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| Forum Polls Find out what forum members think about various fly fishing topics. |
| View Poll Results: How often do you eat/release what you catch? | |||
| Always release |
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43 | 44.33% |
| Mostly release, sometimes keep |
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47 | 48.45% |
| Depends on the location, but prefer to keep |
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5 | 5.15% |
| Always catch fish to keep |
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2 | 2.06% |
| Voters: 97. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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Re: Eat that fish, or release it?
I've never been big on keeping fish. I've kept a couple for dinner on back country outings. When guiding on the local water we do nothing but catch and release. The Snake River fishing is a large part of the local economy here in Jackson Hole. There is no stocking done here either. It is a natural self sustaining population and needs to be treated with care. The majority of people here do not take fish. Those that do adhere to the slot limits.
That being said I do understand folks taking fish from stocked waters that will not sustain the fish over time. A lot of the streams I fished in PA were that way. In late summer they were too warm to support trout. The fish would die anyway.
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Davo My worst day on the water beats my best day anywhere else hands down!! Fly Angler Articles | Upstream Anglers and Outdoor Adventures |
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Re: Eat that fish, or release it?
I release most fish I take in streams. I take the occasional steelhead, I think I have kept four so far this year. Smallmouth Bass I never keep, and will preach to other anglers I meet on the stream to Please Please Please release them...I still cringe about a conversation I had with a lady who had just dropped her husband and son off for a float on my local Bass river...She was telling me how much her son liked fishing, and that he was quite successful at it. She then told me about the 22" Smallie he had caught earlier in the summer...
Now when it comes to bluegills, I'm taking some home to eat! I also eat the occasional Brookie...In my wayward youth when I was a poor college student I was fortunate to live in an area that had an abundance of small feeder streams that flowed through a very large cedar swamp. About the time My freezer was empty, trout season would open. I would go catch a couple of fish for dinner, a couple of times a week. Please forgive my sins; that was a very long time ago! Now when I want fish I go for walleyes and perch for the most part. Dan |
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Re: Eat that fish, or release it?
I release a lot of fish that I'm simply too lazy to clean. I have no problems with keeping fish, but am careful about hauling out a huge stringer. If I want fish, I try to fish waters like private farm ponds that benefit from taking some out. I limit the take in public waters.
Trout are a fish I mostly release though my opportunity to fish for them is limited (If it weren't for camping trips in Missouri's trout parks, I wouldn't do much at all). There isn't much trout fishing in my region, and I like to think that leaving most of the fish helps out the next guy who also drove four hours to catch a trout. I'll keep a fish or two for lunch back at camp, but that's about it. They stock the parks on a per angler basis and that catch rate still leaves more trout in the water than I took out. |
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Re: Eat that fish, or release it?
Quote:
I just about cry every time I pass someone coming out of a stocked stream with a stringer full of stockers. Without fail, a week or so after stocking I'll pass someone coming out empty handed. When I ask them how the fishing went they will comment that the fish are all gone and that their day has been a disappointment. Yet, near as I can tell, they never make a connection between that day and the 4-5 days prior when they walked out each day with a stringer of trout. Were the 4-5 prior days worth ending the season today? Or would they have been happier catching fish today and tomorrow and the day after and the day after... |
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Re: Eat that fish, or release it?
I would have to say that 95% of the fish I catch I Release.
I am not a fish eater but I do enjoy fishing. I have many family members that enjoy a few fish on their plates so I will OCCASIONALLY keep a few fish for them. Tight Lines Mike |
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Re: Eat that fish, or release it?
I catch and releasealways on the river.. no need for taxidermy here . a picture is worth a thousand words! I just take my camera and its a memory forever! I have caught lake erie perch tho and ate it before. with gas the price it is I will be fly fishing all year tho instead!
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"Hey, you.Get your damn hands off my herl !!!!" ![]() owner of the Great Lakes Fishing Forum |
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Re: Eat that fish, or release it?
I catch and release everything now. A few days after opening trout day I kept 4 stockers for tablefare, but I never will again!
You have to carry a creel and fillet the fish, get rid of the remains, and the fillets really aren't that good anyway. I see all the bait chuckers with a treble hook and some power bait taking 90% of all the stockies in the creek and I guess it went to my head! LOL Never again......... I love to catch fish in the beautiful creeks and love to release them just as much. Just think? if everyone was a catch and releaser, all the fishing would be a wonderful paradise. Something that gives us so much pleasure, how could you destroy it? A McDonalds fish sandwich is much better to eat........ and you don't have to clean the fish! Even catfish..... everyone says they are so wonderful to eat. I filleted one and they are cat food!! The soft mushey stinkin' flesh is enough to make me sick!! Now every time I flyfish my favorite river spots, I always catch a few big channel cats. They love woolybuggers and fight like a big bass. A very hearty fish, so I release them all and I have some wonderful fun with my flyrod the next time I visit the area when the sun goes down. IMHO, I think all fishing fresh and salt should be "no harvest" "catch and release" only for the next ten years. And all fly fishing with barbless hooks! If you are too stupid to cast a flyrod, then hire a guide or a trainer to learn how! And anyone caught tossing trash in the water will get 5 years in prison! Poachers would get 20 years in prison! I think fishing licenses should be at least $500! The money should be spent to stock and restock and watch the fish populations very closely. If the fish biologists see a problem, it should be fixed immediately. And no more "rich guys" buying the good streams and posting them. All the wonderful "God given" waters in our wonderful country are for all to enjoy....... especially us C&R fly fishermen. This makes me sick when I see a rich guy buy a stream and won't let anyone trespass. This would never stop me! You may not see the property owner anymore, but I will still be fishing our American Heritage! With these couple changes, the fishing should improve drastically! Fishing could be great like it once was fifty years ago! Scuze me while I tie a fly!
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"People are crazy, times are strange" "I'm locked in tight, I'm out of range" "I used to care, but things have changed" - Dylan |
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Re: Eat that fish, or release it?
I release fish 99.9% of the time. The only time I keep them is if I happen to catch a striper that doesn't look like it would survive if I released it (poor hookset and of legal side). If I am on a trip/guide and give them the fish as part of the tip (places like mexico). I am a big supporter of catch and release but more importantly of how fish (specifically more sensitive fish like trout) should be handled. Grabbing a trout with a dry hand and taking pictures then dropping them into a fast moving current will likely kill them.
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