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#1
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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i'm curious what gear and methods and such you use for fishing on your
cruising boat, and also for shrimping, crabbing, collecting clams, etc, basically getting dinner on the table! i've been reading some about it and am just curious what you all do on your own boats, how much success you have, etc. do you routinely catch fish ? what kind ? what's your secret ? do you ever catch squid ? and i apologize that i keep starting so many discussion threads recently, but i'm really curious. lol. and it's interesting to hear what you are all doing on your boats. here are a few articles i found online on this subject ... http://www.sailnet.com/collections/a...eid=matthe1012 http://www.sailnet.com/collections/a...leid=suelar007 http://www.sailnet.com/sailing/96/tecjul96.htm http://www.sailnet.com/collections/c...eid=sailne0842 all of those are sailnet articles, just worked out that way! |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Get a copy of The Cruisers Handbook of Fishing by Scott Bannerot.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/007...Fencoding=UTF8 This is the best book I've ever seen on the subject, and will answer all your questions. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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See current issue of Cruising World mag, which has article on fishing
while underway. MW |
#4
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purple_stars wrote:
i'm curious what gear and methods and such you use for fishing on your cruising boat, and also for shrimping, crabbing, collecting clams, etc, basically getting dinner on the table! i've been reading some about it and am just curious what you all do on your own boats, how much success you have, etc. do you routinely catch fish ? what kind ? what's your secret ? do you ever catch squid ? and i apologize that i keep starting so many discussion threads recently, but i'm really curious. lol. and it's interesting to hear what you are all doing on your boats. here are a few articles i found online on this subject ... http://www.sailnet.com/collections/a...eid=matthe1012 http://www.sailnet.com/collections/a...leid=suelar007 http://www.sailnet.com/sailing/96/tecjul96.htm http://www.sailnet.com/collections/c...eid=sailne0842 all of those are sailnet articles, just worked out that way! We've used the following: - spearfishing in Mexico and the Caribbean - dragging a "meat line" - 200# test monofilament with a wire leader + tuna feather when offshore - crabbing in B.C. - lots of donations from commercial fisherman - trading/buying from local fisherman - harvesting mussels/oysters in B.C. - going for prawns in BC is a bit more work because they like waters 400' deep We eat well ![]() Evan Gatehouse |
#5
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Evan Gatehouse wrote:
[snip] We've used the following: - spearfishing in Mexico and the Caribbean - dragging a "meat line" - 200# test monofilament with a wire leader + tuna feather when offshore - crabbing in B.C. - lots of donations from commercial fisherman - trading/buying from local fisherman - harvesting mussels/oysters in B.C. - going for prawns in BC is a bit more work because they like waters 400' deep We eat well ![]() Evan Gatehouse thanks everyone for the book and magazine suggestions, i'll check into it. evan, how successful are you when you drag the line, i'm curious about it. i mean, do you get a fish a week doing that, one a day, one an hour, how does it work out most of the time ? can you dependably catch something to eat ? what size/type of a fish do you typically catch on a drag line like this ? i'd like to try spearfishing. i have some material i read about it but i've never done it. i have all the gear though, except for the actual speargun. i am not a very good free diver because i haven't really worked out the whole ear equalization thing yet, but i've gone to the pool a few times with my mask and snorkle and things and tried to get past it. i recently got a weight belt too and have been learning to use it. i only recently learned to "pre-equalize" by pushing air into my ears before i dive and that has helped me a lot. i don't know why i have so much trouble with it, but i do, it's embarrassing really! i have trouble getting past about 10 feet, but even 10 foot depths are better than before. before i learned what little equalization i can do now i couldn't get past about 6 feet without my eardrums feeling like they were going to explode. anyway, my little equalization trouble aside, once i get past that i'd really like to do some freediving and spearfishing. i understand that some people even do this in the deep blue water fishing for things like yellowfin tuna, giant monster sized fishes, but even if i was able i don't know that i'd ever try that .. it's the monster sized white sharks that go along with them that worry me! but i'd definitely spearfish along a reef. i've never harvested oysters/mussels before. it sounds like you just wait until low tide, walk out to where they are, and pry them off the rocks. is that how you do it, or do you have some other method for collecting them ? are they hard to find ? |
#6
