![]() |
Trophy fish
Something to consider before you kill another big one. http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/fishing_dc
You know you caught it. Kill it, show it off, and eat it and it is gone forever. Let it swim and you, your friends, and your kids will benefit. |
my thoughts exactly.
|
Thats just another theory. With the $$$ of food rising..I won't be throwing anything back...within my limit that is...:fury:
|
Soounds like Numbie's back on the soapbox again......................
I will hopefully kill 4 BIG GURLS this year and have a shot at the Tundra as well as help Team S-B to repeat. Not gonna change my participation in The Striper Cup based on one study and its opinion. would ya have us believe that everyone else is wrong, and only THIS guy is right because he supports yer own agenda? Fish die of old age and anglers, boat comm's. kill fish for profit, surfcaster's kill feesh for recreation, sum for the table, AND some for sum tourney's. so long as it's within the FM's numbers and guidelines who gives a flippp? They are FOOD, numbie! Why do ya think God made them taste soooo goooooood, and made them so fuuun to catch? i release 97% of all the stripers i land, anywho! and i LOVE our beloved prey, PREY being the operative word. We are the dominant species! I kill Stripers to eat, also! And even IF i am blessed enough to land the next 80#'er and proceed to Parade her around like the TROPHY that she would BE, does the cat from Scripps have any specific numbers on how many 80#+ yearmates happen to be swimming with the current AC Stock of migrators that grace our shores each year? The two studies seem mutually exclusive to me, mang! What do the fine scientists at Wood's Hole have to say? :drool: :drool: MMMMMMMMMMM, STRRRRRIIIIIIPERRRRRRRRRRR :drool: :drool: |
Quote, "what do the fine scientists say at Woods Hole"?
The same thing Dr. Sugihara is saying. Besides the "big girls" ( I hate that term it sounds silly) Besides the big ones don't taste anywhere near as good as the little ones do. Give me a 20 incher to eat anyday, it's like the veal of Striped Bass. You may continue....... |
Quote:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...pavfish27.html http://www.todojuegos.com/modules/Fo.../gathering.gifhttp://img116.exs.cx/img116/1231/z7shysterical.gifhttp://smilies.zx6r.info/lachen/567.gif |
I liked the Maine slot limit... A 20# bass does have the best balance of taste and proper heft for a meal.
BD - while I don't always agree with George, I do value his opinion - soapbox or no soapbox. And I've been too busy to stand up on mine :wall: (It's Flap's soapbox I have the problem with :fury::rotf2: ) |
Can Dr Sughira's study be applied to Morone Saxatilis, or is it species specific?
i could care less what's happening in Oslo, or SoCal! Tell me how this "data" effects our target species, and then you may have my interest, if there is a pressing or apparent danger! Otherwise, man's gotta fish and man's gotta EAT!!!! The homeless shelter down the street doesn't care how old or gamey some BIG Cow tastes.................and i'd bet her tail meat is delicious!!!! :bl: :bl: :bl: And i agree, Steve, my ideal belly-filler is from 32"- 36". MMMMM, juicy, sweet, and tendah!! |
Quote:
|
Quote:
A slot would be great. I don't know if it will ever fly in Rhodie or Mass, but it might if more and more science supports it. The only thing I worry about is release mortality vs. size, depending on tackle, location etc.. some big fish probably don't make it if put back, IMHO... |
I mean George no Ill Will...........
soapbox was tongue in cheek, since he seems to be fostering this Kill No Trophy Campaign. To date, i've released ALL of my big fish, and lost more than a few. To each his own, and i also value yer opinion, numbskull, and agree with you often. Just not in this direction since .5% of the total MA Comm Kill is such a small kill amount when compared to the entirity of the Hudson and Chesapeake Bay Stocks combined, or the 1.5 Million+ Stripers that migrate here yearly. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
yeah with Flaptail eating 20 inch fish he needs wheels on his soapbox hey that gives me an idea ... :think: we can have a soapbox derby :btu: |
Good article. I would agree that we are targeting the wrong gene pool for removal from the population.
