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The definition of "A Big Fish" from the BigFish is subjective at best! To a 12 year old a 28 inch fish is HUGE! To someone who lands his share of 20-30 pound fish, a 40 would be his bench mark! It all depends on the person on the butt end of the rod.;) To each his own, boat/surf.....there is no difference!
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Alright...large? Ummmmmm..........Anything over 30 pounds! SLOB.....anything over 40 pounds!:)
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I'd take #25 all day long and consider it a big fish on plugs. I think that the tackle you use also needs to be considered. I love light tackle. I got a #28 on the fly last year, that was a big fish.
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My personal opinion is that 20 # bass off the beach is better than catching a 30# bass off some charter boat. I would rather catch a 15 # on my fly rod than a 20 # on my spin. It's all personal feeling |
35+ by land and 40+ by sea is large in my book, but it is in the eye of the beholder IMO. I just classify them all as decent.
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any fish above the 20lb mark is a large fish for me wether it be canal or surf.
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okay I am changing my tune :angel:.... I have got fish to 45lbs and thought this over while reading all your postings...
a 25lb fish is a decent fish....but 30+ is Large....:btu: |
it depends on the angler
for #^^^^^^&, mckennan and captain white.....a 25 lb fish is an average fish, more or less a schoolie...because these people have caught LARGE, which to them would be 40 + lbs to a person who is fishing for the first year....a 25 lb fish would be a fish of a lifetime to me.......a 35+ lb fish is large whether it be surf caught or from the boat |
Biggest fish I ever caught was 25lbs on a salt shaker shad. It was and still is huge to me. I quite pleased with anything over 32" inches with my light tackle. I agree with some of the other posts,its subjective. I don't get into really big fish often
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when i was a kid fishing with my father,on the boat 50lbs was a large fish, now fishing from the beach a 30 lber is a large fish for me.but it is all subjective to what is around.last year on the cape a 25lber from the beach was large
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30 pound fish always seem big to me. In the canal , a 30 pounder can give you a good pull if the current is at full tilt.
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while i completely respect everyone's opinions
and find these interpretations MOST interesting, it seems to me that a BENCHMARK, by definition, is a benchmark that IS NOT subject to change. we use them daily when we plumb the columns of our structural buildings and if we allowed for fluctuations from one benchmark to the other, one surveyor/angler to the other, then ALL the buildings in Boston would resemble the Leaning Tower of Pisa :bl: :bl:................. a STANDARD is a standard for ALL to aspire to; regardless of whether or not you've ever hit that MARK, and defined by the same definition that the people for generations have considered to be LAHHHGE from then to today. in other words, while it may "feel" subjective until you reach said BM, once you "get there" don't most people aspire for something more and BIGGER??? likewise, by having a uniform weight we can ALL be measured by the same BM and not by what your best friend or yer Momma says to enable your relative mediocrity.................. i don't think that Today's surfcasting legends were sticking 40#'ers out of the womb ~~*though sum have suggested that Mr Nolan was born part Striper, that's how he knows the way they think*~~ so at some point they also had to aspire to the lofty weights, at that particular time of their individual angling developement, of 30#'s and up. for example Newbie, Hungry, Sharpie. the point being, they started somewhere and through due diligence and many moonlit haunts they've angled themsleves into the Striper Coast's Legends that they've become by fishing hard and not settling for 20# to 25# as LAHHHGE. still a dink at that weight, if ya ask me. AND, just because large and up is a regular weight for them that doesn't change the standard it just means that their levels of expertise have them landing more trophies/monstahs than the rest of us schlubs that don't have the experience and know-how that they do................still the standard remains the same ~~30#'s and up is LAHHHGE, imho. my own scale goes a li'l sumthin' like this: 0" - 28" ;;;; schoolie 28" - 30#;;; rats to big bass 30# - 40#;; LAHHHHGE 40# - 50#;; SLOB 50# - 60#;; TROPHY 60# - 70#;; COW 70# - 80#;; IGFA World Record 80# - 90#;; MONSTAHH 90# - 100#; FISH OF A LIFETIME those are the goals for me, so far so good, and i LOVE the challenge and the mindset that is required to not settle, and TO go for sum Big Gurls. |
5- 10 lbs- "schoolies"
10 - 20 lbs- "school bass" 20 - 30 lbs- "decent fish" 30- 40 lbs- "large" 40-50 lbs- "trophy fish" 50+.. fish of a lifetime. |
What Species of fish?