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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![]() purple_stars wrote: i'd like to try spearfishing. i have some material i read about it but i've never done it. i have all the gear though, except for the actual speargun. i am not a very good free diver because i haven't really worked out the whole ear equalization thing yet, but i've gone to the pool a few times with my mask and snorkle and things and tried to get past it. i recently got a weight belt too and have been learning to use it. i only recently learned to "pre-equalize" by pushing air into my ears before i dive and that has helped me a lot. i don't know why i have so much trouble with it, but i do, it's embarrassing really! i have trouble getting past about 10 feet, but even 10 foot depths are better than before. before i learned what little equalization i can do now i couldn't get past about 6 feet without my eardrums feeling like they were going to explode. Be very careful about equalization. If your ears hurt do _not_ force it by going lower... or higher ... until you can equalize the pressure. Google "barotrauma" and learn about how you can damage your ears with overpressure. As I write this I can hear the constant squeal of tinnitus which never goes away. It is due to an aborted scuba dive in about 12' of water-- and I was lucky. AT least I can still hear. Don W. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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![]() evan, how successful are you when you drag the line, i'm curious about it. i mean, do you get a fish a week doing that, one a day, one an hour, how does it work out most of the time ? can you dependably catch something to eat ? what size/type of a fish do you typically catch on a drag line like this ? I'd say 1-2 fish a week is pretty typical. Varies tremendously with the area we were in. Fish size is proportional to lure size. If you drag a 12" lure, you're going for something too big! Something about 4" long worked well, catching say 10 lb fish like Dorado, tuna, etc. i'd like to try spearfishing. i have some material i read about it but i've never done it. i have all the gear though, except for the actual speargun. i am not a very good free diver because i haven't really worked out the whole ear equalization thing yet, but i've gone to the pool a few times with my mask and snorkle and things and tried to get past it. (a) lots of practice during cruising makes perfect. I got so that I could go down to 30' and just slowly cruise around for about a minute. 45' was the most I went down. Good long fins help enormously. THey rocket you downward. (b) equalize lots as you decend. If you wait too long, it gets hard/impossible. Equalize more in the first 15' or so. (like 2-3 times) aside, once i get past that i'd really like to do some freediving and spearfishing. i understand that some people even do this in the deep blue water fishing for things like yellowfin tuna, giant monster sized fishes, but even if i was able i don't know that i'd ever try that .. Yeah, I don't get that. I spearfish for food so a typical little 2-3 lb reef fish for supper is perfect for me. i've never harvested oysters/mussels before. it sounds like you just wait until low tide, walk out to where they are, and pry them off the rocks. is that how you do it, or do you have some other method for collecting them ? are they hard to find ? Yes, in short. Mussels like vertical pilings too but I wouldn't pick them in a harbour. These are cold water creatures so you won't find them in the tropics. Evan Gatehouse |
#8
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Equalization is keeping the air in your middle ear at about the
same pressure/volume as the other air inside you and the water around you. As you go deeper, you will need to 'pump' minimal amounts of air into your middle ear by the process you describe as pre-equalizing. Keep doing it while going down as soon as your ears tell you to. Pre-equalizing all at once for a deeper skin dive would hurt quite a bit. On the way up, the extra air expands and needs to get out of your middle ear. It usually goes all by itself, you just feel a slight pressure and kear a slight clicking noise. If you feel pain on the way up, try going back down a bit or to at least stay level, and swallow several times, yawn, or wiggle your jaw to help the air out. If you still experience problems after a bit of practice, you can try hot Thai food, decongestants, or an ENT specialist. Don't force it, a small congestion in the Eustachian tube can easily be stronger than an eardrum. |
#9
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![]() "Evan Gatehouse" wrote in message ... - going for prawns in BC is a bit more work because they like waters 400' deep We eat well ![]() Evan Gatehouse The coonstripe (dock) shrimp are smaller but tastier (IMHO) than the deep water spot shrimp and can be had much shallower. The problem I see is hauling the pots around around. They take up a lot of room. Dungeness crab, on the other hand, can be scooped up with a fish net in shallow waters. Gordon |
#10
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Gordon wrote:
"Evan Gatehouse" wrote in message ... - going for prawns in BC is a bit more work because they like waters 400' deep We eat well ![]() Evan Gatehouse The coonstripe (dock) shrimp are smaller but tastier (IMHO) than the deep water spot shrimp and can be had much shallower. The problem I see is hauling the pots around around. They take up a lot of room. Dungeness crab, on the other hand, can be scooped up with a fish net in shallow waters. Gordon We go to a place in the Gulf Islands that are teeming with giant red rock crab. These are some of the biggest rock crab that I have seen. Kids we take sailing go wading in waist deep water and catch a dozen in 1/2 an hour. The red rock crab has a very sturdy shell compared to the Dungeness and isn't really commercially caught, but they are super tasty. Collapsible crab traps aint' that big. Be sure to get a round one. Evan Gatehouse |
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