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NJFishing.com Fresh Water Fishing Post all your fresh water topics on this board |
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#1
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Based on my experience of almost 30 years of fishing in New Jersey, I'm postulating there are three things that will profoundly affect the future of fishing in New Jersey: 1) Suburban sprawl and population growth 2) Increased immigration of anglers who never practice catch-and-release and have little respect for game laws. 3) Disease and invasive species Based on those three things, here are my predictions for the future: 1) More stocking of gamefish and few 'native-born' gamefish. Increased fishing pressure and harvest will far surpass wild fish populations' ability to replace their losses. The resulting lakes will rely completely on restocking by Fish & Wildlife to provide any recreational angling. I see this already at popular suburban reservoirs such as Spruce Run. 2) The extirpation of Largemouth Bass from smaller water systems. I'm seeing this already in some park ponds that once had wonderful populations of big Largemouth Bass for no other reason than few people bothered to kill them. In the past few years, the local migrant laborers discovered this source of food and recreation and hammered away at the ponds every evening until there was nothing left but small sunfish. In the future, big Largemouth Bass will only exist on private property and large water systems that require a skilled angler with a boat. Ponds and smaller lakes will only be able to sustain panfish and carp. 3) More fishing clubs and leased private lakes. Just like we see with hunters today paying exorbitant amounts of money for leases to have sole hunting rights on a piece of land, I predict more anglers will respond to high fishing pressure and fewer big bass by forming fishing clubs that will lease lakes and ponds on private property. 4) The veneration of the Northern Snakehead As native gamefish population dwindle, I predict people will begin to look towards the Northern Snakehead as a substitute for bass. The snakeheads grow big -the current record in the U.S. is 17 pounds. They hit bass lures and I'm told their fillets are some of the best tasting of any freshwater fish. Judging by the snakehead's defiance of all the efforts to exterminate them, it appears they are prolific reproducers, too. What's not to like? I think it will be a long time before anybody calls a Snakehead a "gamefish", but I predict in the future it will happen. What are your predictions? .
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"The fish you release may be a gift to another, as it may have been a gift to you." -Lee Wulf |
#2
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![]() Go on bass barn and you will find several guys that call snakeheads gamefish already and rather fish for them then bass. Other then that I agree,
I also see flathead cats continue their spread and will be introduced into new waters as well.
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~~~~Bloody Decks Bowfishing~~~~ Saving your gamefish one carp at a time! Follow us on- Instagram @bloody_decks_bowfishing Facebook - team bloody decks |
#3
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![]() New Jersey is a tough place to fish, always has been and always will be. We are the most populated state in the country and I think it's safe to say that our waters get pounded more than anywhere else. If anyone has ever fished out of state, or on a private lake, I think it's safe to say that our public waters in NJ just don't stack up to other places in the country. That's not saying you can't catch fish, but I just feel like some of the destinations I've gone too in New York, West Virgina, Pennsylvania, Virginia etc. do not have anything equivalent here in the Garden State.
