T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
764.1 | Bass Spawning | PCCAD2::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Tue Jun 14 1988 11:24 | 19 |
| I've read an article years ago about the bass spawning and the way it
works. First when the water temp. reaches, I believe 58degrees fh.
(I don't recall the actual numbers here, so please bear with me),
the male bass will move into shallow water and construct the nest.
He remains there until the water reaches 62 degrees, after
which he leaves, and the female comes in and lays her eggs. At this
time the female only stays 48 hrs approx. She then leaves
the nest and the male comes back and fertilizes the eggs. He remains
there gaurding the nest, right up to and after the eggs hatch.
After the eggs hatch he stays for about 24 hrs and will even eat some
of the young before leaving. The female remains agrresive even after
she has left the nest for a period of time. People can destroy bass
fishing in a pond by keeping females before they lay their eggs,
a good thing to keep in mind when you pull in an early bass.
I welcome any corrections here because it was a few years ago that
I read the article.
Jim
|
764.2 | | CASV02::PRESTON | Curious George & th'Temple of Doom | Tue Jun 14 1988 12:55 | 24 |
|
When we were up to Winni for the week after Memorial Day, it seemed as
though the bass had not yet spawned. One of the local guys at the
sporting goods store said he hadn't caught any off the beds yet, though
some others had said that the spawn was over. Another guy going past the
dock in a bass boat said the spawn was over in the big lake, but not in
Paugus Bay (where I was). That didn't make a lot of sense to me, since
the bay is much smaller than the big lake, hence the water should warm a
bit more slowly, but hey, what do I know?? I suspect the guy at the store
was probably right.
I imagine that if they haven't spawned up there yet, it must be soon,
because of all the warm weather lately.
If I recall correctly, ideal spawning temp for smallmouths is 65 deg. It
was 58-62 deg when I was there. Following the logic of large water vs
small, the bass in the ponds and small lakes must have spawned by now.
I fished at Horn pond in Woburn with a friend of mine last Sat. (while
the wives were at a baby shower - oh joy!) In spite of seeing some jumping
we had no action at all. Three weeks ago he caught them one after the
other during lunch. The spawn is definitely past there.
Ed
|
764.3 | here's to baby showers | VIDEO::LEVESQUE | I fish, therefore I am. | Tue Jun 14 1988 14:09 | 7 |
| I agree. The small ponds seem to have already experienced the spawn
whereas the larger ones seem to be experiencing it now. Lucky you-
getting to fish while the wife is at a baby shower. I'm going fishin'
tonight- ( my wife's going shopping for maternity clothes <future
fisherperson on the way>). Hoo Hah!
The Doctah...................................
|
764.4 | The doc better get used to house calls (his own!) | TOOK::SWEET | Capt. Codfish...Jeffries Ledge or Bust | Tue Jun 14 1988 14:41 | 7 |
| Hey Doc...
You better get your fishing in now because things are going to
change real soon when that little one comes. No such thing as
just running out to wet a line after the baby is around.
Capt. Codfish (who has a 1 year old son to prove his point)
|
764.5 | ADDICTS AT A TENDER AGE... | STRATA::WOOLDRIDGE | | Tue Jun 14 1988 17:48 | 9 |
| re: .4
YO CODFISH AND DOCTAH...
Your babies should not stop you from
taking part in the untimate sport of fishing. My three children
go fishing with me wether they like it or not! ha ha! (in reality
they enjoy it tremendously. Get em' hooked early!!)
NIGHTCRAWLER~~~~~~~~~
|
764.6 | No eggs in this one | VIDEO::LEVESQUE | I fish, therefore I am. | Wed Jun 15 1988 09:26 | 12 |
| I caught a good sized largemouth last night. It went a little better
than three lbs. If it was a female (I'm not sure) it had definitely
already spawned. The stomach was small. The fish was caught very
close to shore. (Half my time was spent retrieving my lures from
overhanging trees). I used a small perch colored rapala floater.
I retreived it in a herky-jerky stop and go action It's a good thing
I was able to see the lure, cause I never felt the bass pick it
up. It grabbed it and swam sideways, so I neverfelt it at all. It
gave a good acrobatic show, and I put it back after I weighed it.
The Doctah (who's_hittin'_the_ocean_with_Joe_on_Saturday)
|
764.7 | Male Or Female ? | PCCAD2::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Jun 15 1988 09:46 | 14 |
| re: 6
Good catch !
Not sure if it was female? Remember the female only stays with her
nest for 48hrs, then the male takes her place until the eggs hatch.
