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More political cut and paste from Harry..
Vic Smith wrote:
On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 20:28:40 -0500, HK wrote: They're ok eating in the smaller sizes, and they are easy to catch. For reasons I don't understand, they seem to fight hard in the colder, New England salt waters. Asked my Dad yesterday, and he said he's only seen a couple in all his Florida fishing years, and never caught one, though he never went after them either. Agree that the bigger fish aren't as good-tasting, so I just might not go after them unless I release. My dad's favorite eating fish is the sand perch. He can still stand there for an hour filleting them to get a couple pounds of meat, and he can hardly stand. They do taste good. --Vic Salt water stripers are not common in florida's ocean waters. In fact, I never caught one down there. But...when we went up to georgia and fished some of the rivers and inlets near the ocean, we'd see the occasional striper. Sand perch are delicious. My favorite little fishes in florida were whiting. Small, caught on bits of shrimp, delicious fillets. Next on my taste list were flounder. Steaked out kingfish fillets, properly cooked, were good. Also liked sea bass. Around here in the bay nothing competes in taste with flounder, though. I think I like sea trout second after flounder. |
More political cut and paste from Harry..
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 10:00:57 -0600, Vic Smith
wrote: On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 16:02:19 -0500, Red Herring wrote: Bread it, fry it, eat it. Simple! That's what I normally eat, but it's always a fair-side cook doing the frying. But I'm always catching stuff that fillets out pretty small. When I start getting the bigger, don't know exactly the best method for slicing it up for frying. Don't care too much for fish unless it's fried. --Vic If it's big, one way is to fillet it and then steak the fillets. Stripers have too big a backbone to cut through like one would a salmon, especially the big ones. -- Red Herring |
More political cut and paste from Harry..
JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
"HK" wrote in message ... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "HK" wrote in message . .. JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "Reginald P. Smithers III" "Reggie is Here wrote in message ... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... If you want to catch a variety of decent-sized "fighting" fish around here, you should fish the mouth of the Bay, near the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunner around Norfolk-Virginia Beach, or the nearshore or offshore wrecks down there. Correction: If "the fight" is that important to you, you're a very strange person. "The fight" is a reaction to a strange stimulus and it's a struggle to survive. It's impressive, but do you really fish just so you can have repeated demos of a basic animal instinct? WTF??? No sense being a recreational fisherman, then. "Wow! Look at that fish doing exactly what it's expected to do!" Now, that's a surprise. :-) One of the advantages of not using light weight tackle is you do not overexert the fish where they build up an excess of lactic acid, giving the fish a much higher survival rate when C&R. You actually said something that makes sense. WTF? Depends on the depth of the water where the fish are and the ability of the fisherman. When the fish are in 10-25 feet of water, and you aren't pulling in 100' or more of trolled line, it isn't much of an issue. Not true (depth of water). The level of lactic acid is determined by the length of time spent exerting muscles. A fish caught in 3 feet of water and played too long will have problems. This is why catch & release may not be all it's cracked up to be. Played too long? Is there a played too long meter? Will reggie google it up? Stay tuned. This is based on research described in a book I read last year. When I mentioned it at the time, you agreed completely with the concept. Isn't that interesting? I think it is a factor if you "play" the fish a long time. I don't. But, againt, what is "too long"? |
More political cut and paste from Harry..
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 11:14:41 -0500, HK wrote:
JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "HK" wrote in message . .. JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "Reginald P. Smithers III" "Reggie is Here wrote in message ... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... If you want to catch a variety of decent-sized "fighting" fish around here, you should fish the mouth of the Bay, near the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunner around Norfolk-Virginia Beach, or the nearshore or offshore wrecks down there. Correction: If "the fight" is that important to you, you're a very strange person. "The fight" is a reaction to a strange stimulus and it's a struggle to survive. It's impressive, but do you really fish just so you can have repeated demos of a basic animal instinct? WTF??? No sense being a recreational fisherman, then. "Wow! Look at that fish doing exactly what it's expected to do!" Now, that's a surprise. :-) One of the advantages of not using light weight tackle is you do not overexert the fish where they build up an excess of lactic acid, giving the fish a much higher survival rate when C&R. You actually said something that makes sense. WTF? Depends on the depth of the water where the fish are and the ability of the fisherman. When the fish are in 10-25 feet of water, and you aren't pulling in 100' or more of trolled line, it isn't much of an issue. Not true (depth of water). The level of lactic acid is determined by the length of time spent exerting muscles. A fish caught in 3 feet of water and played too long will have problems. This is why catch & release may not be all it's cracked up to be. Played too long? Is there a played too long meter? Will reggie google it up? Stay tuned. Harry, they're played too long when you take the hook out, put them in the water, and they float. Don't pretend to be more moronic than necessary. -- Red Herring |
More political cut and paste from Harry..
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More political cut and paste from Harry..
