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pounds and inches.
Most people report fish caught in inches.. I think because just about everyone carries a measuring tape with them. I've never seen any one whip out a heavy brass scale they been hauling with them and weigh a fish . To give an accurate weight you must keep the fish bring it in and get it weighed.. Or if you have fished for some time ,(years) kept and weighed a bunch of fish ,you have some refference to guess the weight . I really don't care how fish are reported pounds or inches, I get the picture . Some people take great offense.. I don't know why . You know a newbe is going to measure and give report in inches.. Must suc everyone yelling "pounds" at you . :scream:
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I always have a Manly scale and a tape with me, take a pic and send it back to grow to a 50
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I added this as my sig on another site ;) I do pounds. I don't mind people who report bass in inches, but bluefish? What's next, people reporting 20" tautog?
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I like to know the weight in pounds but usually report in inches because I only carry a measuring tape.
I find it annoying when someone gets huffy because a fish's size is reported in inches. I'm also not all that fond of weighing and releasing on larger fish. I'm not stating this as fact but I don't think it can be very good for a fish over 30#'s to dangle from a boga grip considering they spend most of their life horizontal. |
with fish being on the skinny side these days....a 40" fish sounds better then a 17lber.or racer as us old farts call them.I've caught 36" fish as low as 11 lb's...sad indeed.
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see fish laws (man laws)
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Majority of my fish aren't worthy of getting weighed. Length is good by me, at least until the state changes regs to pounds.... That said, I see more racers, but have enough to know a 30#, and be pretty good to guessimate if a fish is a forty. Just don't have enough slobs compared to the racers the past few years. Would rather keep a 30 inch fish for the table anyway.
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I usually carry a scale (chatillion 50 calibrated). It weighs a lot and I rarely use it, but I can't see killing a fish (nevermind carrying it out) just to weigh it, and I don't catch enough fish over 30lbs to accurately judge their weight at night.
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I looked at my record book and here are some weights and sizes of fishes I have caught over the years
29": 8.5 30": 9.1, 9.2 33": 11.5 34": 11, 11.1, 12, 12.3, 12.5, 13.5 34 1/2": 13.75 35": 12.5, 13, 13.25, 13.4, 14.5, 15, 16.5 35 1/2": 13, 14.5 36": 15.0, 15.75, 16, 16.25, 16.5 37": 16.5, 17.25, 20.5 38": 18, 21, 22 39": 24.3 40": 19.2, 21, 23, 24.3 40 1/2": 23, 24.3, 24.6 41": 23 41 1/2": 24.3 43 3/4": 26 44": 30.4, 32.6 47": 37 (my biggest to date) All these weights come from a few of the canal fish I've taken home for supper over the years. Truly large fish have always "alluded" me (got away) on the rocky ledges and drop offs in the canal. Someday I'll get one of those huge ones that I've hooked many times, stripped my reel and make me cry and babble to myself Hope someone finds this useful. |
Measuring in inches doesn't do the harm that hanging it by its jaw will do. Fish aren't made to support their weight by the jaw, it harms their gills. Research shows that it kills large fish. If people think it's more manly to describe their fish in pounds, I think they're selfish to risk killing those fish. I fish for sport, not to substitute for gonads. A nice bass is too valuable to be caught only once. Even releasing a nice fish without measuring it doesn't lower your testosterone production.
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Geeze, Tagger, I have one or two of those heavy brass scales. Nut nothin' to hang it on....I guess my poundage by length and size of gut. I get within 10-12 pounds everytime.:confused: :bo: :bo:
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I simply don't keep and weigh enough fish to be able to tell, to within a pound, how heavy a fish is. So I usually report fish in inches to avoid over estimating the size. Just seams easier and it works for me. If I had been fishing longer and during the commercial days pounds would be what was engrained in my head. I really think its just a generation thing.
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Actual conversation I had on the Canal this summer: "Hi xxxx, you guys do anything?" "I got some shorts, but xxx got two nice fish". "Really? How big?" "Oh, 31, 32" Stop the conversation right here, and who wouldn't believe the guy was talking pounds? "He got a 32 pounder?" "No, no, 32 inches". That was the day I started asking when a 32" bass became a "nice fish". |
It's def. an age thing.. I cant' get over it, no matter how hard I try.. I hear the same thing Mike..
some guy will come in the shop and say, "I got a 32 last night".. I assume pounds right off.. the younger fellow (early 30's) that works part time with me, who is a serious fisherman, he assumes inches.. Another "generational" issue... :) |
I still think a 32" fish is a nice fish for table fare...... but not when trophy hunting. Some schoolies I've caught this year had more game during the fight than most mid twenty pound fish, so seeing those testosterone loaded schoolies swim away makes me think, nice fish, nice fight.
