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On track for a 2020 ban on sportsfishing?
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On track for a 2020 ban on sportsfishing?
jeff wrote:
wrote: Really? Even if it had been limited fishing? Even if it had been 1 brook trout over 30 pounds? C'mon, I know you're smarter than this Dave. well...um...what do you do with the 30,000 brook trout under 30 pounds you catch while trying to catch the one over 30 pounds? jeff (serial killer of fish) This 30-pound restriction is onerous and unreasonable. I propose loosening it up a bit: 1 brook trout at least twice the current world record by weight -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
On track for a 2020 ban on sportsfishing?
|
On track for a 2020 ban on sportsfishing?
rw wrote:
wrote: It's never, ever necessary. A 'practical; slot limit can be set just above or below the target. Imagine a 1 trout over 5 pounds limit, for example. That would effectively be C&R almost everywhere all the time. I've caught quite a few trout this year (it's been a very good year so far) and none of them were close to five pounds except for a bull trout (strictly C&R). Furthermore, a laboratory study (I can't find the source at the moment) showed strong evidence that culling larger fish led to genetic changes on the population in a surprisingly short time, reducing the average size of the fish. If anything, people should be allowed to keep smaller fish and be required to release "trophy" fish. "One trout over 5 lbs" is not a slot limit. The slot limit for trout on the lower Deschutes is a model: two fish between 10" and 13" per day. Simple AND highly effective. All rainbows in the lower Deschutes (a unique strain called redsides hereabouts) are wild and native, and they are thriving. Although artificial lures and gear are allowed, most people fly fish, by choice. Most also fish 100% C&R, again by choice. Those who do take fish, within the slot, have essentially no impact on population numbers. If more people killed fish, the slot could be further tightened (one fish between 10" and 13", for example, or two fish between 10" and 12"). Lots of options available. Such a true, highly restrictive slot limit could, I believe, have served the same purpose as the mandatory C&R reg on the Rapid, without turning the fishery into the common trout petting zoo, where "sportsman" engage in harassment of wildlife for fun. -- John Russell aka JR |
On track for a 2020 ban on sportsfishing?
jeff wrote:
dave...tim's real argument is that you're being mean to the fish. it's a moral dilemma - kill them and eat them, or be mean to them and release them. I'm glad someone finally distilled that "argument" to its essence. That's exactly what he seems to be saying. You either show your "love" by killing the fish outright, or you show your "hatred" by releasing it to fight again. Chuck Vance |
On track for a 2020 ban on sportsfishing?
Conan The Librarian wrote:
I'm glad someone finally distilled that "argument" to its essence. That's exactly what he seems to be saying. You either show your "love" by killing the fish outright, or you show your "hatred" by releasing it to fight again. Has nothing to do with "being mean," "hatred" or "love." In one case, you're catching a fish for a serious purpose. A purpose that can justify the suffering inflicted on the fish. In the other, you're doing it for amusement, for a passing lark. Hunting does not trivialize the prey. Mandatory C&R reduces them to playthings. Some folks have no problem with that; others do. -- John Russell aka JR |
On track for a 2020 ban on sportsfishing?
|
On track for a 2020 ban on sportsfishing?
JR wrote:
Conan The Librarian wrote: I'm glad someone finally distilled that "argument" to its essence. That's exactly what he seems to be saying. You either show your "love" by killing the fish outright, or you show your "hatred" by releasing it to fight again. Has nothing to do with "being mean," "hatred" or "love." In one case, you're catching a fish for a serious purpose. A purpose that can justify the suffering inflicted on the fish. In the other, you're doing it for amusement, for a passing lark. Hunting does not trivialize the prey. Mandatory C&R reduces them to playthings. Some folks have no problem with that; others do. I think C&R can be approached respectfully. If the angler takes care to try to avoid harming the fish (pinching barbs, landing them quickly and properly, not catching as many as he might, etc.) I think he's acting respectfully. On the other hand, I think someone who spends hundreds or thousands of dollars on gear and travel to catch and kill a few fish is deluding himself if he thinks the killing makes his motives pure. Also, there is plenty of hunting that trivializes the prey. It's popular around here for people to shoot ground squirrels. The ground squirrels aren't hurting anyone -- they're just targets. Sometimes hunters shoot an elk or a moose and leave the meat to rot. They can't be bothered. They just want the trophy. It's very illegal, but it happens. And then there's the despicable practice (IMO) of game-farm hunting, ala Dick Cheney. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
On track for a 2020 ban on sportsfishing?
William Claspy wrote:
On 8/1/06 9:15 AM, in article , "JR" In one case, you're catching a fish for a serious purpose. A purpose that can justify the suffering inflicted on the fish. In the other, you're doing it for amusement, for a passing lark. The crux comes when one attempts to apply a human feeling- suffering- on a non human- the fish- who may, or quite possibly may not, have such feeling. It seems to me that if you reject "being mean", "hatred" and "love" (human notions), you should also reject "suffering". No? Or does it become more of a discussion about US and our feelings rather than about the fish? I'm not imposing a human feeling. I think all the discussions of "whether fish suffer" and "whether fish feel pain" do unfortunately always seem to rehash questions of whether they feel pain *the way we do* and whether they suffer *the way we would*. These questions can never be resolved and are pointless anyway. I think it is self-evident that, as sentient beings (see your last sentence below), fish suffer in response to certain stimuli. Fish suffer the way fish do, and we suffer the way we do. (I know, I know.... doh! g). That we might not suffer the same way (have the same "feelings") is beside the point. Some folks find it easy to believe the enjoyment they derive from catching a fish is justified because a fish's suffering is not *really* suffering (i.e., is not the same as human suffering). It's a convenient rationalization. I think it is an excellent topic for discussion. Hunting does not trivialize the prey. Mandatory C&R reduces them to playthings. Some folks have no problem with that; others do. The above statement, or in particular the "playthings" portion of it- might trivialize the many reasons in favor of C&R, which effect the fishes' life just as much as C&K would. I don't think so. That they're reduced to playthings, to be harassed for fun only, is a fact. The "many reasons" only can only help to justify--or fail to justify--the fact; they cannot be trivialized by a simple statement of the fact. I have no problem with C&R, only with pure, mandatory 100% C&R. If there are any conservation reasons for mandatory C&R that couldn't be satisfied by a highly restrictive slot limit, then the population is, I believe, too fragile to allow fishing in the first place. Part of the problem is that it is difficult- for me anyhow- to think in a binary fashion. For example, I have seen C&K fisherman that, if you are thinking in human terms, were quite brutal to their prey. And I have seen C&R fisherman with whom the fish probably were not really aware (if they are aware at all....) that they had been hooked and released. You've seen fish go completely limp or behave in completely the same fashion after hooking as before? Sentience is not an easy concept. Often it's not an easy state. At least not before a few cups of coffee, anyway. :) -- John Russell aka JR |
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