Shark Fishing - Catch and Release?
On Thu, 05 Jan 2006 19:58:20 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing
wrote:
On Thu, 05 Jan 2006 13:51:10 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote:
"Reggie Smithers" wrote in message
...
Using Circular Hooks is becoming popular as a way to improve the odds of
fish surviving when released.
With the spread of Shark Fishing Tournaments (as seen on a new reality TV
show) how do people improve the odds of a Shark surviving a catch and
release. I know some people just cut the leader, but that seems like it
impacts on the fish's ability to hunt and opens the fish to infection by
having a wound that will not heal.
Does the hook and leader rust or is the fish destined to carry around a
hook and leader for ever? Is it just me or do some aspects of fishing
seem pretty brutal and barbaric?
I was speaking with a NY DEC biologist about a month ago. He said he'd just
been to a seminar on the results of catch & release, where one discussion
focused on the results of catch & release. It may not be the panacea it was
made out to be. Fish apparently build up huge amounts of lactic acid in
their muscles as they're being caught, and they may not recover from the
experience. The fact that a fish swims away is no indication of future
survival, because in many cases, the fisherman is a moron who picks up the
fish around the mouth and gills, thereby damaging the gills. Removal of
lactic acid from the bloodstream requires efficient breathing, which can't
happen when the gills are damaged. And, even a minute out of the water for a
photograph is enough to cause trouble.
i am typing with one finger - i wish i could enter this discussion.
i will say this - shark tourneys are an abomination and should be
banned unless they are in-water tag and release similar to xtreme
billfishing tourneys.
as to catch/release, it is almost never done properly hook set and
retrieval is never done properly and while it sounds good c/r hurts
more fish than it saves. it is really the fault of the quote pros end
quote who can't properly handle a fish and dont care.
the operation went well, i am very tired and can't do much. i was
tired of sitting around tv sucks and i netflix is slower than
molasses. i have to do everything left handed.
maybe in a month i can return and beat everyone up. smile. even
typing this is exhausting.
later
tom
Glad to have you back, even if we can only read half of what you intend to say!
--
John H.
"Divide each difficulty into as many parts as is feasible and necessary to resolve it."
Rene Descartes
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