Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 17, 1:43*pm, "Calif Bill" wrote:
"H the K" wrote in messagenews:kL2dnTfQh8IeAf3XnZ2dnUVZ_sidnZ2d@earth link.com... Frogwatch wrote: On Jul 17, 10:25 am, Richard Casady wrote: On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 06:12:56 -0500, thunder wrote: On Wed, 15 Jul 2009 21:37:20 -0700, Tim wrote: Could they become a new fresh water plague? Not that I would suggest tampering with an ecosystem, but Zebra Mussels are not without some positive aspects. *Their filtering capabilities can improve water quality and clarity. *There are reports of areas where the smallmouth, perch, and even salmon fishing has improved after Zebra Mussel infestations. http://seapics.com/feature-subject/m.../zebra-mussel- pictures.html What eats them? So many acres of sunlit water will produce x tons of plants which will support y tons of animals. It is looking like, some places, all the animals will be mussels, and no fish whatever. Casady From Wiki: "In terms of reproduction, zebra mussels are among the most prolific of all animals. An adult female Zebra mussel may produce between 30,000 and 1 million[3] eggs per year. Spawning usually begins in the months from late spring to early summer by free-swimming larvae (veligers)." So, why not take advantage of this source of protein by harvesting them or even growing them. *Take them off whatever they grow on, grind em up and use the result in animal feed. Or serve them as a delicacy in really crappy rednecky restaurants? With barbecue sauce, of course. Sounds more like fodder you would get in a Yuppie, upscale diner. They aint empty, they got critters in em when alive. The wave washes em in, and then they real quickly bury themselves in the sand. You take a collander and find a patch of em and sieve em out till you get about a gallon of em. I'd have to look up a recipe cuz I have not done it as an adult. As kids, we tried to eat just about everyhting we found in the water including sea urchins, (yuk). |
#2
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Frogwatch wrote:
On Jul 17, 1:43 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote: "H the K" wrote in messagenews:kL2dnTfQh8IeAf3XnZ2dnUVZ_sidnZ2d@earth link.com... Frogwatch wrote: On Jul 17, 10:25 am, Richard Casady wrote: On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 06:12:56 -0500, thunder wrote: On Wed, 15 Jul 2009 21:37:20 -0700, Tim wrote: Could they become a new fresh water plague? Not that I would suggest tampering with an ecosystem, but Zebra Mussels are not without some positive aspects. Their filtering capabilities can improve water quality and clarity. There are reports of areas where the smallmouth, perch, and even salmon fishing has improved after Zebra Mussel infestations. http://seapics.com/feature-subject/m.../zebra-mussel- pictures.html What eats them? So many acres of sunlit water will produce x tons of plants which will support y tons of animals. It is looking like, some places, all the animals will be mussels, and no fish whatever. Casady From Wiki: "In terms of reproduction, zebra mussels are among the most prolific of all animals. An adult female Zebra mussel may produce between 30,000 and 1 million[3] eggs per year. Spawning usually begins in the months from late spring to early summer by free-swimming larvae (veligers)." So, why not take advantage of this source of protein by harvesting them or even growing them. Take them off whatever they grow on, grind em up and use the result in animal feed. Or serve them as a delicacy in really crappy rednecky restaurants? With barbecue sauce, of course. Sounds more like fodder you would get in a Yuppie, upscale diner. They aint empty, they got critters in em when alive. The wave washes em in, and then they real quickly bury themselves in the sand. You take a collander and find a patch of em and sieve em out till you get about a gallon of em. I'd have to look up a recipe cuz I have not done it as an adult. As kids, we tried to eat just about everyhting we found in the water including sea urchins, (yuk). Makes sense to me now. We used to scrape buckets of mussels off the rocks at low tide. A buddy's mom was traditional Italian and she knew exactly how to cook 'em up with garlic and butter and serve 'em with pasta. |
#3
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 10:51:25 -0700, Frogwatch wrote:
As kids, we tried to eat just about everyhting we found in the water including sea urchins, (yuk). Are you Japanese? ;-) Didn't try to eat any blowfish, did you? I always wondered how many people died, *before* they figured out how to eat them. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetraodontidae |
#4
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
thunder wrote:
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 10:51:25 -0700, Frogwatch wrote: As kids, we tried to eat just about everyhting we found in the water including sea urchins, (yuk). Are you Japanese? ;-) Didn't try to eat any blowfish, did you? I always wondered how many people died, *before* they figured out how to eat them. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetraodontidae I learned a lot about seafood when we lived in Florida, including that most larger fish we caught were not as tasty as smaller fish of the same species, or just plain smaller fish. |
#5
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 13:19:14 -0500, thunder
wrote: On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 10:51:25 -0700, Frogwatch wrote: As kids, we tried to eat just about everyhting we found in the water including sea urchins, (yuk). Are you Japanese? ;-) Didn't try to eat any blowfish, did you? I always wondered how many people died, *before* they figured out how to eat them. My dad loves them, but he knows how to clean them. --Vic |
#6
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Vic Smith wrote:
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 13:19:14 -0500, thunder wrote: On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 10:51:25 -0700, Frogwatch wrote: As kids, we tried to eat just about everyhting we found in the water including sea urchins, (yuk). Are you Japanese? ;-) Didn't try to eat any blowfish, did you? I always wondered how many people died, *before* they figured out how to eat them. My dad loves them, but he knows how to clean them. --Vic Practice makes perfect. |
#7
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Frogwatch" wrote in message ... On Jul 17, 1:43 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote: "H the K" wrote in messagenews:kL2dnTfQh8IeAf3XnZ2dnUVZ_sidnZ2d@earth link.com... Frogwatch wrote: On Jul 17, 10:25 am, Richard Casady wrote: On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 06:12:56 -0500, thunder wrote: On Wed, 15 Jul 2009 21:37:20 -0700, Tim wrote: Could they become a new fresh water plague? Not that I would suggest tampering with an ecosystem, but Zebra Mussels are not without some positive aspects. Their filtering capabilities can improve water quality and clarity. There are reports of areas where the smallmouth, perch, and even salmon fishing has improved after Zebra Mussel infestations. http://seapics.com/feature-subject/m.../zebra-mussel- pictures.html What eats them? So many acres of sunlit water will produce x tons of plants which will support y tons of animals. It is looking like, some places, all the animals will be mussels, and no fish whatever. Casady From Wiki: "In terms of reproduction, zebra mussels are among the most prolific of all animals. An adult female Zebra mussel may produce between 30,000 and 1 million[3] eggs per year. Spawning usually begins in the months from late spring to early summer by free-swimming larvae (veligers)." So, why not take advantage of this source of protein by harvesting them or even growing them. Take them off whatever they grow on, grind em up and use the result in animal feed. Or serve them as a delicacy in really crappy rednecky restaurants? With barbecue sauce, of course. Sounds more like fodder you would get in a Yuppie, upscale diner. They aint empty, they got critters in em when alive. The wave washes em in, and then they real quickly bury themselves in the sand. You take a collander and find a patch of em and sieve em out till you get about a gallon of em. I'd have to look up a recipe cuz I have not done it as an adult. As kids, we tried to eat just about everyhting we found in the water including sea urchins, (yuk). HK was referring to Zebra or Quagga mussels. |
#8
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ... On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 19:51:18 -0700, "Calif Bill" wrote: HK was referring to Zebra or Quagga mussels. I am not sure how this thread started but Obama was on TV tonight saying he was going to save us from Zebra mussels. My idea is to grind them up, use the accumulated fats for bio diesel and make concrete out of the carbonates for our road projects. I think the problem is scraping them up. |
#9
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 18, 12:52*pm, "Calif Bill" wrote:
wrote in message ... On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 19:51:18 -0700, "Calif Bill" wrote: HK was referring to Zebra or Quagga mussels. I am not sure how this thread started but Obama was on TV tonight saying he was going to save us from Zebra mussels. My idea is to grind them up, use the accumulated fats for bio diesel and make concrete out of the carbonates for our road projects. I think the problem is scraping them up. Wow. Those things will glue onto about anything... http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/...dex= 3&ned=us |
#10
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Frogwatch" wrote in message ... On Jul 17, 1:43 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote: "H the K" wrote in messagenews:kL2dnTfQh8IeAf3XnZ2dnUVZ_sidnZ2d@earth link.com... Frogwatch wrote: On Jul 17, 10:25 am, Richard Casady wrote: On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 06:12:56 -0500, thunder wrote: On Wed, 15 Jul 2009 21:37:20 -0700, Tim wrote: Could they become a new fresh water plague? Not that I would suggest tampering with an ecosystem, but Zebra Mussels are not without some positive aspects. Their filtering capabilities can improve water quality and clarity. There are reports of areas where the smallmouth, perch, and even salmon fishing has improved after Zebra Mussel infestations. http://seapics.com/feature-subject/m.../zebra-mussel- pictures.html What eats them? So many acres of sunlit water will produce x tons of plants which will support y tons of animals. It is looking like, some places, all the animals will be mussels, and no fish whatever. Casady From Wiki: "In terms of reproduction, zebra mussels are among the most prolific of all animals. An adult female Zebra mussel may produce between 30,000 and 1 million[3] eggs per year. Spawning usually begins in the months from late spring to early summer by free-swimming larvae (veligers)." So, why not take advantage of this source of protein by harvesting them or even growing them. Take them off whatever they grow on, grind em up and use the result in animal feed. Or serve them as a delicacy in really crappy rednecky restaurants? With barbecue sauce, of course. Sounds more like fodder you would get in a Yuppie, upscale diner. They aint empty, they got critters in em when alive. The wave washes em in, and then they real quickly bury themselves in the sand. You take a collander and find a patch of em and sieve em out till you get about a gallon of em. I'd have to look up a recipe cuz I have not done it as an adult. As kids, we tried to eat just about everyhting we found in the water including sea urchins, (yuk). Urchins eggs are the orange dots on the Sushi. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Boating restrictions due to mussels? | General | |||
KANSAS GETS BLASTED WITH MEXICAN GRAFFITI | General | |||
Ship Blasted Pirates With Sonic Weapon | ASA | |||
Zebra Mussels? What is the best Cure | ASA | |||
Zebra Mussels | ASA |