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[email protected] LoogyPicker@gmail.com is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Oct 2007
Posts: 7,892
Default More political cut and paste from Harry..

On Jan 22, 9:40*pm, "D.Duck" wrote:
wrote in message

...
On Jan 22, 2:53 pm, "Sam" wrote:





"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in
messagenews:i1u6p3lhb8bg02vb2t5ep4ge29o99gsf1v@4ax .com...


On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 11:25:51 -0500, Red Herring
wrote:


On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 10:13:10 -0600, Vic Smith
wrote:


On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 20:28:40 -0500, HK wrote:


They're ok eating in the smaller sizes, and they are easy to catch.
For
reasons I don't understand, they seem to fight hard in the colder, New
England salt waters.


Asked my Dad yesterday, and he said he's only seen a couple in all his
Florida fishing years, and never caught one, though he never went
after them either. Agree that the bigger fish aren't as good-tasting,
so I just might not go after them unless I release.
My dad's favorite eating fish is the sand perch. He can still stand
there for an hour filleting them to get a couple pounds of meat, and
he can hardly stand. They do taste good.


I love 'perch fingers'. Fillet's about the size of a half dollar, a
quarter
inch thick, breaded, deep fried. Takes about a hundred, but damn they're
good.


Speckled trout - pan fried in a corn meal batter.


MMMMMMM.......


Blackened Snook, followed closely by blackened Redfish.- Hide quoted
text -


- Show quoted text -


We have a white and black panfish (freshwater crappie) out here we
call calico bass, they can get a pound or better record is like 2 I
think. Anyway, in the fall they are just great panfried. Beautiful
flaky, just like good flounder..

Come to Florida where Crappies (specks down here), 2 ~ 4 pounders are not
hard to find. *Great eating, if fact we have a Crappie cookout planned for
this coming Sunday.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Damned fine little morsels there!