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#1
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Rodney posted a picture entitled For you C&R Guys he took of a very
expensive metal sign designed to last multiple years and/or be moved around from lake to lake on alt binaries pictures fish that he said had been posted on three Alabama lakes that read: The "catch and release" policy is potentially harmful due to bass overcrowding. "Bass removal is necessary" to improve the potential yield of this lake. STATE CREEL LIMITS APPLY In the July issue of Fish Alaska on page 46 the writer Pudge Kleinkauf wrote "Catch & Release Rainbows get big in the Mat-Su Valley at three Treasured Lakes". What's going on here? How can C&R be a failure in one state and wonderful in another? Is there a difference between the species or the water bodies or is the difference between the two state's employees? What are the facts here? In the Alaska article the free-lance author who said she had not fished either lake spoke to three guys and a biologist who had fished the lakes. Alaska stocks these lakes with fingerlings once every 5 years and does not measure mortality, growth or track any fisherman response due to lack of budget funding! The Alabama sign uses the weasel word "Potential" twice in the sign itself which means they do not know what is going on! OK what's the conclusion? In Alaska 1/2 the population is near Anchorage. Local lakes have long ago been fished out and voters whined about stocking which the F&G did but others whined about tiny fish so F&G set aside three hard to get to lakes for C&R without any study, justification or follow-up. My guess is the Alabama lakes are NOT stocked but are out of balance for some reason and F&G is guessing that catch and kill is the quick fix without any meaningful study or research. IMHO these are two great examples of state F&G incompetence and mismanagement of our fisheries. These F&G politicians manage our fisheries to maximize their salaries and minimize our votes. They need to be watched, monitored and told to spend our tax money to optimize fisheries science for the betterment of us all. Go to their meetings, write them and stand up to them and I'll do the same. Good luck! John |
#2
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I fish in a small secluded lake. I pretty much have it to myself. When I
first discovered it bass were plentiful but small, most were no larger than 1.5 lbs. . A strike was to be had on nearly every cast. There were few small bait fish in the lake and my guess is that they were consumed by the numerous bass as fast as they were spawned. I began keeping a few bass on every trip for the pan. A year later the bass were notably larger and still plentiful but not in the same numbers. Every third cast would produce a strike. Again I kept a few for the pan and by the third year of fishing the same lake I was catching a fair number of 3 lb bass with an occasional 5 pounder. After 5 years, presently, larger fish are common though my total count is down. Small bait fish are frequently visible in the shallows. That lake was simply over crowded with fish and keeping a few of the smaller ones was beneficial. I always did release the larger fish. I am not a biologist but applied common since to the situation and I believe it paid off. This lake is only about 150 feet wide and 1/3 mile long located behind a diversion dam in an overgrown jungle. C&R is beneficial if fish size is considered. Keep the small and always release the big mature producers. If you catch an abundance of small fish it might be wise to keep a few for dinner. Ken "bassrecord" wrote in message ... Rodney posted a picture entitled For you C&R Guys he took of a very expensive metal sign designed to last multiple years and/or be moved around from lake to lake on alt binaries pictures fish that he said had been posted on three Alabama lakes that read: The "catch and release" policy is potentially harmful due to bass overcrowding. "Bass removal is necessary" to improve the potential yield of this lake. STATE CREEL LIMITS APPLY In the July issue of Fish Alaska on page 46 the writer Pudge Kleinkauf wrote "Catch & Release Rainbows get big in the Mat-Su Valley at three Treasured Lakes". What's going on here? How can C&R be a failure in one state and wonderful in another? Is there a difference between the species or the water bodies or is the difference between the two state's employees? What are the facts here? In the Alaska article the free-lance author who said she had not fished either lake spoke to three guys and a biologist who had fished the lakes. Alaska stocks these lakes with fingerlings once every 5 years and does not measure mortality, growth or track any fisherman response due to lack of budget funding! The Alabama sign uses the weasel word "Potential" twice in the sign itself which means they do not know what is going on! OK what's the conclusion? In Alaska 1/2 the population is near Anchorage. Local lakes have long ago been fished out and voters whined about stocking which the F&G did but others whined about tiny fish so F&G set aside three hard to get to lakes for C&R without any study, justification or follow-up. My guess is the Alabama lakes are NOT stocked but are out of balance for some reason and F&G is guessing that catch and kill is the quick fix without any meaningful study or research. IMHO these are two great examples of state F&G incompetence and mismanagement of our fisheries. These F&G politicians manage our fisheries to maximize their salaries and minimize our votes. They need to be watched, monitored and told to spend our tax money to optimize fisheries science for the betterment of us all. Go to their meetings, write them and stand up to them and I'll do the same. Good luck! John |
#3
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It's very simple John, allow me to explain.
