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On Wed, 27 May 2009 17:08:10 -0700, "Calif Bill"
wrote: http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/...halesstealfish Last week there was a show on Discovery about cod fishing in the Bering Sea and that was one of the issues for the fishermen - when the whales show up, they have to pull in the long lines and leave because they will lose half their catch to the whales. |
#3
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On Thu, 28 May 2009 07:57:33 -0400, Wizard of Woodstock
wrote: Last week there was a show on Discovery about cod fishing in the Bering Sea and that was one of the issues for the fishermen - when the whales show up, they have to pull in the long lines and leave because they will lose half their catch to the whales. Longliners go for large fish. They put out fifty miles of line with a hook every two hundred feet. You put it out and haul it back once a day. Swordfish and tuna are longlined. Maybe halibut. Not cod, which are netted. They would find cod suitable for bait. As for whales, the sonar they have will pick them up miles away. They can sit there and watch while the whales clean the longline. Casady |
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Richard Casady wrote:
On Thu, 28 May 2009 07:57:33 -0400, Wizard of Woodstock wrote: Last week there was a show on Discovery about cod fishing in the Bering Sea and that was one of the issues for the fishermen - when the whales show up, they have to pull in the long lines and leave because they will lose half their catch to the whales. Longliners go for large fish. They put out fifty miles of line with a hook every two hundred feet. You put it out and haul it back once a day. Swordfish and tuna are longlined. Maybe halibut. Not cod, which are netted. They would find cod suitable for bait. As for whales, the sonar they have will pick them up miles away. They can sit there and watch while the whales clean the longline. Casady What about sharks? They must view the fish caught on long lines as a chow line. I wonder how often when pulling in those lines, the fishermen encounter a large shark caught on the line and maybe really mad. |
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On Thu, 28 May 2009 11:48:42 -0400, HK wrote:
What about sharks? They must view the fish caught on long lines as a chow line. I wonder how often when pulling in those lines, the fishermen encounter a large shark caught on the line and maybe really mad. They all carry a shotgun just for that. No live sharks on board. Some sharks are commercial fish, of course. Casady |
#6
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On May 28, 12:36*pm, Richard Casady
wrote: On Thu, 28 May 2009 11:48:42 -0400, HK wrote: What about sharks? They must view the fish caught on long lines as a chow line. I wonder how often when pulling in those lines, the fishermen encounter a large shark caught on the line and maybe really mad. They all carry a shotgun just for that. No live sharks on board. Some sharks are commercial fish, of course. Casady Have you watched the show on Discovery where the Aussies go out in the ocean and set up these huge holding pens for Tuna that they are catching with other boats? Amazing! Great Whites break into the nets to get to the fish, and divers go down to get the Great White out and repair the nets! |
#7
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On Thu, 28 May 09, 11:48-0400, HK wrote:
What about sharks? They must view the fish caught on long lines as a chow line. I wonder how often when pulling in those lines, the fishermen encounter a large shark caught on the line and maybe really mad. Many of the sharks I've encountered leave the fish's head on the hook. And when they do eat the whole fish, they simultaneously bite through the line like a hot knife through butter. All the shark fishing rigs I know of use a long length of steel leader. Is steel what a long line is made of?? Rick |
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#9
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On Thu, 28 May 2009 10:31:03 -0500, Richard Casady
wrote: On Thu, 28 May 2009 07:57:33 -0400, Wizard of Woodstock wrote: Last week there was a show on Discovery about cod fishing in the Bering Sea and that was one of the issues for the fishermen - when the whales show up, they have to pull in the long lines and leave because they will lose half their catch to the whales. Longliners go for large fish. They put out fifty miles of line with a hook every two hundred feet. You put it out and haul it back once a day. Swordfish and tuna are longlined. Maybe halibut. Not cod, which are netted. They would find cod suitable for bait. As for whales, the sonar they have will pick them up miles away. They can sit there and watch while the whales clean the longline. Fishermen lay out long sets of lines across the ocean floor. These sets are made up of skates, long lines with baited hooks attached to them. These sets can run nearly 3 miles in length and hold as many as 4000 or more hooks http://www.fishex.com/seafood/black-cod/black-cod.html |
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