So the fish especially at 3lbs probably was a male, or young female which
was feeding not spawning. Bass will come in close to shore to feed
in the evening and mornings, otherwise will generally stay in deeper
water. My brother and I caught seventeen bass one year all over
5lbs. and all from deep water caught in the middle of the afternoon.
One of the things I have found is that the males, though smaller
than the females, taste much better especially when their about the
size you caught 3lbs.
Jim
|
764.8 | | STAR::ROBIE | Will the Wolf Survive? | Thu Jun 16 1988 12:27 | 9 |
| Re: 0
Doctah,
Would you mind sharing our secret pond/puddle in Hudson? I
Would like to find another spot close other then Robinson pond.
thanks
Michael
|
764.9 | Moved from the Spring Classic Note | DRUID::WOOD | | Thu Feb 14 1991 10:30 | 11 |
| Just a thought, but I'm surprised the BASS organizations would
even want to schedule tournaments during the spawn. Catch and release
near the bed will not harm the reproductive cycle of the fish, but
on a lake like winni, you'll be displacing fish many miles...a whole
years worth of catch and release and then you destroy a years worth
of offspring for each bass you put in the live well. I'm not on
any hi horse here, but I imagine the subject has been discussed and
am curious what the rational was that ended up allowing this to
happen....:-)
Marty
|
764.10 | good subject | RANGER::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Thu Feb 14 1991 12:24 | 22 |
| Excellent point Marty.
Just to summarize for folks: Recently, NH imposed a 2 fish limit
from May-June to protect spawning bass. Additionally, from May 15 -
June 15, it is catch and release only.
On a tournament by tournament basis the NH F&G dept will determine
whether they feel that the bass population is healthy enough to support
a 2 fish per person catch and release tournament.
Speaking for our club, the New Hampshire Bassmasters, we trust our F&G
departments judgement on the matter. If they feel that our tournament
will not hurt the smallmouth population on Winnipesaukee (or any given
lake), that is good enough for us.
On some waters the bass have been holding their own for a very long time,
even with the old 5 fish limit during the spawn. The recent laws will
help tremendously. I think if the bass did ok during the 5 fish limit
during the spawn, then a controlled number of 2 fish tournaments should
be quite acceptable.
-donmac
|
764.11 | not much to worry about ! :-) | DRUID::WOOD | | Thu Feb 14 1991 12:57 | 10 |
| Sounds reasonable to me Donmac....Maybe an honor rule not to
cull would be a good idea though...If you catch 7 fish during the
day, and keep two, but keep releasing the smaller, but in a
different area, you've really messed up 7 potential breeders,
not two...if you have 20 teams with 40 anglers total, you could
screw up 100's of spawning pairs. Of course, with the results
of the DEC tourneys I've seen so far, there's probably not much
to worry about :-), :-) !
Marty
|
764.12 | input | DEMING::HAUER | | Fri Feb 15 1991 09:52 | 17 |
|
Don Mac...do they [NH F&G] have any studies on this? I read once
in the Bassmaster the the University of Missouri did a study for
the Bassmaster trail concerning removing the fish from the beds.
It stated that fish were back on the beds within three hours. It
DID NOT state if that was a problem or not. I forget the
distances that they released the fish from.
IMHO- I can't believe that an extended time off the bed is good.
It would seem that they hang around the bed for reasons, ones
that a study couldn't determine.
Gitzit'
|
764.13 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | No easy way to be free... | Fri Feb 15 1991 10:14 | 10 |
| The mere act of taking a bass off the beds at all can create a problem when
there are alot of sunfish around. Sunfish LOVE bass eggs, and frequently gang
up on the bass guarding the nest. When the bass chases off one intruder, others
come in from the blind side and gobble as many eggs as they can before the
bass returns in a second or two. It's amazing how quickly that sunfish can
home in on an unprotected nest. I would bet that even with the bass returning
to the beds in three hours, 50% of the eggs will have been eaten (assuming
enough predators).
The Doctah
|
764.14 | thanks | DEMING::HAUER | | Fri Feb 15 1991 10:33 | 11 |
|
The sunfish is the type of concern that I felt was left out of
the article. Given that the Bassmasters paid for the study....
I am at once leery of the results.
Given, what I perceive as enthusiasm for this topic, we should
keep it in mind as we schedule our tournies.
Gitzit'
|
764.15 | yup only 33% | HPSTEK::MMURPHY | | Fri Feb 15 1991 11:21 | 9 |
|
And to complicate things more...ONLY 1/3 of the nests are
sucessful anyway. Thats before any angler removes him from
the nest.
who else would know better
then the KIV
|
764.16 | We don started!! | SCAACT::BEAZLEY | | Fri Feb 15 1991 11:36 | 12 |
| Its ban too warm for too long an de sprawn has started an de basses
dey are hittin!!!
