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JoeSpareBedroom February 21st 07 08:23 PM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or on my
hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish, porgies, sea
robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local to North Carolina?



John February 21st 07 09:51 PM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 

"JoeSpareBedroom" wrote in message
...
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or on
my hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish, porgies, sea
robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local to North
Carolina?


most certainly, as well as others including mackerel and tuna



Short Wave Sportfishing February 21st 07 11:03 PM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 
JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or on my
hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish, porgies, sea
robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local to North Carolina?


Yes - and the specialty is redneck clams.

John February 22nd 07 04:28 AM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 

"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
m...
JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or on
my hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish, porgies, sea
robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local to North
Carolina?


Yes - and the specialty is redneck clams.


Must be referring to oysters......



Short Wave Sportfishing February 22nd 07 11:03 AM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 
John wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
m...
JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or on
my hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish, porgies, sea
robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local to North
Carolina?

Yes - and the specialty is redneck clams.


Must be referring to oysters......


WHOOSH!!!

Reginald P. Smithers III February 22nd 07 12:46 PM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 
Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
John wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
m...
JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets
(or on my hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish,
porgies, sea robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist
local to North Carolina?
Yes - and the specialty is redneck clams.


Must be referring to oysters......


WHOOSH!!!


I had no idea there was a clam species called a "redneck claim". I
learn something new everyday.

dvh February 22nd 07 01:06 PM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 
On Feb 21, 3:23 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or on my
hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish, porgies, sea
robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local to North Carolina?


Right now there are Stripers to be caught around New Bern. Plenty of
what we call Speckled Trout up in the feeder creeks. I don't know what
they are doing on the coast.


JoeSpareBedroom February 22nd 07 01:10 PM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 
"dvh" wrote in message
ups.com...
On Feb 21, 3:23 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or on
my
hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish, porgies, sea
robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local to North
Carolina?


Right now there are Stripers to be caught around New Bern. Plenty of
what we call Speckled Trout up in the feeder creeks. I don't know what
they are doing on the coast.


Is there enough of a commercial flounder catch that it appears in food
stores at any point during the year?



John February 22nd 07 02:18 PM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 

"Reginald P. Smithers III" "remove wrote in
message . ..
Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
John wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
m...
JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or
on my hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish,
porgies, sea robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local
to North Carolina?
Yes - and the specialty is redneck clams.

Must be referring to oysters......


WHOOSH!!!


I had no idea there was a clam species called a "redneck claim". I learn
something new everyday.


Me neither - eaten a few bearded clams in life tho......



JLH February 22nd 07 04:20 PM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 
On 22 Feb 2007 05:06:05 -0800, "dvh" wrote:

On Feb 21, 3:23 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or on my
hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish, porgies, sea
robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local to North Carolina?


Right now there are Stripers to be caught around New Bern. Plenty of
what we call Speckled Trout up in the feeder creeks. I don't know what
they are doing on the coast.


Are you in the New Bern area?
--
*****Have a Spectacular Day!*****

John H

JoeSpareBedroom February 22nd 07 04:22 PM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 
"JLH" wrote in message
...
On 22 Feb 2007 05:06:05 -0800, "dvh" wrote:

On Feb 21, 3:23 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or
on my
hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish, porgies, sea
robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local to North
Carolina?


Right now there are Stripers to be caught around New Bern. Plenty of
what we call Speckled Trout up in the feeder creeks. I don't know what
they are doing on the coast.


Are you in the New Bern area?
--
*****Have a Spectacular Day!*****

John H


No. I have a friend in Raleigh who claims her grocery stores never have
locally caught sal****er fish. Not shellfish, but fish. The story sounds
fishy to me, so that's why I'm asking. The problem could be the store, her
lack of knowledge, or maybe there isn't much available for other reasons.
So, I'm curious.



JLH February 22nd 07 04:30 PM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 
On Thu, 22 Feb 2007 16:22:37 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"
wrote:

"JLH" wrote in message
.. .
On 22 Feb 2007 05:06:05 -0800, "dvh" wrote:

On Feb 21, 3:23 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or
on my
hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish, porgies, sea
robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local to North
Carolina?

Right now there are Stripers to be caught around New Bern. Plenty of
what we call Speckled Trout up in the feeder creeks. I don't know what
they are doing on the coast.


Are you in the New Bern area?
--
*****Have a Spectacular Day!*****

John H


No. I have a friend in Raleigh who claims her grocery stores never have
locally caught sal****er fish. Not shellfish, but fish. The story sounds
fishy to me, so that's why I'm asking. The problem could be the store, her
lack of knowledge, or maybe there isn't much available for other reasons.
So, I'm curious.


I was asking 'dvh'. The Safeway just down the road never has any locally
caught fish. The Giant, a couple miles away usually has croaker, stripers,
spot, perch, and sometimes trout, all of which could be considered 'local'.
I've no idea if they were 'locally' caught, however. But, it does show that
the problem could be the store.
--
*****Have a Spectacular Day!*****

John H

John February 22nd 07 05:12 PM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 

"JoeSpareBedroom" wrote in message
...
"JLH" wrote in message
...
On 22 Feb 2007 05:06:05 -0800, "dvh" wrote:

On Feb 21, 3:23 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or
on my
hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish, porgies, sea
robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local to North
Carolina?

Right now there are Stripers to be caught around New Bern. Plenty of
what we call Speckled Trout up in the feeder creeks. I don't know what
they are doing on the coast.


Are you in the New Bern area?
--
*****Have a Spectacular Day!*****

John H


No. I have a friend in Raleigh who claims her grocery stores never have
locally caught sal****er fish. Not shellfish, but fish. The story sounds
fishy to me, so that's why I'm asking. The problem could be the store, her
lack of knowledge, or maybe there isn't much available for other reasons.
So, I'm curious.


A lot of the big stores do not carry locally caught fish, but on the coast
it is all local. There are a number of small trucks that drive to the coast
and load up with fish and ice then sell locally caught fish on the roadside.
Some of the smaller stores and fish markets also sell local fish. It all
depends on where you shop. I shop at my neighborhood Harris Teeter store
and they rarely have local fish.
John
Chapel Hill



Reginald P. Smithers III February 22nd 07 06:06 PM

Fresh fish off the coast of NC
 
JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
"JLH" wrote in message
...
On 22 Feb 2007 05:06:05 -0800, "dvh" wrote:

On Feb 21, 3:23 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
If I lived in Long Island, I'd know what fish to expect in markets (or
on my
hook) at certain times of year, like flounder, bluefish, porgies, sea
robins, etc. Do some of these same varieties exist local to North
Carolina?
Right now there are Stripers to be caught around New Bern. Plenty of
what we call Speckled Trout up in the feeder creeks. I don't know what
they are doing on the coast.

Are you in the New Bern area?
--
*****Have a Spectacular Day!*****

John H


No. I have a friend in Raleigh who claims her grocery stores never have
locally caught sal****er fish. Not shellfish, but fish. The story sounds
fishy to me, so that's why I'm asking. The problem could be the store, her
lack of knowledge, or maybe there isn't much available for other reasons.
So, I'm curious.


I live just as close to the coast as your friend in Raleigh, and if it
is locally caught fish, they never label it as such. The do label the
country of origin, wild vs. farm raised, but if I am not mistaken, it
all comes to the store frozen. I have never it labeled as fresh,
unfrozen fish from the GA. coast, NC coast or Fla. coast. I think the
restaurants buy all the fresh local fish, and it never makes it to the
supermarkets.


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