In an ideally balanced habitat (ecosystem) all the environmental factors are in check, working perfectly, & populations sustain themselves for long periods of time. A balanced food chain is a beautiful thing. Unfortunately, perfectly balanced ecosystems are few & far between. Signs promoting the capture & harvest of bass are placed in places where the bass population has grown way out of balance. This happens alot in relatively "new" & private waters. You'll have near-ideal conditions for a few years. Forage will be abundant & bass spawns will be heavy & successful. The original bass will grow big & robust. But as the bass population grows the forage declines for a number of reasons, resulting in a water full of slow-growing, undersize, hungry bass & a strong shortage of food for them to eat. Sadly though, in most cases even efforts like the one you mention to support harvest of these small bass don't succeed in reviving the waterway, because generally the root of the problem is at some other level in the food chain or some other factor (environmental, habitat, etc), not with the top-predator (bass). As for Catch-and-Release, on healthy waters its an invaluable tool for sustaining quality bass fishing. Warren "bassrecord" wrote in message ... Rodney posted a picture entitled For you C&R Guys he took of a very expensive metal sign designed to last multiple years and/or be moved around from lake to lake on alt binaries pictures fish that he said had been posted on three Alabama lakes that read: The "catch and release" policy is potentially harmful due to bass overcrowding. "Bass removal is necessary" to improve the potential yield of this lake. STATE CREEL LIMITS APPLY In the July issue of Fish Alaska on page 46 the writer Pudge Kleinkauf wrote "Catch & Release Rainbows get big in the Mat-Su Valley at three Treasured Lakes". What's going on here? How can C&R be a failure in one state and wonderful in another? Is there a difference between the species or the water bodies or is the difference between the two state's employees? What are the facts here? In the Alaska article the free-lance author who said she had not fished either lake spoke to three guys and a biologist who had fished the lakes. Alaska stocks these lakes with fingerlings once every 5 years and does not measure mortality, growth or track any fisherman response due to lack of budget funding! The Alabama sign uses the weasel word "Potential" twice in the sign itself which means they do not know what is going on! OK what's the conclusion? In Alaska 1/2 the population is near Anchorage. Local lakes have long ago been fished out and voters whined about stocking which the F&G did but others whined about tiny fish so F&G set aside three hard to get to lakes for C&R without any study, justification or follow-up. My guess is the Alabama lakes are NOT stocked but are out of balance for some reason and F&G is guessing that catch and kill is the quick fix without any meaningful study or research. IMHO these are two great examples of state F&G incompetence and mismanagement of our fisheries. These F&G politicians manage our fisheries to maximize their salaries and minimize our votes. They need to be watched, monitored and told to spend our tax money to optimize fisheries science for the betterment of us all. Go to their meetings, write them and stand up to them and I'll do the same. Good luck! John |
#4
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IMHO these are two great examples of state F&G incompetence
You are comparing trout in Alaska and bass in Alabama and calling state Game and Fish folks incompetent? Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
#5
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As much as I hate to give the French any credit there is one area they could
teach USA a few things. In this country we fish and hunt for the biggest and best of the stock. We eliminate the superior of the specie. I traveled to new Caledonia a few years ago and learned that there, under French law, the mature and adapted superior of the game species are protected even in their vast ocean resource. The results are a great experience to observe. I dove their reefs and was astounded at the numbers and size of all species present. Every coral head had it's resident 400 pound grouper, giant spiny lobster and the surrounding sea was overflowing with other large fish. They protect the mature of the specie believing that they are the fittest which have survived disease and predation. The Mature of the specie are the producers of quality stock and from what I saw the French are way beyond us in game management. The only allow harvesting of juvenile of the specie, leaving the fittest to reproduce. Ken "bassrecord" wrote in message ... Rodney posted a picture entitled For you C&R Guys he took of a very expensive metal sign designed to last multiple years and/or be moved around from lake to lake on alt binaries pictures fish that he said had been posted on three Alabama lakes that read: The "catch and release" policy is potentially harmful due to bass overcrowding. "Bass removal is necessary" to improve the potential yield of this lake. STATE CREEL LIMITS APPLY In the July issue of Fish Alaska on page 46 the writer Pudge Kleinkauf wrote "Catch & Release Rainbows get big in the Mat-Su Valley at three Treasured Lakes". What's going on here? How can C&R be a failure in one state and wonderful in another? Is there a difference between the species or the water bodies or is the difference between the two state's employees? What are the facts here? In the Alaska article the free-lance author who said she had not fished either lake spoke to three guys and a biologist who had fished the lakes. Alaska stocks these lakes with fingerlings once every 5 years and does not measure mortality, growth or track any fisherman response due to lack of budget funding! The Alabama sign uses the weasel word "Potential" twice in the sign itself which means they do not know what is going on! OK what's the conclusion? In Alaska 1/2 the population is near Anchorage. Local lakes have long ago been fished out and voters whined about stocking which the F&G did but others whined about tiny fish so F&G set aside three hard to get to lakes for C&R without any study, justification or follow-up. My guess is the Alabama lakes are NOT stocked but are out of balance for some reason and F&G is guessing that catch and kill is the quick fix without any meaningful study or research. IMHO these are two great examples of state F&G incompetence and mismanagement of our fisheries. These F&G politicians manage our fisheries to maximize their salaries and minimize our votes. They need to be watched, monitored and told to spend our tax money to optimize fisheries science for the betterment of us all. Go to their meetings, write them and stand up to them and I'll do the same. Good luck! John |