Me, I'm gonna try an sneak away for som ob it!!
Course Lake Monticello sprawns all year roun...its wun ob dem lakes nex
to a power genirater wot keep it warm ALL year roun. Deres som more ob
dem, but Monticello is de mos popular one.
Come on don an we gib it a shot!!
Coonass
|
764.19 | WHEN?!?!? are you catching these fish? | GEMVAX::HICKSCOURANT | | Tue May 07 1991 19:43 | 21 |
| You do realize, don't you, that when you see a bass on a nest it is
DONE spawning and is now protecting the nest?
You also realize that it is the MALE rather than the female that is
protecting the nest, don't you?
If you catch a bass near the nest and remove it, the nest will be
obliterated within 30 minutes. Everything from ducks, to bottom-feeding
fish, to crayfish, to leaches feed on bass eggs. If you have the
patience, watch a bass nest for an hour or so and count the number of
times the male chases off a would-be predator. It's amazing how many
creatures consider bass eggs a delicacy. I once watched a sucker make a
bee-line for a bass nest from 150 feet away. While the male chased that
one off, another sucker came in on another direct line. The bass made
it back JUST in time.
I guess what I'm saying is that if this catch, keep in livewell, and
release stuff is happening while the bass are protecting their nests,
a lot more bass are dying than the ones that don't survive the weighing
in ceremony.
FWIW
John H-C
|
764.20 | Kill a whole generation - win a trophy. | MONTOR::NICOLAZZO | Free the beaches! | Wed May 08 1991 06:38 | 10 |
| re: .23
john,
I agree completely. If your gonna fish for bass during
(or right after) the spawn, PLEASE release the fish where you
caught them! I would hope that the people who run tournies would
be aware of this, but it seems that many tournies (at least in
MASS) are run during the spawn, with the traditional weigh-in at
the launch - I find this a bit scary.
Robert.
|
764.21 | Give us a break | SOFBAS::SULLIVAN | | Wed May 08 1991 09:23 | 11 |
|
Get the facts!
re .24
Mass for your information (MASS BASS) has removed all tournaments in
May and the first part of June to avoid the spawn. Please don't
critisize us MASSHOLES before you have the facts!
- Slam
|
764.22 | Not ALWAYS the male... | HPSTEK::BCRONIN | | Wed May 08 1991 09:40 | 17 |
| RE: .23
A little nit picking here. The male fans out the nest and when he
has it ready he tries to push any available females onto it. When he
finally convinces a willing partner to join him they spend from several
days to over a week together at the nesting site. During this time
they will both protect the area. After the actual spawning takes place
the female leaves the area and the responsibility of protecting the
eggs and later the fry lies with the male. He spends a few weeks
guarding them until one day he decides they just look too good to pass
up and he procedes to eat all of them that he can catch! This is
their first real hard lesson on predation.
I totally agree that EVERYTHING down there will eat the eggs/fry if
they get half a chance. I've always felt that a school of perch is
probably the worst case, they'll wipe it out in just a few minutes.
B.C.
|
764.17 | let the fisheries biologists make the call | DONMAC::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Wed May 08 1991 09:58 | 19 |
| .26 is right, the female does spend a fair amount of time on the nest.
Also, try and remember that in many parts of the country on many bodies
of water people have been catching and eating fish off the beds for
many many years - and the bass population has done pretty good
in many areas regardless.
I practice catch and release 99.9% of the time, and I'm glad that NH has
enforced a catch and release period from may 15 - June 15, and a 2 fish
limit for the rest of May and June. I think this will help the fish out
a great deal - but I'm no where near ready to give up catch and release
fishing during the spawn.
In NH, I think the fish and game dept is doing the right thing, by
controlling the number of tournaments on the lakes. If they think
the fish can handle the pressure, I'll go along with the idea until
I see results that prove otherwise.
-donmac
|
764.23 | Picking the nit picking.... | GEMVAX::HICKSCOURANT | | Wed May 08 1991 10:32 | 12 |
| Last year the bass were still on the nest protecting fry in the last
week in June..... (data from Winnipesaukee)
If you see two fish on the nest for several days, what you are seeing
is the same male with several different females. He kicks her out as
soon as she sheds her eggs and proceeds to entice any other female who
approaches into his nest area.
FWIW
John H-C
|
764.24 | I MUST be wrong.....again... | HPSTEK::BCRONIN | | Wed May 08 1991 10:58 | 8 |
| I must be wrong. All the books on Bass that I've read during
over 30 years of Bass fishing must be wrong also. You should
talk to Doug Hannon and tell him the REAL ways of the Bass also
because you're telling me that he's wrong too.
