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Keeper bass
"alwaysfishking" wrote in message
... While I have not kept track of hours on the lake I have 429 bass this year. I have no idea how many were dinks but I gotta say that a majority were 12 inchs or better. I am definetly not one to compare to. I have a very unfair advantage in the lakes here and the amount of time I can fish. My average size bass this year would be about 2 pounds +, I plan on keeping more detailed logs next year. like baits and time spent. One thing I won't track is money spent :-) If we had a 12" limit, I'm sure my percent would be a lot higher. But we don't. Not like it really matters. I enjoy catching them to just about any size. I would like ot have a few larger ones this year, though. I think my largest is just over 4lb this year. I used to keep a really detailed log. I think I got so detailed, it became a hassle, and I gave up on it. I'm just really hitting the high points on this log. -- Andrew Kidd http://www.amiasoft.com/ - Software for the rest of us! http://www.rofb.net/ - ROFB Newsgroup Home |
Keeper bass
Not to open up the "dinks are wothless" thread again, but I only keep count
of keeper bass in my logs. I know I've caught more dinks than keepers overall too Andrew. The thing that I can be proud of is that I've averaged far more than a 5-fish limit of keepers for every day I've fished this year. In my book that's the most important factor. The total number of fish is inconsequential to me. Warren -- http://www.warrenwolk.com/ http://www.tri-statebassmasters.com 2004 NJ B.A.S.S. Federation State Champions "Andrew Kidd" wrote in message news:WupYc.65784$9d6.50346@attbi_s54... "alwaysfishking" wrote in message ... While I have not kept track of hours on the lake I have 429 bass this year. I have no idea how many were dinks but I gotta say that a majority were 12 inchs or better. I am definetly not one to compare to. I have a very unfair advantage in the lakes here and the amount of time I can fish. My average size bass this year would be about 2 pounds +, I plan on keeping more detailed logs next year. like baits and time spent. One thing I won't track is money spent :-) If we had a 12" limit, I'm sure my percent would be a lot higher. But we don't. Not like it really matters. I enjoy catching them to just about any size. I would like ot have a few larger ones this year, though. I think my largest is just over 4lb this year. I used to keep a really detailed log. I think I got so detailed, it became a hassle, and I gave up on it. I'm just really hitting the high points on this log. -- Andrew Kidd http://www.amiasoft.com/ - Software for the rest of us! http://www.rofb.net/ - ROFB Newsgroup Home |
Keeper bass
I say turn em all loose.
You're extracting some good info from your records Andrew. Maybe some that you never intended them to reveal. Now you know which lakes offer you the best chance at bigger bass, and which ones you're more apt not to. That is cool. 1/35 is not good, I'd be fishing some other lake. Warren -- http://www.warrenwolk.com/ http://www.tri-statebassmasters.com 2004 NJ B.A.S.S. Federation State Champions "Andrew Kidd" wrote in message news:XYoYc.80969$Fg5.2697@attbi_s53... "IMKen" wrote in message ... So why with everybody practicing C&R is this true. Should be more big fish. Perhaps it will happen in a couple years as all these smallies grow up. maybe there are just too many small fish and some need to see the frying pan? What do you think? Ken Interesting thoughts. I'd had these myself too, except at one of the closest lakes (pond) to me, I'm 19/36, for over 50%. TI used to have a lot of small fish. In another, I'm 1/35. I don't even want to caluclate the percent on that one, although I've had fun both times out to that lake this year. It's been like that for years, even after a slot limit of 12-15 during the last several years. You'd think they'd eventually grow bigger. I just don't think people were taking out the 12" and less bass. I know I wasn't. Unfortunately, I'm a little lazy when it comes to the cleaning fish part. If I want fish, I typically go out to eat! :-) -- Andrew Kidd http://www.amiasoft.com/ - Software for the rest of us! http://www.rofb.net/ - ROFB Newsgroup Home |
Keeper bass
So why with everybody practicing C&R is this true.
because we are making them smart and much harder to catch Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
Keeper bass
I say turn em all loose.