#6
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![]() "go-bassn" wrote in message ... It's very simple John, allow me to explain. In an ideally balanced habitat (ecosystem) all the environmental factors are in check, working perfectly, & populations sustain themselves for long periods of time. A balanced food chain is a beautiful thing. Hey Warren, let me embark on a little side trip. I fish a natural pond of 4 or 5 acres. There is a decent population of bass, which are reasonably proportioned and grow to a reasonable size for western NY. But the majority of the pike that I've seen are not only small (most run from 16-20", with a few larger), but significantly skinnier than average. Can you speculate what might be going on in that water to allow for normal bass but skinny pike? For what it's worth, I catch maybe 7-10 bass per pike. |
#7
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IMKen said:
snipped for brevity ...... and from what I saw the French are way beyond us in game management. The only allow harvesting of juvenile of the specie, leaving the fittest to reproduce. Yes we call that type of fishery management technique "slot limit." Would you implement that technique in North America to the exclusion of all else with or without scientific study to support it? From what you described it is not clear that French fishery bureaucrats are smarter managers than North American fishery bureaucrats. But it is clear that they are good businessmen. By keeping divers from killing the big fish, divers come from all over the world to see and photograph the big fish. g. Who will pay big francs to see tiny underwater fish? But seriously you made my point another way. C&R - Only, C&K - Only, Slot limits, Posted - No Fishing, etc. should be used on specific water bodies for specified purposes based upon research and with public participation. "One size fits all" is not the best IMHO. Neither is "Squeaky wheel gets the grease" always the best way to go. John |
#8
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![]() "Marty" wrote in messageSNIP Hey Warren, let me embark on a little side trip. I fish a natural pond of 4 or 5 acres. There is a decent population of bass, which are reasonably proportioned and grow to a reasonable size for western NY. But the majority of the pike that I've seen are not only small (most run from 16-20", with a few larger), but significantly skinnier than average. Can you speculate what might be going on in that water to allow for normal bass but skinny pike? For what it's worth, I catch maybe 7-10 bass per pike. Marty, Are you 100% certain that the esox critters you're catching are pike and not pickerel? Muskellunge, Northern Pike and several sub-species of Pickerel are all members of the family Esox. They all look similar, muskies are the largest, northern pike run second and pickerel rarely get larger than what you describe. -- Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
#9
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On Sun, 4 Jul 2004 07:01:50 -0500, "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers"
wrote: "Marty" wrote in messageSNIP Hey Warren, let me embark on a little side trip. I fish a natural pond of 4 or 5 acres. There is a decent population of bass, which are reasonably proportioned and grow to a reasonable size for western NY. But the majority of the pike that I've seen are not only small (most run from 16-20", with a few larger), but significantly skinnier than average. Can you speculate what might be going on in that water to allow for normal bass but skinny pike? For what it's worth, I catch maybe 7-10 bass per pike. Marty, Are you 100% certain that the esox critters you're catching are pike and not pickerel? Muskellunge, Northern Pike and several sub-species of Pickerel are all members of the family Esox. They all look similar, muskies are the largest, northern pike run second and pickerel rarely get larger than what you describe. Pickerel was the first thing to come to my mind also, especially in a pond of that size. Harry J aka Thundercat Brooklyn Bill's Tackle Shop Fishing Team http://www.geocities.com/brooklynbill2003/products.html Share the knowledge, compete on execution. |
#10
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Trying to be properly sensitive and Politically Correct, is it not possible
that the "Pike" are simply oppressed and depressed due to being repressed by the Right? An independent posting by Citizen Bob "Marty" wrote in message ... "go-bassn" wrote in message ... It's very simple John, allow me to explain. In an ideally balanced habitat (ecosystem) all the environmental factors are in check, working perfectly, & populations sustain themselves for long periods of time. A balanced food chain is a beautiful thing. Hey Warren, let me embark on a little side trip. I fish a natural pond of 4 or 5 acres. There is a decent population of bass, which are reasonably proportioned and grow to a reasonable size for western NY. But the majority of the pike that I've seen are not only small (most run from 16-20", with a few larger), but significantly skinnier than average. Can you speculate what might be going on in that water to allow for normal bass but skinny pike? For what it's worth, I catch maybe 7-10 bass per pike. |
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