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#1
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The importance of catch and release
I've been struggling to catch pike for the last two years in the river. My go-to spots just don't produce like they used to.
Sunday morning I decided to give it another shot. Overcast day with a little misty rain and a very low water level. Lost a chatterbait on a snag so I pull out a spinnerbait. About an hour of casting and I see a healthy, long pike following it in. It comes right to my feet in inches of water and I'm slowing down just fast enough to keep the blade going but I'm running out of real estate. It makes a lunge and just kinda nips at it and I bury the hook, landing a nice pike after a battle. As I go to remove the hook, I notice what appears to be an old hook and a short piece of line buried in his throat. Clearly this guy has been recently caught...thank you for releasing this fish! My second biggest ever, made my day. Catch and release makes a world of difference! Anyway it tasted great. Just kidding! I don't ever criticize someone who follows the law and keeps fish they are legally allowed to keep...but I'm happy catch and release is so popular these days. |
#2
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Re: The importance of catch and release
As much as I agree in CnR
"old hook and a short piece of line buried in his throat" Sounds to me it wasnt actually CnR but the infamous bite off |
#3
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Re: The importance of catch and release
Nah it was super thick, way thicker than the 40 lb fluoro I usually use with no problems...no way it was bitten off, I've caught sharks with less than this
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#4
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Re: The importance of catch and release
Quote:
But that's why needle nose pliers are useful |
#5
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Re: The importance of catch and release
I had a muskie slice #50 fluoro like a hot knife through butter instantly on impact. if it hits the right spot on their teeth it's like slashing it with a razor blade. trust me, they could cut it.
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#6
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Re: The importance of catch and release
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I'm a big proponent of catch-and-release for bass and other large gamefish like pike and muskie. Some of the bass I catch bear the tell-tale mouth wounds of having just been caught-and-released. Occasionally, I'll even have a bass barf up someone else's plastic lure as I'm reeling it in. I will occasionally keep some panfish, catfish, or stocked trout for dinner. I may be contradicting myself, but I don't believe I am. There's a difference between perch and pike in terms of population and the 'value' anglers place on the catch. It's hard to articulate, but every non-bucketeer understands what I'm saying. New Jersey's public waters are very heavily fished. When an angler catches a big bass, the angler didn't discover a previously uncaught fish. What that angler caught was a older fish that has repeatedly been caught-and-released every year until it reached its present age. One of my favorite movies is 'Unforgiven'. In it Clint Eastwood says "Its a hell of a thing, killing a man. You take away everything he's got and everything he's ever gonna have.". That's how I feel about killing a bass. When that bass hits the bucket, you've not only killed a bass other anglers would have enjoyed, but you also killed all the size potential the bass was ever going to achieve and all the eggs she would have laid in the spring. .
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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; 10-17-2017 at 03:56 PM.. |
#7
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Re: The importance of catch and release
Cool post about the catch n release thing! Next time you should eat em! Hahahaha! Nice Pike!!!
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"Go BIG or go HOME" "STRAIGHT OUT OF JERZEY" |
#8
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Re: The importance of catch and release
Yeah when I got home I was pretty hungry, a nice pike sandwich would've hit the spot! Haha. I also enjoy seafood tacos and bearded clam.
Stay with me people...yes it is possible this was a breakoff. But a barely visible hook in a very vulnerable spot very deep in the soft tissue of a big fish's throat, coupled with a short stub of very stiff leader, maybe even wire, 2-3 times thicker than mine, literally thicker than the shark rigs I bought in Ocean City NJ last year, in a spot that trying too hard to remove it would put the fish's life in danger, has me 99% convinced this was a release. Either way same result she's still alive and kicking. Anyway Eskimo I am with you 100%. This fish has probably lived in that river for 10 years...try a hot pocket instead they are breathtaking (credit to Austin Powers). |
#9
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Re: The importance of catch and release
Nice work on the C and R!
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#10
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Re: The importance of catch and release
Well said Eskimo.
Whenever asked about keeping fish my response is "I would rather catch a fish twice than eat it once"
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Practice CPR. Let 'em Go Let 'em Grow |
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