From: "Cyli"
|
| Germany, too, I believe. And some countries don't (or didn't at my
| last information) allow catch and release fishing. If you catch it,
| you take it home with you. I don't know what they do about size
| restrictions or even if they have any. I know that some of the
| private waters have number of fish per species limits and assume that
| all or most of the countries do, too. And I believe there's on
| country (Germany comes to mind) where you have to pass a test to get
| your basic license.
|
| Sort of like the difference in the Internet here and 'over there'. In
| many places every byte and bit you download is counted, where in the
| US, as far as I know, we have, at most, number of hour limits until
| you get to some of the specialized ones where people download binaries
| by the ton. My present ISP just went from 200 hours / month for
| dialup users to unlimited. They'd had DSL users unlimited from the
| start. So even though editing posts is merely good manners in the US,
| it's saving money in other countries.
|
| Cyli
| r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels.
| Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless.
|
|
http://www.visi.com/~cyli
| email:
lid (strip the .invalid to email)
That's weird. I practice Catch & Release most of the time.
I can't imagine the idea of being forced to take home fish that I won't eat.
If I am not going to eat it, I want the fish to live.
--
Dave
http://www.claymania.com/removal-trojan-adware.html
http://www.ik-cs.com/got-a-virus.htm