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Re: Stripers added to the do not eat list in D C.
Show me facts that fracking is harmful.
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Re: Stripers added to the do not eat list in D C.
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The Hacky is loaded with fish these days.. A damn Sheepshead was caught there last year.... Same with the Hudson, simply loaded with fish of all species, and people eat them all te time... The "cess pool "status you allocated to the rivers in question was well deserved , until the 80's.. The turnaround has been slow, but steady, and compared to what I knew as a young man in NJ, has been dramatic... Much of the pcp and chemical pollution is under decades of sediment, and will stay there hopefully.. I was unable to fish the Passaic as a kid. There were NO fish except eels and killies.Same with the Hacky..The Passaic is now one of the premier Pike fisheries on the east coast, and the Hacky yields 25 pound stripers to urban fishermen in relative isolation. I am very hopeful for the rivers you mentioned. They get cleaner and more productive each year.... bob |
Re: Stripers added to the do not eat list in D C.
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Re: Stripers added to the do not eat list in D C.
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Re: Stripers added to the do not eat list in D C.
Im not a big fan of eating bass anyways. I think I let go everyone I caught last year. I think i might have saved one for pops
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Re: Stripers added to the do not eat list in D C.
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Also the Paraquat Pot scare never hurt a single person. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paraquat |
Re: Stripers added to the do not eat list in D C.
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Re: Stripers added to the do not eat list in D C.
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Re: Stripers added to the do not eat list in D C.
I would probably follow the posted guidlines-they are usually posted near the fishing areas.. Also it would depend on what and where.. Say a smaller bluefish from Newark Bay, yes.. It was a visitor, not a resident.. An eel?.. no.
The Hacky signs say Stripers are ok, not to eat White Perch, Catfish, etc... I would go with that.. Not a fan of stripers anyway. Up river in the non tidal areas, I would eat the fish.. Same with the Passaic.. Non tidal areas, yes I would eat some of the fish.. Perch, Bluegills, a very stray walleye, etc.. I don't kill black bass, pickerel, pike, and don't like bullheads,, The Raritan, non tidal areas, yes I would eat the fish.. Lower tidal areas, I would eat some of the fish.. No cats,eels etc.. If I caught some white or yellow perch, or any migratory species, fluke, blue, weakfish, or even a winter flounder or porgy or something like that, I would certainly eat them. Lower Raritan gets flushed pretty good with bay and ocean water with those big channels cut through the bay right out into the ocean... I dunno, to be 100 % honest I would say that I would be more cautious in eating fish from those rivers than I would be if they were caught say in Sandy Hook Bay or one of the upstate lakes, but there are some fish I would eat from them.. We ate crabs form the hacky when they started coming back in the 70s, and I think a lot of people still do, not sure.. In 10 years, I hope that all those rivers are clean enough not to even have restrictions... They may get there.. I hope they do. Meanwhile I am happy that NJ fishermen can enjoy some seriously good fishing in waters that were dead 40 years ago. bob |
Re: Stripers added to the do not eat list in D C.
The fact of the matter is the South Branch and North Branch of the Raritan are super clean and are alive with aquatic insects. There are May fly hatches and and they hold trout year round. From Johnson Park in Newbrunswick to the mouth of Raritan Bay in Perth Amboy it holds stripers ,fluke and weakfish.The crabbing is good also. There is natural reproduction of striped bass in this river according to marine biologists.Comparing the Raritan with the Hackensack is apples and oranges.The rivers in our state are cleaner now than when i was a kid.
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