a 6 lb. Smallmouth is a slob a 10 lb. Largemouth is a slob a 20 lb. Bluefish is a slob a 40 lb. Striper is a slob a 100 lb. Tuna is a slob a 225 lb Anglah is a Slob (at least thats what my wife says) :hihi: |
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For me
Large is 35# + NiceFish 20-35 |
"LARGE" ?????? WHO-T-F cares? I mean, I caught a bunch of 20 to 25 pound fish in the last couple weeks (on plugs:kewl:) from shore and my skiff and they all fought great, cartwheeling through the sky and rolling and thrashing just after the hook-up ( my mentor Art Crago said to me once after losing a good fish after a tremendous but brief hook-up on a Danny"You got what you wanted out that fish right? So don't be disapointed" he was right, as usual)
I have caught a lot of "large" fish in my time but the to me the mark of a good fish is not the scale weight but the fight and twenty to 35 pound fish 99% percent of the time will fight the pants off of a 45 pounder. Thats the large for me, the fight not the fat. |
Depends
Whether any one else saw it or not..:bl:
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IMO fish over 35 lbs start to take a different shape.They gain quite a bit in the girth department.Big shoulders..This run of 35-40 lbers all seem similar..Bullet heads like tuna...
When they get over 4o they seem different.Like from a different strain,Year class...Longer not as girthy..To me it's seems weird.Anyone else notice this.. I would call anything over 35 large.. |
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a 4 lb. Smallmouth is large a 6 lb. Largemouth is large a 15 lb. Bluefish is large a 30 lb. Striper is large a 75 lb. Tuna is large a 200 lb Anglah is large |
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I always liked the adjectives MikeP used to describe bass of different sizes, maybe he will chime in.
Personally I classify bass in pounds not adjectives like large although I feel a fish begins to get decent somewhere around 15 pounds, I set my standards low. It also depends on the gear you are using, if you are using light tackle schoolie gear and you catch a 20 lb bass on 6 lb test, that is pretty good IMO. and if you are using a tuna stick and get a 15 lb bass, it is just small. I fish for recreation, for fun, I don't commercial fish. |
I think Nebe put numbers to my thoughts.
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Just give me fish......big, small, dinks, schoolies, cows, slobs, large, fat, skinny, shorts......I will take them all!:eyes:
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It's almost like a vacation in Thailand I'm told. Good Luck, and wear a raincoat. |
For me decent fish is 25-30lb.... large is anything over 30lbs from shore.
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There's only two catogories of stripers.....dead on my dinner plate or live to swim another day.
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Very good list accept the 75lb tuna The REAL tuna guys call us baby killers catching those! 73 inches is a legal giant, but 400lb plus is considered large ! |
anything over 30 is "large" to me.
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If im fishing in april with a schoolie rod and i get a keeper i think its large. If im trowing eels in the canal large is over 42". I dont weigh anything so pounds dont work for me. If the fish held with its tail touching the ground goes over my hips its a large fish. Im 6'1". If ive fished for a couple days and only managed a dink, a 30" is large. ITs all relative i guess.
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Shore 25#
Boat 35# Pretty much what I've always gone by. It also has a lot to do with what's available at a given time. Nowadays both of these benchmarks get beat pretty regularly by anglers of all skill levels. Take home message is we have a very good fishery right now so enjoy it. You might not encounter great blitzes in your local waters every time out, but we have a big pool of available big fish coastwide. |
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