A unique website dedicated to fishing information from Florida's Northern Big Bend. This includes the area from the Econfina River west to the Apalachicola River
Rubber net or any net for keeper. Or use a lip gripper in the water and dehook there if you're going to release it. Remember, you can't effectively horse them into a boat like you would a black bass as their lips tear easily, and the hook comes out.
I only avoid using a landing net when I'm using a lure with treble hooks. If it's a bigger fish, I use the net either way. If I had one of those no-tangle nets, I'd use it every time.
The gods do not deduct from man's allotted span the hours spent in fishing. ~Babylonian Proverb
I net (1) on tourney day (2) fish over 25" and (3) for women and children who may cry if I lose their fish. Otherwise, I'm trying to catch one too, so deal with yours.
In the end we will conserve only what we love. We will love only what we understand. And we will understand only what we are taught.
Speckled trout are also known as weakfish due to the weak mouth. If it is a small fish, I sling them in. If they are larger, get the net. If they are hardly biting, I net all keepers.
MudDucker wrote:Speckled trout are also known as weakfish due to the weak mouth. If it is a small fish, I sling them in. If they are larger, get the net. If they are hardly biting, I net all keepers.
Weakfish are a different species than seatrout
From fwc
Weakfish are an Atlantic coast fish, possibly found in the extreme southeastern Gulf. Adults move inshore and north during warm months inhabiting the surf, inlets, bays, channels and estuaries and offshore and south during cold months. Juveniles inhabit estuaries which serve as nurseries.
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MudDucker wrote:Speckled trout are also known as weakfish due to the weak mouth. If it is a small fish, I sling them in. If they are larger, get the net. If they are hardly biting, I net all keepers.
Weakfish are a different species than seatrout
From fwc
Weakfish are an Atlantic coast fish, possibly found in the extreme southeastern Gulf. Adults move inshore and north during warm months inhabiting the surf, inlets, bays, channels and estuaries and offshore and south during cold months. Juveniles inhabit estuaries which serve as nurseries.
I have heard the same thing and while it is technically true, the old timers called speckled trout weakfish as well, not as a scientific name, but because of how easy their mouths tear.