might
catch trout(s) small enough
to require measurement!
Moderators: bman, Tom Keels, Chalk
Rocket, I'm looking at it from an economical standpoint. I understand the perch jerkers on the bank are fishing for supper. But if all those folks out there jigging took the money they spent on that fishing trip to the grocery store, they could eat much better. I suppose what I'm saying is they're out there because they want to fish. Supper is a bonus. Just the price of fuel tells me they could eat much better from the grocery store.rocket wrote:Good feedback.![]()
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Hey TC...surely I read your post wrong when you wrote you don't think anyone is trout fishing for supper. Haven't you seen the maze of boats that sit out there jigging all day long? I believe that is exactly what they are doing.
Charles put it best..anything other than a compliment on someone else's legal stringer is should be none of my business.![]()
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I kid my buddies with offshore boats about how much those grouper fillets cost per pound.Chalk wrote:What Tincan is saying is this...your boat cost say $12,000.00 you catch 10 pounds of fish on the first outing, the fish cost you only $1200 a pound....you have to catch alot of fish to justify the cost of a boat....not to mention tackle, gas, insurance and up keep
I hope you are joking, because it's the scientists and Fish Commission that come up with the regulations. There is no special reason that 15" for sea trout (it used to be 12", then later 14") is magic, no more than the slot for reds, or any other size or bag limit. At one point there was no size limit for trout in Franklin County.Jumptrout51 wrote:Now I see.The divers aren't at fault.
It's the scientist.
Let's start harvesting scientist.