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#21
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On Feb 27, 8:22 pm, Dave LaCourse wrote:
On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 11:38:09 -0800 (PST), Halfordian Golfer wrote: I was just reading about the elevated levels of mercury in the fish caught in some of the most pristine waters in North America. http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/...tml?source=rss I was thinking the average Catch and Release fisherman isn't doing anything to stop this because they simply do not care about eating fish, though the claims of conservation and love of things wild are rampant. I anglers were forced to eat the fish they caught there'd be a lot less apathy, IMO. Sad thing when you can not eat the fish in the last wilderness in this country. Bone How long have you been supporting this catch and kill logic? I've known you for 12 years or so and it hasn't changed. If we started to eat the trout and salmon on my home waters, there would be NO fish except stocked trout to fish for. Catch and release works, Tim. I've seen it with my own eyes - a river came back from almost being empty of brook trout because of meat gatherers, to a place where 5 lb brook trout are caught every week. If you catch them and eat them, there will be nothing but stocked trout. Catch and release does not cause poluted waters - umcaring man does. The reservoir system for Boston has warnings about not eating a certain amount of the fish. THAT water is catch and kill, so your logic has some flaws. Dave THAT water is catch and kill, so your logic has some flaws. You failed to understand my logic. I never blamed pollution on C&R. What I said was that there will be no pressure from C&R anglers to correct this (despite their so called conservation POV) as it doesn't 'affect' them. This is too bad because of the potential lobby if anglers still had fishing to eat fish (as opposed to just counting score) as part of the angling program. Prove me wrong Dave. Write a letter to TU saying the reservoir pollution making it unsafe for pregnant women and children to eat fish is something they need to focus on. Show me the response that says they'll get 'right on it'. Lest you think I'm hyocritical, this is a path I have taken in the past but, there's no interest from anyone I talked to to do anything about it. In fact, I got the feeling they flyfishing community (by and large) was kind of happy with it this way. People aren't eating their hero shots. Halfordian Golfer |
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On Wed, 5 Mar 2008 14:06:21 -0800 (PST), Halfordian Golfer
wrote: Prove me wrong Dave. Write a letter to TU saying the reservoir pollution making it unsafe for pregnant women and children to eat fish is something they need to focus on. Show me the response that says they'll get 'right on it'. There is nothing TU or anyone else can do about it. The fish (bass, pickeral, white perch, laketrout, bullheads, etc) have been contaminated for years. Yet, fishing is still allowed and most people still eat their catch. It is not a place where c & r types would go (generally), but is a meat gatherer's heaven. Catch and release *works*, Tim, as I have illustrated with the Rapid River example. Without c & r, the river would be dead, or worse, stocked with cee-ment pond mutant rainbows, brookies, browns. There are many put and take ponds/streams in this area. Ya wanna eat some Purina fish, have a go at 'em, but leave the native fish alone. Man has ****ed up just about everything he has touched, and without c & r in the Rapid, that too will find its way on the effed up list. BTW, I have taken *many* wild fish, the first person to catch them as witnessed by their reaction, in Russia, Canada, and Alaska. And I released them for someone else to enjoy. Tell me something, Tim: When you go fishing, do you catch a fish, put it in your creel, and continue to fish (assuming it is a 1 fish/day limit)? Or do you release it and wait for a really big one? I saw an old geezer do just that on the Rapid one time a few years ago with a landlocked salmon. He put a skinny 14 incher in his creel and continued to fish. When he caught a 16 incher he was about to "trade in" the dead fish for the "better" one when I told him I would report him to the local warden. The man reluctantly released the 16 incher and moved on to another spot. I followed him for awhile, but I know that when I left him he threw the 14 incher back and kept a better fish. I'm not saying you do the same, Tim, but when you catch a fish and keep it, shouldn't you stop fishing altogether (again, assuming it is a one fish limit). If you continue to fish, are you a hypocrite? Dave |
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On Mar 5, 3:58 pm, Dave LaCourse wrote:
On Wed, 5 Mar 2008 14:06:21 -0800 (PST), Halfordian Golfer wrote: Prove me wrong Dave. Write a letter to TU saying the reservoir pollution making it unsafe for pregnant women and children to eat fish is something they need to focus on. Show me the response that says they'll get 'right on it'. There is nothing TU or anyone else can do about it. The fish (bass, pickeral, white perch, laketrout, bullheads, etc) have been contaminated for years. Yet, fishing is still allowed and most people still eat their catch. It is not a place where c & r types would go (generally), but is a meat gatherer's heaven. Catch and release *works*, Tim, as I have illustrated with the Rapid River example. Without c & r, the river would be dead, or worse, stocked with cee-ment pond mutant rainbows, brookies, browns. There are many put and take ponds/streams in this area. Ya wanna eat some Purina fish, have a go at 'em, but leave the native fish alone. Man has ****ed up just about everything he has touched, and without c & r in the Rapid, that too will find its way on the effed up list. BTW, I have taken *many* wild fish, the first person to catch them as witnessed by their reaction, in Russia, Canada, and Alaska. And I released them for someone else to enjoy. Tell me something, Tim: When you go fishing, do you catch a fish, put it in your creel, and continue to fish (assuming it is a 1 fish/day limit)? Or do you release it and wait for a really big one? I saw an old geezer do just that on the Rapid one time a few years ago with a landlocked salmon. He put a skinny 14 incher in his creel and continued to fish. When he caught a 16 incher he was about to "trade in" the dead fish for the "better" one when I told him I would report him to the local warden. The man reluctantly released the 16 incher and moved on to another spot. I followed him for awhile, but I know that when I left him he threw the 14 incher back and kept a better fish. I'm not saying you do the same, Tim, but when you catch a fish and keep it, shouldn't you stop fishing altogether (again, assuming it is a one fish limit). If you continue to fish, are you a hypocrite? Dave Dave, You asked a crux question: but when you catch a fish and keep it, shouldn't you stop fishing altogether? That is a primary point, but not of this particular thread. There are no "limits" to C&R. We accept more anglers astream for longer periods of time. This directly affects the 'wildness' of the act and profoundly affects the quality. Not just from the other angler presence but the affect that a mass of fishermen have on a fishery. The fish no longer act wild. They become more selective but will sit there a foot downstream from my boots. When you do catch a fish it is often grotesquely disfigured from multiple catchings. Pure C&R release only 'works' if you accept those things as 'working'. I do not. I think it teaches the absolute wrong sporting ethic. We kid ourselves that we 'respect' the wildlife as we revive it from hooking and hauling. We harass a wild animal all day long for sport alone. We stress, maim and kill fish for fun. That's just a 'fact'. You can accept this or not. I think that when we are responsible sportsmen, we do not harass animals for fun and we stress and maim them only as rare accidents that are side-affects of hunting food and existing on the food chain. Way different than killing an animal for fun. Don't you think? So, you take all that "truth" and contrast it with the other truth that there is *never* a management or biological imperative for pure C&R and the whole thing seems silly and wrong. Yes. If the limit is one fish, there is no question about it, you should stop fishing, leave the hole for another and thank the Lord for his generous bounty. Your pal, TBone Guilt replaced the creel. |
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On Mar 4, 4:25 pm, "JT" wrote:
"Ken Fortenberry" wrote in message et... I have caught such fish as Tim describes. And it is pathetic. I consider tailwaters phony fisheries and the stocked fish therein phony fish. Better to let folks eat those things than to release them over and over until they're monstrosities. I'm talking about the San Juan River in New Mexico. I'm not talking about stocked fish, I'm talking about wild trout. Hell, some of the stocked fish I have seen look terrible before they have been caught once. I have no problem with keeping a planter for the fry pan, (and do on occasion) I have a hell of a time killing a wild trout to eat. There is no one and only true fishery management method for all streams everywhere. C&R is good for some streams, selective harvest for others. What we need is a little less dogma and a little more science. I would agree, however the wild freestone C&R streams I fish, I feel C&R is the best means to keep them productive into the future. JT -How you doing with your health these days? Last report was good, hope things are continuing the same. JT - How can a fish that is caught repeatedly by a human possibly be 'wild'? If a fish is born in a raceway that has an automatic feeder and lives completely in the absence of man. With the racoons and bears for it's natural life, and dies in that raceway, is that not a more "wild" fish than any fish that shares the river every day with hundreds of humans? Maybe I'm not sure what the word "wild" means. Sincere question. Thanks, TBone |
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On Wed, 5 Mar 2008 15:36:51 -0800 (PST), Halfordian Golfer
