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A friend directed me to a local fishing web site. One of the
discussion pages was about freshwater fishing. I was amazed to see pictures of guys holding up stringers of dead bass like it was still 1954. I don't think I have killed a bass on purpose in over 20 years and I don't think I know anyone who still keeps bass. Do any of you folks eat bass? Dick Durbin |
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"Olebiker" wrote in message
oups.com... A friend directed me to a local fishing web site. One of the discussion pages was about freshwater fishing. I was amazed to see pictures of guys holding up stringers of dead bass like it was still 1954. I don't think I have killed a bass on purpose in over 20 years and I don't think I know anyone who still keeps bass. Do any of you folks eat bass? Dick Durbin When I gut hook a fish in a tournament I'll put it on ice instead of in the livewell. It looses less weight, and the meat stays fresh. It is illegal to throw away dead game in Arizona if you are the one that killed it. Also, if I take a kid fishing I will often keep a small bass that they caught for them to eat if I can't get them onto some big sunfish. Lots of folks eat bass, they just don't talk about it much because the small core of C&R extremists will start pelting them with bibles. (Note I said extremists. Not all C&R anglers are way out there, but enough are.) Personally I don't care for bass. I happen to like sunfish and bluegill, and if I can catch them I much rpefer crappie. Big stringers of dead fish though is a waste. If you want one take one. If you want to take two. If you want more get a job and go to the grocery store. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#3
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On Wed, 30 May 2007 12:55:51 -0700, Olebiker wrote:
A friend directed me to a local fishing web site. One of the discussion pages was about freshwater fishing. I was amazed to see pictures of guys holding up stringers of dead bass like it was still 1954. I don't think I have killed a bass on purpose in over 20 years and I don't think I know anyone who still keeps bass. Do any of you folks eat bass? Dick Durbin Yes. I haven't seen anything identifying them as endangered. Small ones or extremely large ones I release, but otherwise I take them home and eat them. |
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I will eat Bass. We have a lot of Slot lakes in Texas and they encourage us
to take the smaller under the slot bass. I eat a few and take the others and put in a local pond my kid fishes all the time. "Olebiker" wrote in message oups.com... A friend directed me to a local fishing web site. One of the discussion pages was about freshwater fishing. I was amazed to see pictures of guys holding up stringers of dead bass like it was still 1954. I don't think I have killed a bass on purpose in over 20 years and I don't think I know anyone who still keeps bass. Do any of you folks eat bass? Dick Durbin |
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On May 30, 3:55 pm, Olebiker wrote:
A friend directed me to a local fishing web site. One of the discussion pages was about freshwater fishing. I was amazed to see pictures of guys holding up stringers of dead bass like it was still 1954. I don't think I have killed a bass on purpose in over 20 years and I don't think I know anyone who still keeps bass. Do any of you folks eat bass? Dick Durbin I eat bass filets several times a month. I don't keep anything over about 2 pounds and usually keep spots or bass in the in the size on lakes with slot limits that the DNR says should be removed from lakes. I especially like bass 12 to 13 inches long. An acre of water will support a limited number of pounds of bass. Fishermen can remove them or they can die naturally. Here in the south bass reproduce in high enough numbers and grow fast enough that fishermen don't do any damage to the populations - we still have a ten bass daily limit. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
#7
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![]() On May 30, 3:55 pm, Olebiker wrote: A friend directed me to a local fishing web site. One of the discussion pages was about freshwater fishing. I was amazed to see pictures of guys holding up stringers of dead bass like it was still 1954. I don't think I have killed a bass on purpose in over 20 years and I don't think I know anyone who still keeps bass. Do any of you folks eat bass? Dick Durbin No, I don't eat bass and I release everything I catch. Perch, crappie, bluegill, bass, everything goes back into the drink. |
#8
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![]() "Olebiker" wrote in message oups.com... snipDo any of you folks eat bass? Dick Durbin - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I eat bass. Managed harvest is part of the game management strategy of every state game and fish commission. To some extent, it improves the health of the ecosystem. I have no scruples against harvesting game fish and serving them up for the family. I would estimate that 95% of the black bass I catch go back in the water, as do all the northern pike and the occasional musky. I happen to like the taste of bass, especially battered and fried. I fillet a good number of the legal-size walleye, striped bass hybrids, white bass, and striper that come my way, too. The C&R principle is so deeply ingrained in tournament anglers these days that I often watch them release dead bass along with the lives ones after the weigh-in. It seems like a waste (as well as creating a PR perception problem) to see decent-size bass floating away on the surface for the next hour or so. They'll not be wasted, of course; turtles will benefit from the act, certainly. But sometimes I'll take an ice chest with me to a weigh-in and will receive some of the fish that are weighed in dead. I live in a neighborhood with many elderly folks, and they welcome a plastic bag of fresh bass fillets, too. I recall a medium-size lake in Arkansas where the G&F officer requested that tournament participants toss every bass under twelve inches up on the bank to die because the lake was over-populated with stunted largemouth. The forage base was inadequate and the number of bass over three pounds was steadily declining. If more anglers practices Catch & Keep in that case, the lake's ecosystem would have benefited. So, back to the question... killing bass? Yes, I do. I don't give bass any special status. They're right in there with all the cows, hogs, chickens, sheep, deer, doves, rabbits, squirrels, quail, shrimp, crab, lobster, and other fresh- and sal****er fish that show up on the dinner plate and that people kill on my behalf. Add to that all the plants that are killed for me and the animals adversely affected by their harvest, and one could easily make the case that death and destruction are part of my daily diet. That's life.... and death. Joe -- Secret Weapon Lures Tackle systems engineered for innovative anglers --------------------------------------------------------:~ 0"))) Subscribe to our mail list for intel briefings and chances to win free tackle every month at http://secretweaponlures.com --------------------------------------------------- |
#9
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On May 31, 8:14 am, "Joe Haubenreich"
I eat bass. Managed harvest is part of the game management strategy of every state game and fish commission. To some extent, it improves the health of the ecosystem. Joe, Good call on changing the title of the thread. I thought about that last night. I guess what got me about the pictures was the fact that these guys were harvesting four to seven pound fish. That's their breeding stock. Where do they think the next generation of bass is going to come from? As the old folks back in the country used to say, "Don't eat your seed corn." |
#10
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![]() On May 31, 8:14 am, "Joe Haubenreich" I eat bass. Managed harvest is part of the game management strategy of every state game and fish commission. To some extent, it improves the health of the ecosystem. Here in MI (rusting away with the slow decline of the auto industry), we have a keeper size of 14". So, all those 11, 12, and 13" bass I catch have to go back in the water. When I manage to get one of those 18 - 21" beauties, I can keep them under law but it just doesn't seem proper to pull out a bass that size. They grow slowly in northern waters and these survivors deserve a better fate than my deep fryer. With the limitations of the law and some amount of moral responsibility to the breed, I have decided to return them all. I don't know enough about fish management up here to know if a slot limit would even work in MI. |
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