|
Quote:
how's that script of chill pills holdin out, numbskull? "best science available" ~sounds subject to change. Science is much more subjective than you would imagine. Follow the money, bro, and you'll be amazed. Who's funding the Good Dr Sighura? And since you are into analogies: It's very similar to the so-called expert witnesses giving testimony in a murder case. Mountains of evidence are subject to interpretation, are they not? Just ask Marcia Clark and OJ.................... Besides ya still didn't answer my question so i'll ask it another way; if you, Oak, Flaptail, John R, Tony O, and ITS all killed 2-50#'ers apiece this year, then how many of those killed's fellow yearmates would be left to proliferate the species? Does Dr Sighura, know? Anyone, Beuller, anyone from Woods Hole? Science seems rather subjective at this point, eh? The other BIG issue i have with SCIENCE and its "numbers" is that by it's very nature it is a field that works in reverse to prove what is already taking place or an event that has already happened. While I QUITE agree that slot limits would be great and have been very effective in FL, and elsewhere, i contend that The Good Dr's study from Scripps seems to be too general and is probably a very sound documentation of something that we already know...................... Kill the breeders, kill the species......in a nutshell. Funny thing is i agree to an extent, i just would like to see more poignant and exact numbers inre to MoSax, me brother, before promoting an Anti Trophy Agenda. Further, how many trophies actually get killed a year? Is it safe to assume that far more Cows get released and "get away" than the amount that actually hit the certified scales? I'm all for numbers, the more the merrier, imho it's still a little early to pull the plug on the Recreational Fishing Tournaments that align themselves with current FM guidelines. also, in the future i'll thank you to keep any references to some imaginary girlfriend of mine OUT of our discussions, as my lovely wife would be none too appreciative of such tasteless banter. i get that you were speaking in the general sense of YOU, but she would not, "get it". :bl: :bl: :bl: |
I entered in a soapbox derby once when I was a kid:deadhorse::soon:
It can only help the fish by releasing the larger fish. If you keep removing all the large fish, then the fish will onl;y grow to just enough of a size to keep reproducing and the 100 pound capability is severely diminished since the genes have not been passed on from other large fish capable to grow over 100 pounds. I have let many large go free, I have also kept my share of large, but only about 3-4 fish over 30 pounds. I try to revive them now. I hope it helps. Some people will keep on killing for food or tournaments and I have no problem with that. I worry about myself, and whoever is fishing with me makes their own decision too. |
if there was a slot limit for 25-50lb tournament action would be......interesting...
|
Damm, just when this gets intersting my soapbox breaks. Guess I will just go over to You Tube and watch more skateboard crashes.
Dude my F()cking arm is broke!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! |
First off, BD.
Science is objective, not subjective. When we get subjective, we become advocates, not scientists. If you knew Dr. Sugihara is a card carrying PETA member, then you could MAYBE, MAYBE make an issue out of this. For all you know he is an avid fisherman. The 'good doctor' is a former dept. chair at one of the worlds premier oceanographic institutions, with 35 years of white (peer reviewed) literature. Does that make him infallible? Of course not. But BEST AVAILABLE SCIENCE is what runs our fishery management plans, cutting edge medical fields, space travel etc. etc. etc. questioning that is a good thing. blindly questioning it without reason smacks of the creationist zealots, who rip on the evolutionary theory without knowing what it means to actually get vetted through the scientific process to become a theory... This was a study, by a respected scientist, who submitted it to a journal, which then sends it out to other experts to review. Then and only then it is accepted. All that, and like numbskull said, I guess they should have dropped a draft in your mailbox too. That was a long tangent, I am absolutely a carnivore, I keep fish, I eat fish, some are large, some are tasty 'MoSax' in the 30" range. I went and read the article in the library. Do I understand any (most) of it? No, but I understood enough to know that on this study, on these 50yr of data, it seems to hold true. Will it change my habits? maybe not, but we'll cross that bridge when I have a big girl in the wash... Thanks for posting numbskull. Interesting read. |
Don't waste your time on here. Make a difference, stand in front of the fish houses, hand out pamphlets with statistics. Maybe bring a generator so you can show a video. I luv kicking horses
|
Quote:
|
Kill the old ones they have lived a long and healthy life.