wrote: You asked a crux question: but when you catch a fish and keep it, shouldn't you stop fishing altogether? No. I will continue to fish. I practice good catch and release habits - land the fish quickly, no net unless absolutely necessary and then it is a rubber mesh one, barbless hooks. I have fished dries with the hook cut off. If I feel a good tug when I set the hook, I consider it a catch. That is a primary point, but not of this particular thread. There are no "limits" to C&R. We accept more anglers astream for longer periods of time. This directly affects the 'wildness' of the act and profoundly affects the quality. I'll guarantee you a spot on a beautiful river in Maine where the fish will be as wild as you want. The "quality" of the fish is excellent. Not just from the other angler presence but the affect that a mass of fishermen have on a fishery. The fish no longer act wild. They become more selective but will sit there a foot downstream from my boots. You must be talking the Kiddie Hole at the San Juan. I fished it once and will never fish it again. You are correct that the fish were beat up, but if you come to my rivers, I'll guarantee you a landlocked salmon that will tail walk across a pool and a big brook trout that will defy you landing it. They are just as wild as the fish I've seen in Labrador, Russia and Alaska. AND, they are there because of....... ta daaaaa...... a catch and release policy making killing them illegal. There would not be any of these wonderful brookies left if the State did not step in and stop the slaughter. My two oldest grandsons have caught them, as has my granddaughter. My two youngest grandsons will soon experience these fish. They would not have been able to if the meat gatherers had killed them. When you do catch a fish it is often grotesquely disfigured from multiple catchings. Not on my rivers/lakes. In late season they *may* have some hook marks (and I emphasize "may"), but I have never seen gotesque disfigured fish on these rivers. The San Juan, yes, but not on any Maine river. Pure C&R release only 'works' if you accept those things as 'working'. I do not. Horse puckies! Wipe your mouth, Tim, there's still some horse **** on your lips. d;o) I think it teaches the absolute wrong sporting ethic. We kid ourselves that we 'respect' the wildlife as we revive it from hooking and hauling. We harass a wild animal all day long for sport alone. We stress, maim and kill fish for fun. That's just a 'fact'. You can accept this or not. I think that when we are responsible sportsmen, we do not harass animals for fun and we stress and maim them only as rare accidents that are side-affects of hunting food and existing on the food chain. Way different than killing an animal for fun. Don't you think? So, you take all that "truth" and contrast it with the other truth that there is *never* a management or biological imperative for pure C&R and the whole thing seems silly and wrong. That is your opinion, Tim. It's not mine. I think you are wrong. Yes. If the limit is one fish, there is no question about it, you should stop fishing, leave the hole for another and thank the Lord for his generous bounty. Good. That's the only thing you've said that makes any sense. d;o) Be well. Dave |
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On Wed, 5 Mar 2008 15:40:16 -0800 (PST), Halfordian Golfer
wrote: Maybe I'm not sure what the word "wild" means. buzzer We have a winner in the loges, Doctor. |
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Halfordian Golfer wrote:
How can a fish that is caught repeatedly by a human possibly be 'wild'? If a fish is born in a raceway that has an automatic feeder and lives completely in the absence of man. With the racoons and bears for it's natural life, and dies in that raceway, is that not a more "wild" fish than any fish that shares the river every day with hundreds of humans? Maybe I'm not sure what the word "wild" means. Sincere question. Thanks, TBone Wild as it refers to trout, is generally accepted as meaning streambred fish (I think you know this). The same would apply to other animals. This is to distinguish between wild and animals bred by man. Wild, as I understand it, means the absence of man. Animals with frequent contact with man usually don't act like a wild animal. I agree with you that in heavily fished fisheries, the fish often don't act wild. However, I've seen this on fisheries with slot limits as well as those with C&R regulations. It's the amount of contact with people the fish are forced to deal with and not the fishing regulation that makes the difference. Willi |
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Dave LaCourse wrote:
You must be talking the Kiddie Hole at the San Juan. I fished it once and will never fish it again. You are correct that the fish were beat up, but if you come to my rivers, I'll guarantee you a landlocked salmon that will tail walk across a pool and a big brook trout that will defy you landing it. They are just as wild as the fish I've seen in Labrador, Russia and Alaska. AND, they are there because of....... ta daaaaa...... a catch and release policy making killing them illegal. There would not be any of these wonderful brookies left if the State did not step in and stop the slaughter. My two oldest grandsons have caught them, as has my granddaughter. My two youngest grandsons will soon experience these fish. They would not have been able to if the meat gatherers had killed them. When you do catch a fish it is often grotesquely disfigured from multiple catchings. Not on my rivers/lakes. In late season they *may* have some hook marks (and I emphasize "may"), but I have never seen gotesque disfigured fish on these rivers. The San Juan, yes, but not on any Maine river. The State of Alaska did a study of C&R effect on Rainbows in the Alagnak River Drainage. (I think this is in the area or close to the area of Alaska you fished. It is strict a fly in area. They found that out of the 1900 Rainbows that they captured, 30% had at least one previous hooking scar. This is in the middle of nowhere Alaska! They also found that 58% of fish captured by hook and line experienced at least one new hooking injury (which would lead to a scar or was in a sensitive area). http://www.absc.usgs.gov/research/Fi...nd_release.htm Willi |