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 11:04:10 -0500, HK wrote:
Vic Smith wrote: On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 16:02:19 -0500, Red Herring wrote: Bread it, fry it, eat it. Simple! That's what I normally eat, but it's always a fair-side cook doing the frying. But I'm always catching stuff that fillets out pretty small. When I start getting the bigger, don't know exactly the best method for slicing it up for frying. Don't care too much for fish unless it's fried. --Vic It's best to avoid frying if you can. There are many ways to cook fish without oil or, even worse, crisco. 'Poaching' is kinda cute. -- Red Herring |
More political cut and paste from Harry..
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 10:13:10 -0600, Vic Smith
wrote: On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 20:28:40 -0500, HK wrote: They're ok eating in the smaller sizes, and they are easy to catch. For reasons I don't understand, they seem to fight hard in the colder, New England salt waters. Asked my Dad yesterday, and he said he's only seen a couple in all his Florida fishing years, and never caught one, though he never went after them either. Agree that the bigger fish aren't as good-tasting, so I just might not go after them unless I release. My dad's favorite eating fish is the sand perch. He can still stand there for an hour filleting them to get a couple pounds of meat, and he can hardly stand. They do taste good. --Vic I love 'perch fingers'. Fillet's about the size of a half dollar, a quarter inch thick, breaded, deep fried. Takes about a hundred, but damn they're good. -- Red Herring |
More political cut and paste from Harry..
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 10:41:53 -0500, "Reginald P. Smithers III"
"Reggie is Here wrote: JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... If you want to catch a variety of decent-sized "fighting" fish around here, you should fish the mouth of the Bay, near the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunner around Norfolk-Virginia Beach, or the nearshore or offshore wrecks down there. Correction: If "the fight" is that important to you, you're a very strange person. "The fight" is a reaction to a strange stimulus and it's a struggle to survive. It's impressive, but do you really fish just so you can have repeated demos of a basic animal instinct? WTF??? No sense being a recreational fisherman, then. "Wow! Look at that fish doing exactly what it's expected to do!" Now, that's a surprise. :-) One of the advantages of not using light weight tackle is you do not overexert the fish where they build up an excess of lactic acid, giving the fish a much higher survival rate when C&R. That's not exactly true. It is true that light tackle can increase the amount of lactic acid, proper C&R technique is to let 'em set in a heavily oxygenated live well before you release 'em back into the wild. About the only freshwater fish that I know of that can handle the excess are the largemouth/smallmouth fishies. Normally, it's not a long fight though - I don't do a lot of long casts into structure. |
More political cut and paste from Harry..
Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 07:53:55 -0800 (PST), wrote: And smallmouth, largemouth, spotted, white and hybrid bass. Along with trout, bluegill, crappie, huge catfish, drum, etc. I love cat fishing. Around these parts, the cats tend to be channel cats on the small side - say, less than ten pounds or so. We also have horned pout which can run up to 3/4 pounds sometimes. I was fishing Lake Marion last summer with a guide out of Santee - great guy, real knowledgable, put me on a channel cat that was 30 pounds easy. Used a commercial blood bait - we must have caught 10 fish that day, not one under 20 pounds. Good eatin' too. You folks have carp down there? Mess much with salt water catfish? Great little fighters, stinky fish. |
More political cut and paste from Harry..
"HK" wrote in message
... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "HK" wrote in message . .. JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "Reginald P. Smithers III" "Reggie is Here wrote in message ... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... If you want to catch a variety of decent-sized "fighting" fish around here, you should fish the mouth of the Bay, near the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunner around Norfolk-Virginia Beach, or the nearshore or offshore wrecks down there. Correction: If "the fight" is that important to you, you're a very strange person. "The fight" is a reaction to a strange stimulus and it's a struggle to survive. It's impressive, but do you really fish just so you can have repeated demos of a basic animal instinct? WTF??? No sense being a recreational fisherman, then. "Wow! Look at that fish doing exactly what it's expected to do!" Now, that's a surprise. :-) One of the advantages of not using light weight tackle is you do not overexert the fish where they build up an excess of lactic acid, giving the fish a much higher survival rate when C&R. You actually said something that makes sense. WTF? Depends on the depth of the water where the fish are and the ability of the fisherman. When the fish are in 10-25 feet of water, and you aren't pulling in 100' or more of trolled line, it isn't much of an issue. Not true (depth of water). The level of lactic acid is determined by the length of time spent exerting muscles. A fish caught in 3 feet of water and played too long will have problems. This is why catch & release may not be all it's cracked up to be. Played too long? Is there a played too long meter? Will reggie google it up? Stay tuned. This is based on research described in a book I read last year. When I mentioned it at the time, you agreed completely with the concept. Isn't that interesting? I think it is a factor if you "play" the fish a long time. I don't. But, againt, what is "too long"? There's no way for you or I to know that unless we happen to have a biologist in the boat who's prepared to measure, in whatever way they do that. All you and I can do is forget the nonsense about light tackle being "more sporting". |
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