on some lakes that adds to the problem of overpopulation of small bass. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
Keeper bass
I've said it before Ronnie, the overpopulation of small bass on any lake is
99% of the time based on an inbalance somewhere in the water's ecosystem. The problem of stunted fish generally means that those fish don't have enough to eat. Removing small bass is nothing more than a temporary fix; It had nothing to do with the cause of the problem & it has no bearing on solving it. Balanced ecosystems have a way of mainting healthy populations at all levels, that's my belief at least. Warren -- http://www.warrenwolk.com/ http://www.tri-statebassmasters.com 2004 NJ B.A.S.S. Federation State Champions "RGarri7470" wrote in message ... I say turn em all loose. on some lakes that adds to the problem of overpopulation of small bass. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
Keeper bass
I've said it before Ronnie, the overpopulation of small bass on any lake is
99% of the time based on an inbalance somewhere in the water's ecosystem. The problem of stunted fish generally means that those fish don't have enough to eat. Removing small bass is nothing more than a temporary fix; It had nothing to do with the cause of the problem & it has no bearing on solving it. Balanced ecosystems have a way of mainting healthy populations at all levels, that's my belief at least. Warren -- http://www.warrenwolk.com/ http://www.tri-statebassmasters.com 2004 NJ B.A.S.S. Federation State Champions "RGarri7470" wrote in message ... I say turn em all loose. on some lakes that adds to the problem of overpopulation of small bass. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
Keeper bass
I've said it before Ronnie, the overpopulation of small bass on any lake is
99% of the time based on an inbalance somewhere in the water's ecosystem. The problem of stunted fish generally means that those fish don't have enough to eat. And one reason they don't have enough to eat is there are too many of them. Remove enough of the small bass that are eating up all the small baitfish and that allows more baitfish, and more food for the remaining bass, helping to correct the imbalance. Other than feeding them, I don't know how else to correct the problem of too little food for too many bass. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
Keeper bass
I've said it before Ronnie, the overpopulation of small bass on any lake is
99% of the time based on an inbalance somewhere in the water's ecosystem. The problem of stunted fish generally means that those fish don't have enough to eat. And one reason they don't have enough to eat is there are too many of them. Remove enough of the small bass that are eating up all the small baitfish and that allows more baitfish, and more food for the remaining bass, helping to correct the imbalance. Other than feeding them, I don't know how else to correct the problem of too little food for too many bass. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
Keeper bass
Stunted fish are a DIRECT result of an over-populated water body and
removing fish IS the fix. Warren - think about what you wrote. "Stunted fish are stunted because they don't have enough to eat and removing small bass is nothing more than a temporary fix." If you have a limited amount of food to be distributed amongst say 100 bass, each of those bass will only get a certain amount of food - and that amount may not be enough to grow. Maybe it's just enough for "maintenance feeding" - just enough to stay alive, in other words, without the extra protien and nutrition needed to metabolize and convert to somatic (body) growth (and increase in length and weight). Now, if you take away 50 bass of those bass and give them the same amount of food, each bass gets a larger share and will be able to grow ultimately larger. You're partly right in that removing just the small fish is not enough. With a stunted population, a certain portion of that population NEEDS to be removed to allow the food resources to be better distribution to the remaining population - and the removal should include both large fish and small fish. Large fish eat far more food than small fish do, so the removal needs to include "some" of the large fish as well to return the water body to a more balanced situation. Most biologists you talk to nowadays will talk about "selective harvest" and a better fisheries management tool over strictly catch-and-release, in most situations. There are always exceptions - in slow growing, long-lived species for instance, like muskie or lake trout. But for most basic warmwater fisheries, harvesting fish is an integral part of fisheries management. In 2000, I was sent by my Department to take part in the Black Bass Symposium in St. Louis, Missouri that the American Fisheries Society and B.A.S.S. put on. It was a 4-day event comprised of bass researchers, biologists, and managers, giving presentations and papers on their research and management activities from around the US and Canada. A full text book has since been published on bass biology and management practices that came from this symposium. During the symposium I attended multiple presentations by bass researchers that basically said in some areas of North America, the "catch-and-release" philosophy was almost having the opposite effect as people were thinking, in that decreased harvest was resulting in more bass, but smaller in overall size, bordering on "stunting" in some populations because of limited food resource availability. I'll leave it at that. I won't bore people further with bass biology and management lessons ...... Shawn n "go-bassn" wrote in message ... I've said it before Ronnie, the overpopulation of small bass on any lake is 99% of the time based on an inbalance somewhere in the water's ecosystem. The problem of stunted fish generally means that those fish don't have enough to eat. Removing small bass is nothing more than a temporary fix; It had nothing to do with the cause of the problem & it has no bearing on solving it. Balanced ecosystems have a way of mainting healthy populations at all levels, that's my belief at least. Warren -- http://www.warrenwolk.com/ http://www.tri-statebassmasters.com 2004 NJ B.A.S.S. Federation State Champions "RGarri7470" wrote in message ... I say turn em all loose. on some lakes that adds to the problem of overpopulation of small bass. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
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