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#1
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Hi everyone. I wanted to get some of your opinions on an artical I just read
in In-Fisherman magazine. It was a short column called "Do Tournament-Released Bass Go Home?" Basicly, It cited a study which showed that very few of bass caught and released in tournaments actually return to the areas of the lake or river where thay were caught. It mentioned that bass should be dispersed when released so they would not be concentrated, but the author hypothesizes that many of these fish would wander around homless, catch less prey, and grow slowly. The most interesting part to me was the idea of a catch-and-immeadiate-release tournament. Interesting because the variety of ways such a tournament could be conducted. What are your thoughts on the subject? How bad off do you think tournament caught bass really are when they are released? -Zimmy |
#2
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That's a tough question! Without a verified study, it is left to a lot
of conjecture....how big is the lake?...what time of the year?....and probably a dozen other questions. Catch and release on site might be the optimum answer, but that would entail a lot of additional rules and checks...maybe the major tourneys could deal with that, but think of all the thousands of local tourneys, and what they would be faced with. I don't believe there has been any study that qualifys as "valid" that shows any real harm is beng done to the bass population by the present release critieria. jmo JK |
#3
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Zimmy- In response to your question on tournament bass being well off when
released. I dont fish tournaments. However with the woman in the canoe. (With frying pan). If it fits in said pan, I'm going to say he's better off dealing with you guys Indian. |
#4
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Lol Zimmy, isn't your whole query based on the assumption that the fish were
better off where they were caught? Without drawing it out, my view is that most released bass go on to live healthy, productive lives. A tournament without a weigh-in is like a horse race without the home-stretch. Warren -- http://www.warrenwolk.com/ "G. M. Zimmermann" wrote in message ... Hi everyone. I wanted to get some of your opinions on an artical I just read in In-Fisherman magazine. It was a short column called "Do Tournament-Released Bass Go Home?" Basicly, It cited a study which showed that very few of bass caught and released in tournaments actually return to the areas of the lake or river where thay were caught. It mentioned that bass should be dispersed when released so they would not be concentrated, but the author hypothesizes that many of these fish would wander around homless, catch less prey, and grow slowly. The most interesting part to me was the idea of a catch-and-immeadiate-release tournament. Interesting because the variety of ways such a tournament could be conducted. What are your thoughts on the subject? How bad off do you think tournament caught bass really are when they are released? -Zimmy |
#5
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................The super bowl ending in a tie
"go-bassn" wrote in message ... Lol Zimmy, isn't your whole query based on the assumption that the fish were better off where they were caught? Without drawing it out, my view is that most released bass go on to live healthy, productive lives. A tournament without a weigh-in is like a horse race without the home-stretch. Warren -- http://www.warrenwolk.com/ "G. M. Zimmermann" wrote in message ... Hi everyone. I wanted to get some of your opinions on an artical I just read in In-Fisherman magazine. It was a short column called "Do Tournament-Released Bass Go Home?" Basicly, It cited a study which showed that very few of bass caught and released in tournaments actually return to the areas of the lake or river where thay were caught. It mentioned that bass should be dispersed when released so they would not be concentrated, but the author hypothesizes that many of these fish would wander around homless, catch less prey, and grow slowly. The most interesting part to me was the idea of a catch-and-immeadiate-release tournament. Interesting because the variety of ways such a tournament could be conducted. What are your thoughts on the subject? How bad off do you think tournament caught bass really are when they are released? -Zimmy |
#6
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Without drawing it out, my view is that most released bass go on to live
healthy, productive lives. I don`t know about tournament fishing with catch and release. Do they go home?? I know in a local lake by me that I have caught the same bass twice. It had a scarred over eye with another scar right by the eye. A couple of friends of mine who also fish the same lake said they also have caught that bass. They also are catch and release fisherpeople. So for 3 or 4 people to catch and release the same fish seems to me that the fish do fine. Dan. |
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