And wouldn't inches be a better measurement to gauge the age of a fish? While a fifty inch fish would definitely get my attention, a fifty pounder would be a lifetime accomplishment, which is why the weight measurement gets a lot of attention when it comes to records, I think, for what that's worth..... Worth noting is if you fish surf or boat on this subject too. I'm 90% surf. Funny, can you imagine if we were debating inches vs. weight in 'measuring' up our female companions?????? If those numbers are right, I could care less about the weight!:D |
good to know I'm not an old fart yet.....
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To guys who don't always catch 30 pound fish on their outings, a 34 inch fish may be a nice fish to them...why ruin their day by saying..."oh, inches"? After catching some 30 pound fish, their mind-set will change and they will classify them differently. I always say "nice job" to someone proud of their catch, whatever size (legal).
People fish for different reasons, I'll leave it at that. On a different note - I side with nightfighter I fish for FOOD along with enjoyment. I LOVE eating fish. I have NEVER taken a bass home that didn't end up getting eaten. I have NEVER wasted fish...To this day, my father will NOT fillet a fish, he believes too much gets wasted. He scales them, guts them, and chops em up. The head goes into a large pot for stewing...he claims the cheeks on a bass's head are "to die for". One shouldn't judge another based on what they think is a nice fish. IMO - |
bloo...I'll agree that a fish in the hand will always be a nice fish reguardless of it's size....But what is happening more and more these day's is the fact that history is being changed day by day...what once was alway's lb's is slowly going over to inches,why?.Plug shapes that always were called XX are being called something intirely different why?I havn't seen grass-trees-water getting a name change, why not?....If one doesn't correct a new person to the name game,,how are they going to learn what is and has always been??...I don't go to the lumberyard looking for scratch paper?[sandpaper]...does history mean nothing to the younger folks? who knows,,someday fish may be called scalers:hihi: wtfit?
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I abhor the word "keepah" in describing fish, in my little group it's small legal or legal and legal ain't no "keepah" in my book, 28 inches is a minnow, plain and straight.
I still use the terms we used when we sold everything over 16 inches, smalls, mediums, large.. 36 inch fish would to 15 pounds for a fatty and average 20 back when ( and to all of you that are going to post about me bringing up the old days, put a sock in it. Most of you weren't there and aren't worthy enough to talk of those times.) 30 pounders were the norm and spring fish were called racers not cause they were skinny but because of the way they would rip the rod almost out of your hands when they nailed your plug in the first wave and take off like a frieght train from the Monomoy and Nauset shores. By the time they reached P-Town in force around July4th they were getting a little lethargic with all the food and warm water. Best fishing ever though was not the good old 70s it was in the late 80's early nineties when the limit was 36 inches, the 70's had big fish and you could go anywhere by buggy or boat without a lot of restriction but for more 36 inch fish in areas they were not used to being seen in, like the B-Harbor flats. We could go there in the skiff and take several with surety each trip on the fly that would top 20 pounds in a tide while drifting the bars. Ah, twas only like that again........(sigh) |
In July & Aug all I want to see is 34" then they go to market!
After that its just for fun and I could careless. I might eat 2 fish a year, Bass isn't on top of the food chain here, I rather have some nice Fluke or Sea Bass even Scup :drool: |
inches are tough to get a read on weight with todays fish. In June I landed 2 fish 1 week a part each 45" long. The first fish was 21 lbs and the 2nd was 35 lbs. I was astonished at the weight difference.
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"Back in the day" anthem is an old war cry and often looked back on. I prefer to look ahead. I have no complaints about size of Striped Bass or a shortage. Does it make me a less of a fisherman if I talk in inches? lol
Did a miracle take place in the olden days and bass became big mac over eaters? I would hope bass eat the same now as they did back then. Theres plenty of bait to eat. I have never fished the late seventies and early 80's. Mid 80's and on is my time. The bottom line? Bass don't change....we do...or not. lol |
I am from the old farts school on inches to weight, but seeing as I mostly release fish caught I do not weigh them as I feel they are harmed more by hanging them from the lip. I have been using the attached chart to estimate the weight of a fish caught. Note that it gives the min and max weights of a particular sized fish. It is a useful guide only. :spin: NS - is this the chart you were looking for?:lasso:
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