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#11
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![]() "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Eisboch wrote: "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message news ![]() i have to do everything left handed. later tom Everything? Hope you heal and feel better fast. Eisboch Hope you have a speedy recovery, and next time, keep your right hand out of the garbage disposal while it is running. Is that really what happened to him????? |
#12
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Eisboch wrote: "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message news ![]() i have to do everything left handed. later tom Everything? Hope you heal and feel better fast. Eisboch Hope you have a speedy recovery, and next time, keep your right hand out of the garbage disposal while it is running. Is that really what happened to him????? Nope. Rotator cuff injury and operation. |
#13
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message news ![]() 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. Proper "Catch and release hurts more fish than it saves?" Are you sure you phrased that correctly? Afterall, the vast majority of fish caught and released live to be fooled again. 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. Here's to wishing you a speedy recovery! (because I'm sick of reading sentences without the proper capitalization of words at the beginning of sentences) ;-) |
#14
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posted to rec.boats
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"NOYB" wrote in message
ink.net... "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message news ![]() 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. Proper "Catch and release hurts more fish than it saves?" Are you sure you phrased that correctly? Afterall, the vast majority of fish caught and released live to be fooled again. You should know better than to say something as statistically outrageous as that. Let's focus on red snapper, for instance. What percentage of them are tagged or marked in some way, so they can be identified later? |
#15
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... "NOYB" wrote in message ink.net... "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message news ![]() 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. Proper "Catch and release hurts more fish than it saves?" Are you sure you phrased that correctly? Afterall, the vast majority of fish caught and released live to be fooled again. You should know better than to say something as statistically outrageous as that. Let's focus on red snapper, for instance. What percentage of them are tagged or marked in some way, so they can be identified later? Go on floridasportsman.com fishing forums and send an IM to a member named C. undecimalis (Alexis Trotter) if you think I'm wrong. She lives in St. Pete, works for FWC, and studies mortality rates of c/r snook. Here's what her study showed: General Catch and Release Mortality: Estimated at 2.13%. Determined in a controlled study in which 470 common snook, between 205 and 1120 mm TL (8.1" to 44.1"), were caught and held in net pens for set amount of times. All were held for at least 48 hours, 20.4% were held for 96 hours, 30.8% were held for 120 hours, 3.2% were held for 288 hours. All of the fish that died, 10 of them (or 2.13%), died within 24 hours of capture. Terminal gear type, temperature, and fish length has no significant effects on mortality. The only variable that significantly effected survival was hook location. 5 of the 10 fish died after being hooked in the mouth, 4 after being hooked in the throat or stomach, and 1 was foul-hooked. 24 snook were hooked in the throat or stomach. Of these, 12 had the hooks removed and 12 had just the leader cut and the hook left in place. The 4 snook that died from being hooked in the throat or stomach were all fish that had had the hook removed. 2.13% catch and release mortality is a very low value and over 90% of all snook that are caught are released. This all seems like a good thing (and it is), but it can become scary to a biologist or fisheries manager when you consider the numbers. For instance: In 2001, it was estimated that about 1,800,000 snook were caught statewide and about 70,000 were harvested. About 1,730,000 were released. 2.14% of that, or 36,849 snook, died from catch and release mortality. Almost 35% of total measurable mortality. Deaths from poaching and natural mortality (cold kills, red tide kills, etc) are hard to determine. How to reduce catch and release mortality: Reduce fight time by using heavy enough gear for the size of fish being targeted. Circle hooks are never a bad thing. Crimp barbs on hooks. If possible, leave the snook in the water when de-hooking. If you have to take it out of the water, use wet hands or wet cotton gloves and support it's belly. Never hold a snook, particularly a large one, by it's lower jaw. This can damage the isthmus (group of muscles and tendons that attaches the jaw to the body and is responsible for the gulping/sucking feeding movements). When reviving, hold the snook facing into the current and only move it in a forward direction. Sorry that was so long, but hope it helps. Let me know if I didn't explain something very well or if there are any other questions. Alexis ----------------------------------------------------------------- So as I said: "the vast majority of fish caught and released live to be fooled again." |
#16
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posted to rec.boats
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Shortwave Sportfishing wrote:
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 get well soon! we'll try to keep the lines tight in your absense... |
#17
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posted to rec.boats
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NYOB and Doug,
I think Tom left a comma out while typing with one hand. I think he meant to say: 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. I read this to mean, that of those fish who are caught and released more than 50% of the fish die anyway. I have no idea if this is accurate, but what I have read the death rate among catch and release is very high, even with barbless and circle hooks. -- ************************************************** ************************ If you would like to make rec.boats an enjoyable place to discuss boating, please do not respond to the political and inflammatory off- topic posts and flames. ************************************************** ************************** "NOYB" wrote in message ink.net... "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message news ![]() 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. Proper "Catch and release hurts more fish than it saves?" Are you sure you phrased that correctly? Afterall, the vast majority of fish caught and released live to be fooled again. 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. Here's to wishing you a speedy recovery! (because I'm sick of reading sentences without the proper capitalization of words at the beginning of sentences) ;-) |
#18
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posted to rec.boats
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"NOYB" wrote in message
news ![]() "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... "NOYB" wrote in message ink.net... "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message news ![]() 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. Proper "Catch and release hurts more fish than it saves?" Are you sure you phrased that correctly? Afterall, the vast majority of fish caught and released live to be fooled again. You should know better than to say something as statistically outrageous as that. Let's focus on red snapper, for instance. What percentage of them are tagged or marked in some way, so they can be identified later? Go on floridasportsman.com fishing forums and send an IM to a member named C. undecimalis (Alexis Trotter) if you think I'm wrong. She lives in St. Pete, works for FWC, and studies mortality rates of c/r snook. Here's what her study showed: General Catch and Release Mortality: Estimated at 2.13%. It's an interesting study, but it only applies to snook placed in a holding tank after being caught. How tough is a snook? My only frame of reference would be fresh water fish at the moment. If I release a weakened smallmouth bass in a lake where there are no pike around, it's got a better chance of survival than if there ARE pike, which will spot a crippled fish and turn it into dinner very quickly. If I release a weakened pike (and it's pretty hard to do that to a pike), the fish has sharp enough fins & gill covers that not much will attack it while it's getting its wits about it again. You can't point to one study and say it's conclusive about all fish. |
#19
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posted to rec.boats
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Doug Kanter wrote:
"Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Eisboch wrote: "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message news ![]() i have to do everything left handed. later tom Everything? Hope you heal and feel better fast. Eisboch Hope you have a speedy recovery, and next time, keep your right hand out of the garbage disposal while it is running. Is that really what happened to him????? I heard his wife whupped him when he sassed her. |
#20
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 5 Jan 2006 08:20:26 -0500, "Reggie Smithers"
wrote: 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 would say that circle hooks would work as well with sharks as any other species. Yes, they would be rough to remove, so cutting the leader and leaving the hook in the lip is probably the only alternative. I see humans all the time with metal things in their lips, and it doesn't seem to shorten their life much. A hook in the corner of the mouth would still leave the shark in much better shape than a gut hook would, especially after some fighting which would rip up more of the shark's insides. -- John H. "Divide each difficulty into as many parts as is feasible and necessary to resolve it." Rene Descartes |
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