I think a lot has to do with pressure, and people are going to jump on me for saying this, but these boards are part of the problem. 5 years ago I could go ice fishing on Pompton Lake, be the only person out there on a Sunday, jig up 70 panfish and have a 20 flags with pike, big bass and big pickerel all day. People still have some good days there, but the place is an absolute zoo now and it's nothing in comparison to what it was. And that has only been a few short years. I've been saying this all along, but watch what happens to the Passaic River pike fishery 5 years from now. Once you alert the bucket brigade, it's only a matter of time. One thing we have going for us is that less people are fishing these days. Kids want iPads, not fishing rods. Laurie at Dow's told me she used to rent 40 boats on a weekend back in the day. On the other side of it, I see more saltwater guys eventually getting fed-up with all the BS they have to deal with and maybe taking up freshwater fishing. The other thing we have going for us is that we have the best hatchery in the country. The state is constantly assessing fish populations and replacing what it lost. I can honestly say that I have not seen much of a decline in our fisheries since I first started freshwater fishing in NJ 20 years ago. In fact, it's gotten so much better, with more species diversity and more angling opportunities. The invasive species, meh. They'll be here, but nature will adapt. The flatheads are not new and neither are the snakeheads. I've talked to Lake St. Clair guides and St. Lawrence Guides and everyone was all freaked out about zebra mussels and gobies, but the common belief among guys in the know is that the fisheries adapted. I fished for 3 days with a Potomac River guide this year for snakeheads and he says that the hype is definitely overplayed. We fished hard for snakes for 3 days and although we could see them, we couldn't get one to bite. And we caught like 30 bass. So, after all of that......my prediction for the future of NJ fisheries....not much different then what it is now. Some lakes will be become less productive, some will get better. New Jersey has always forced anglers to fish a little harder, walk a little further in the woods, spend some time getting lost in the car and digging on Google maps nowadays. For those willing to put in the time, we will always have quality fishing. That being said, promoting catch and release is the most important thing we can do as anglers. Just because it's legal to bring home a bucket of 50 panfish while they're spawning, does't mean you should do it. Just because it's legal to keep a big musky, doesn't mean you should do it. If you see someone fishing illegally or taking illegal fish, forget about being a snitch, report them. The future in NJ fishing depends on anglers protecting the resource we have. |
#4
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![]() One gaurantee, licenses won't go down in price!!!!!!!!
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#5
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![]() Hear is a nugget of hope...TRUMP is a fisherman & will deal with the illegal problems. There will be a lot of job opening in eateries & landscaping after 2016...
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#6
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![]() Ok I'll admit I'm a dumbass so hope to help out those not as forthcoming as me....
ven·er·a·tion \ˌve-nə-ˈrā-shən\ noun 1 :respect or awe inspired by the dignity, wisdom, dedication, or talent of a person ex·tir·pate \ˈek-stər-ˌpāt\ verb : to destroy or remove (something) completely ![]()
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OX66 ADDICT KUKUBABY FISHING TEAM EST. 1995 |
#7
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![]() Thanks Duffman.. I feeI better now! I was checking my spanish to english translator and could find those lol
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LET THE BIG ONES LIVE ![]() |
#8
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![]() About 25 years ago I had a snake head in my 150 gallon tank. He outgrew the tank in a little over a year while eating everything I put in there including bass pickrel, crappies, and perch. The only fish he didn't eat were the Oscars and pacus. The fish was an eating machine. Bit all my friends who thought it was funny to wiggle thir fingers in the tank. He also ate lizards,mice, and goldfish to 3 lbs. Last time I saw him he was in a marine cooler going to a guys house who thought he had some bad assed African cichlids. A week later he only had a snakehead. They are some bad as fish! |
#9
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![]() A friend used to keep a few tanks, one of which had snake heads. Next to it was another tank with fish in it that keep disappearing. He could not figure out where they were going. Finally one night he heard a splash so he went to investigate. One of the snakes head had jumped from his tank into his neighbors tank for dinner. The only other thing that I heard of that had done this level of problem solving was an octopus my neighbor had.
With said anything that is smart enough to figure out how to go from one tank to another, eat his neighbor & then jump back home is one smart fish. I think a lot of people will put them on top of their list down the road. |
#10
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![]() Quote:
Nearly all states have a higher per capita of outdoorsmen than New Jersey, but due to the lower population density, the waters always seem to be a lot less crowded. You'll still see fishermen, you just won't see the Walmart-style stampedes that you see on some New Jersey waters. Florida is ground-zero for invasive fish. The waters are churning with various exotics from South America, Asia, and Africa. Florida has been host to a different species of Snakehead called the Bullseye Snakehead (Channa marulius) for a long time now. The people down there tell me that the snakeheads haven't hurt the bass fishing at all. From what I have seen in Florida, I question whether the biologists' dire warnings of an environmental meltdown when the snakeheads enter a water system are really true. I speculate the threats posed by snakeheads are overblown, just like all the news stores about pythons in the Everglades. .
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"The fish you release may be a gift to another, as it may have been a gift to you." -Lee Wulf Last edited by Eskimo; 08-28-2015 at 07:44 PM.. |
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