The bass under 20 should be let go to breed for generations to come. Take one bass at 40 rather than two at 20 to show real conservation. The filet from a 40 provides better yield at the table in comparison. Restaurants and markets alike prefer the larger representatives for fare. All fish are trophies, take only pictures, leave only footprints...... |
I will stand on the soap box of the Numbskull, any time. Science, and the lessons of history tell us uncomfortable lessons, that even a Numbskull can understand if you have a mind to be objective.
Here is a history: In the early 1800's, the disastrous harvest and kill "recreational" fishery (along with dam building) forever wiped out the gene pool of northern New England and Maine 10 pound squaretails (brook trout), and 25 pound landlocked salmon. Gone. No amount of subsequent great fisheries management can recover this. Would you like some 11 inch brookies, no problem says our fisheries managers. How about a "trophy" four pound Lake Winnie landlock? You might have to troll all year for that one. Are you happy? Not if you lived through "back then". Are you happy with the present status of our "fully recovered" striped bass fishery? Not if you are as old as Daignault, or myself. Are you impressed by the shear numbers of all these baby bass running around, while your gene pool access to... or chance for... a dozen or so 40's plus beach bass per season...just sinks. Now it seems pure luck to blunder across even an occasiuonal 30. So, IF you are so fortunate or expert to be looking into that angry eye of your trophy bass this coming season, remember that you are looking at the gene pool. It is not all gone yet. This is what the Numbskull said in words a little more docile than mine. But then again, he isn't as old as I am. He does not know that he missed. |
It’s a legitimate theory known as "fishing down the food chain." Enter the term on google or the like and search it out for a more detailed explanation.
Coming from a plug fisherman I scourged at the thought of clicking on that link, but its good info. However, people of Numbskull’s ilk are silently destroying the world's forests by driving up demand for rare wood.... |
all i catch are small fish anyway
|
I used to keep everything large or small that was a keeper, but as I became more proficient putting fish on the sand I started keeping smaller fish and letting larger ones go. As a general rule I want that 28", but my cardinal rule is to never ever put back the first fish 'because there are fish everywhere and I'll get a small one later'.
I keep the small ones because they taste cleaner and the larger ones are the better breeders (up to a certain point). Correct me if my info is wrong, but from what I have read the mortality rate for the smaller fish, between disease and predators, is higher for smaller fish, which means they aren't going to breed as many times as a prime breeder. I have also read that larger fish, 40 lbrs and up, are not as fecund as the 15-30 lbrs. So this lends to keeping larger fish as trophies (or for competition purposes) and smaller fish for consumption. I have a personally imposed slot that I'm free to break anytime! But I agree with the thrust of George's thread: Let's allow fish to get large. Freshwater bass fisherman do it, why can't we?? |
fisheries decisions based on science... now that is a hoot :lama:
|
This is the voice of Doom and Gloom .. It's over Johnny.. The golden Franky D days are gone forever.. Nothing Gold can Stay .. Looking at the demise of our beloved Striped Bass is tunnel vision . All the earths resources are being used at an alarming rate. Too many people,,too much pressure. The whole eco system is wack , not just the Bass . The Striped Bass only hope is for some kind of plague to wipe out 2/3's of the worlds population or for gas to go over 4 dollars a gallon ..
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
That is some FUNNY sheet, Tagger! :bl: :bl: :bl: :claps: :claps: Tis true, the Golden Days are long gone................... i would only keep the breeders necessary to procure sum decent schwag, anyways. ONE 50#'er, ONE 60#'er for a VS and a shot at a Tundra is a no brainer for me! the rest of my COWS will live to swim, breed, die of old age, and fight for many many more moons, God Willing and the Good Lord Providing. |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:30 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Copyright 1998-20012 Striped-Bass.com