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On Wed, 05 Mar 2008 18:51:58 -0700, Willi
wrote: The State of Alaska did a study of C&R effect on Rainbows in the Alagnak River Drainage. (I think this is in the area or close to the area of Alaska you fished. It is strict a fly in area. They found that out of the 1900 Rainbows that they captured, 30% had at least one previous hooking scar. This is in the middle of nowhere Alaska! They also found that 58% of fish captured by hook and line experienced at least one new hooking injury (which would lead to a scar or was in a sensitive area). What's your point, Willi? Yes, c & r trout are going to be caught more than once. But the grotesque samples that Timbo quotes..... well, I have only seen that once and that was the San Juan, and specifically fish caught at the Kiddie pool or in the shallows by it where the fish were feeding on nymphs that were disturbed from the bottom as I waded. I personally have never caught a fish in Alaska, Labrador, or Russia that had any hook marks on it. I have noted very little (if any!) damage to any taken in Maine rivers, Penns Creek, and a couple of the forks of the Salmon River in Idaho. If all the streams containing wild trout (native if you wish) were catch and kill, and everyone practiced it, there would only be cement trout raised in a cement pond with grotesgue body features long before they were introduced into the streams. My boyhood water, The Connecticut Lakes Region of New Hampshire, contained nothing but native brook trout in the river and Back Lake (where we had a camp). That was in the 1940s/50s. Not that long ago, really. We used to catch and kill six trout/person/day. We'd leave with a cooler ful of frozen fish ranging in length from 8 inches to 5 pounds, *all* of them native brook trout. We'd have brook trout as a meal once a week for a long time. Today, there are no more 3 or 5 pound brookies in Back Lake (or damn few), but there are Rainbows (not native). Fish the river and you catch brook trout that have been stocked along with landlocked salmon. I have been back to Back Lake and the Connecticut River on several occasions in the past ten years, but it is nowhere near like it was when I was a kid. There is a "trophy section" of the Connecticut between Lake Francis and First Lake. Big deal! The entire river used to be trophy water. There was a "three pounder club" on Back Lake at Bacon's Camps. Not any more. OTOH, the Rapid, Magalaway, Kennebago, East Outlet of Moosehead, et al ARE just like my boyhood haunts *used* to be..... full of wild (native if you like) brook trout, and salmon that have been in the waters for so many years that they may as well be native. Timbo's world scares the hell out of me. If it was just you, me, Timbo and half a dozen others it would be just fine to kill a trout for lunch. Only trouble, there are more folks fishin' for native trout than there are native trout. Everyone kills one/day and the resource will not last. It didn't last in The Connecticut Lakes Region, and I am sorry for that. My remaining two grandsons *will* see wild brook trout in Maine. Dave |
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Dave LaCourse wrote:
On Wed, 05 Mar 2008 18:51:58 -0700, Willi wrote: The State of Alaska did a study of C&R effect on Rainbows in the Alagnak River Drainage. (I think this is in the area or close to the area of Alaska you fished. It is strict a fly in area. They found that out of the 1900 Rainbows that they captured, 30% had at least one previous hooking scar. This is in the middle of nowhere Alaska! They also found that 58% of fish captured by hook and line experienced at least one new hooking injury (which would lead to a scar or was in a sensitive area). What's your point, Willi? Yes, c & r trout are going to be caught more than once. But the grotesque samples that Timbo quotes..... well, I have only seen that once and that was the San Juan, and specifically fish caught at the Kiddie pool or in the shallows by it where the fish were feeding on nymphs that were disturbed from the bottom as I waded. I personally have never caught a fish in Alaska, that had any hook marks on it. Then I say you didn't look close enough! The State of Alaska found that 30% of those they captured had hook scars (and this in a river that has to be reached by float plane). Look at the article. I guess my point is that C&R does have impact on a fishery. It's just a tool for fishery management. It's not evil but it's also not THE answer. Willi |
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