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StriperTalk! All things Striper |
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06-27-2009, 06:02 PM
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#1
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Norwich Ct
Posts: 276
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ProfessorM
crushed mussels is what I always used when I did it but I usually got eels of 3 foot length all the time. Usually got plenty but only a few were castable. But you may be able to hook a great white with them on your little rock.
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Man,
I grew up eating eels.Those 3 footers were the best!!!
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06-27-2009, 07:37 PM
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#2
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Eels
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Cape Cod,MA.
Posts: 3,333
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The best thing I found for bait was my wallet 
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Live bait sharp hooks and timing is all you need
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06-27-2009, 09:29 PM
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#3
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: To close to water for my insanity
Posts: 884
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I have always done the best with female horseshoe crabs, but I too think you might need a permit now a days. Back when I use to use them alot I would freeze my horseshoe crabs for when I needed them, since they are easyer to find in the eary spring....Last year since I wasn't sure about needing to use a permit I used bacon in my traps and it worked well. I use bacon to fish for white cats and usually catch about a dozen to two dozen eels in a given night on hook & line so it works well just a little pricy, but then again so are eels.
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offthehookfishing.com
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06-28-2009, 06:47 AM
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#4
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Oblivious // Grunt, Grunt Master
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: over the hill
Posts: 6,682
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Yikes! English muffins and bacon? Someone delete this thread.....if NIB reads it there won't be an eel pot safe on the East coast.
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06-29-2009, 05:08 AM
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#5
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: jerseyshore
Posts: 4,949
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Quote:
Originally Posted by numbskull
Yikes! English muffins and bacon? Someone delete this thread.....if NIB reads it there won't be an eel pot safe on the East coast.
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FORE!
It's usually darkest just before it turns Black..
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06-29-2009, 06:30 AM
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#6
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Plug Builder in Training
Join Date: Apr 2000
Location: wareham MA
Posts: 4,046
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From the DMF website
Massachusetts requires any person harvesting more than six crabs per day to have a regulated
fishery permit and to report landings monthly. New monthly catch reports were developed to
more closely fit forms for other fisheries that are entered in to an Oracle database. New reports
must include the date of harvest, trip start time and duration, port, gear type, disposition, the
gender of the crabs, harvest location, and harvest method. If the crabs are sold, the harvester
must identify the dealer or person purchasing the crabs. All scientific and research institutes and
the single biomedical company must file monthly catch reports listing the names of individuals
they purchased crabs from, in-state and out-of-state, the number of crabs purchased and how the
crabs were used. Bait dealers are required to file electronic reports weekly under the SAFIS
(Standard Atlantic Fisheries Information System) system. The biomedical company, Associates
of Cape Cod (ACC), must also report the number of crabs received dead or rejected and the
number of dead crabs returned to the biomedical vendor. (The vendor is a fisherman who
delivers crabs he, his brother, and one other fisherman harvested, all with biomedical permits, to
ACC). The biomedical vendor must report monthly the number of dead crabs from the time of
harvest to the time the crabs were returned to the water.
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06-29-2009, 08:09 AM
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#7
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Respect your elvers
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: franklin ma
Posts: 3,368
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How do you tell if its a female horseshoe crab?
I mean, are there any key identifying features? 
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It's not the bait
At the end of your line
It's the fishing hole
Where all the fish is blind
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