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Old 03-01-2010, 11:35 AM   #1
RIROCKHOUND
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Kept a bass this past spring loaded with 7 6" fish that I'm 98% sure were baby weaks... the teeth and everything matched, just a bit too digested to see colors

Bryan

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"For once I agree with Spence. UGH. I just hope I don't get the urge to go start buying armani suits to wear in my shop"
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Old 03-01-2010, 11:49 AM   #2
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Connecticut sees some weakfish in a narrow window in May. In one famous 3 day period in 2006 was it?-- some guys from the CT surfcasters from the shore had a 13 pounder caught by Billy D. and 4 or 5 over 10 pounds. But the next year not much. Its very erratic. Most of the big fish that year were caught on mag darters.
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Old 03-01-2010, 12:14 PM   #3
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On the Great South Bay as a young kid I got one and I recall my dad's face...he was in shock, he said he hadn't see a weakfish in 20 years...within a few years (early 70's) it was gangbusters of weaks in the bays on LI. Lots of quality fish in the 10+ lb range.

They use to spawn in the flats on the bay, I would watch them swim in circles in 3' of water among the eel grass. Commercial Gill netters would pound them. Once I saw a fellow fill his cockpit to his knees with fish he caught during the spawn (I was probably 13 or so at the time). I approached him in my boat at the dock and asked him why the took so many...what he said was he needed to take all he could because he was getting just ....15 cents/pound. I told him that I would pay him more than that just to keep them alive. It was a shame to see the row-filled females slaughtered like that. Wish I took a photo.
Now, I hear it is pretty thin these days, nothing like those days.

Caught good numbers in the surf on BI in the early 80's. Now on MV I think one or two come into the local tackle shop each season with a "what is this?"

I am sure bass eat them too, there is noting else for them to eat.

Very mild and tastey fish, as a kid my mom would cook them with eggs for breakfast

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Old 03-01-2010, 12:27 PM   #4
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So, the questions are......

Are the Weakfish stocks down because of overfishing? Does it have commercial value? Has the weakfish become a major source of food for other predators now that menhaden are not as plentiful?

I have no idea and I have never seen or caught a weakfish. Just curious if anyone has any ideas.

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Old 03-01-2010, 12:53 PM   #5
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Probably all of the above. But IMO it's also due to a lack of understanding of the species by the fisheries management groups resulting in poor regulations across the board.
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Old 03-01-2010, 03:56 PM   #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sea Flat View Post
So, the questions are......

Are the Weakfish stocks down because of overfishing? Does it have commercial value? Has the weakfish become a major source of food for other predators now that menhaden are not as plentiful?

I have no idea and I have never seen or caught a weakfish. Just curious if anyone has any ideas.
I don't know anything about commercial pressure on them elsewhere, but like I said before, they've never been what you'd call plentiful this far north except in short bursts. There were none at all in RI in the 1950's and 60's. I didn't even know they existed and I fished just about every day back then. When conditions are favorable here and the population is up they might appear for a year or two, but otherwise, they're just sporadic visitors. Cape Cod is probably the extreme northern limit of their range, even in good years. I've caught more jack crevalle in RI than I have weakfish.

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Old 03-01-2010, 04:09 PM   #7
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They use to be a species included the MV derby.

Again that was back a few years, that was when the bass population was lower...perhaps that was the reason???? who knows.

Great fish though, wish they were around more. Maybe global warming will expand their northerly range
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