Free: Contests & Raffles.
good thing your in estern because us traditional western boys practice catch and release on bass
Quote from: duckmen1 on April 08, 2010, 09:07:14 AMgood thing your in estern because us traditional western boys practice catch and release on bass Its all the traditional catch and release that stunts out and overpoulates our lakes. more bass need to be taken to maintain healthy population. you guys dont get it.
Quote from: BLKBEARKLR on April 13, 2010, 10:47:07 PMQuote from: wastickslinger on April 13, 2010, 06:06:59 PMQuote from: duckmen1 on April 08, 2010, 09:07:14 AMgood thing your in estern because us traditional western boys practice catch and release on bass Its all the traditional catch and release that stunts out and overpoulates our lakes. more bass need to be taken to maintain healthy population. you guys dont get it. For the bodies of water that are present in Washington state, have to disagree with that statement. If the body of water can maintain the amount of bass that are present in it then release them. You only get stunted fish when the body of water can not support the amount of fish in there. And if that is the case, kind of important that you put the spawning females back. And keep the smaller ones, and weed them out. With all the lakes that I have fished here in Washington state I have not come across any lake that needs to have bass removed to maintain a healthy population. Then tell why with 25 fish limits in Twin, Goose, and others over here they still have too many little fish and the numbers of big fish have declined? What happens when you go put too many small fish in a tank? They stay small. What about when you cut the numbr in half? They will get bigger. Lots of studies done on this. Do some research. I do NOT agree with overfishing by any means, dont get me wrong. But implying that stricty catch and release on bass in all bodies of water is just stupid. If we did not keep reasonable limits there would be lake full of stunted out fish. I dont know about you but I would rather catch 5 big fish in a day rather than 25 small ones. Besides I love deep fried bass.
Quote from: wastickslinger on April 13, 2010, 06:06:59 PMQuote from: duckmen1 on April 08, 2010, 09:07:14 AMgood thing your in estern because us traditional western boys practice catch and release on bass Its all the traditional catch and release that stunts out and overpoulates our lakes. more bass need to be taken to maintain healthy population. you guys dont get it. For the bodies of water that are present in Washington state, have to disagree with that statement. If the body of water can maintain the amount of bass that are present in it then release them. You only get stunted fish when the body of water can not support the amount of fish in there. And if that is the case, kind of important that you put the spawning females back. And keep the smaller ones, and weed them out. With all the lakes that I have fished here in Washington state I have not come across any lake that needs to have bass removed to maintain a healthy population.
In all seriousness. I am only speaking for the lakes and rivers that I fish over here. Lots of fish. Plenty to keep a limit and maintain a healthy population. The guys who disagree probably have experienced over fishing of a small pond in the middle of the city. In that case you may be right. Catch and release mostly. But no matter how small the pond you will still have to keep some small ones to let the big ones get bigger.
Quote from: wastickslinger on April 13, 2010, 11:57:45 PMQuote from: BLKBEARKLR on April 13, 2010, 10:47:07 PMQuote from: wastickslinger on April 13, 2010, 06:06:59 PMQuote from: duckmen1 on April 08, 2010, 09:07:14 AMgood thing your in estern because us traditional western boys practice catch and release on bass Its all the traditional catch and release that stunts out and overpoulates our lakes. more bass need to be taken to maintain healthy population. you guys dont get it. For the bodies of water that are present in Washington state, have to disagree with that statement. If the body of water can maintain the amount of bass that are present in it then release them. You only get stunted fish when the body of water can not support the amount of fish in there. And if that is the case, kind of important that you put the spawning females back. And keep the smaller ones, and weed them out. With all the lakes that I have fished here in Washington state I have not come across any lake that needs to have bass removed to maintain a healthy population. Then tell why with 25 fish limits in Twin, Goose, and others over here they still have too many little fish and the numbers of big fish have declined? What happens when you go put too many small fish in a tank? They stay small. What about when you cut the numbr in half? They will get bigger. Lots of studies done on this. Do some research. I do NOT agree with overfishing by any means, dont get me wrong. But implying that stricty catch and release on bass in all bodies of water is just stupid. If we did not keep reasonable limits there would be lake full of stunted out fish. I dont know about you but I would rather catch 5 big fish in a day rather than 25 small ones. Besides I love deep fried bass. Calm down there killer, key words were LAKES that I FISHED not some no name twin, goose lake, read the entire statement first.