Who protects the nest while he's out enticing?
B.C.
|
764.25 | | GEMVAX::HICKSCOURANT | | Wed May 08 1991 12:35 | 2 |
| He doesn't have to move more than a few feet. Seems they ALL get randy
when the water temp is right.
|
764.26 | | GEMVAX::HICKSCOURANT | | Wed May 08 1991 13:04 | 6 |
| I should add that I am unable to distinguish one bass from another when
it's in the water except by species and size. I also can't tell the
boys from the girls except by the rules I learn from the books.
So, it is indeed possible that the male chases off the female and then
lets the same female back after his mood has changed. Who knows?
Where's Dr. Doolittle?
|
764.27 | How to sex Bass | HPSTEK::BCRONIN | | Wed May 08 1991 14:24 | 15 |
| During the spawn period the easiest way to tell males from females
is to simply look at the vent. The females will be swollen and most
likely reddish and the males will not. The biologists way of telling
the sex is to insert a 1mm dia. probe into the vent. A male will have
a vent canal that is angled forward ~45 deg. and about .75-1in. deep.
A female will have a vent canal that goes straight in (90 deg.) and
not nearly as deep. PLEASE do not go around probing the vents of Bass
without knowing what you're doing, especially at this time of year.
According to a Mass. F+G Biologist the swollen vent is as accurate as
probing during the Apr. to Jul. time frame. This is from a study of
approx. 75 animals this spring. Males can also generally be told by
the worn and sometimes bloody tail and anal fins. These are the only
easily done field tests for sexing Bass.
B.C.
|
764.28 | Do they mind? | GEMVAX::HICKSCOURANT | | Wed May 08 1991 14:32 | 3 |
| Gosh, BC, how do you get `em to hold still while you check out their
vents?
<grin>
|
764.29 | The whole truth! | HPSTEK::BCRONIN | | Wed May 08 1991 14:49 | 7 |
| You asked! That's the straight answer, the way the F+G biologists
do it. It's a lot easier when they've been shocked for study.
FYI, No I'm not a fish prober.
B.C.
|
764.30 | My hat is off to Mass Bass! | GNPIKE::NICOLAZZO | Free the beaches! | Thu May 09 1991 08:19 | 10 |
| re: .25
That's great news! My apologies - I had thought that tournaments
were run through the spawn.
BTW - I'm a MASSHOLE too.
Robert.
P.S. - do you know if all the other clubs follow the MASS BASS policy?
|
764.31 | Myths dispelled by B.A.S.S.... | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Thu May 09 1991 10:25 | 25 |
| Re last dozen or so..
According to an article from B.A.S.S. that I reas night before last,
the idea of ONLY the male guarding the nest has been found to be FALSE!
While it is true in SOME cases that the males assume this task, the
B.A.S.S. people who did this study in various southern waters found
that the SURVIVABILITY of the fry was over 10 times HIGHER on nests
where BOTH the male and female did guard duty. This article also
dispelled the rumor that the males hang around largely for a "free
meal" of their own fry when they reached a certain age.. They stated
that while both male and female Bass will surely eat smaller bass, they
DO NOT attacke/eat their OWN fry from the nest. They MAY encounter some
of their own offspring in the lake, but the do NOT eat their own fry
while they are still in the nest...
B.T.W....Before anyone begins to have this tendency to attack me for
my concerns regarding the practices that I expressed concern about, I
DO think that some organizations have their hearts in the right
places...and may be working to get their heads there too... I happen to
be a Lifetime B.A.S.S. Member...have been for over 12 years...joined
back when the Life Membership fee was $200.00....Think it's a LOT more
now...
JM
|
764.32 | RatVENT bound at best | MSDOA::CUZZONE | Clear the ropes! | Thu May 09 1991 12:32 | 9 |
| RE: a couple back ...
If the biologists don't shock the fish BEFORE probing their vents, you
can SURE the fish are shocked AFTER their vents have been probed.
This file is great. Where else are you gonna read about bass buggery?
Hey, isn't that the Harbormaster's brand of boat?
-SSS-
|
764.33 | Hmmmm | GEMVAX::HICKSCOURANT | | Thu May 09 1991 12:55 | 14 |
| re: .37
Am I right in assuming that the article was about largemouth bass?
Do any ponds or lakes in the south have smallmouth bass?
There are about four species of bass found only in the south (other
than largemouth, that is). Was the article about one of those perhaps?
An interesting data point. Would you be willing to distribute copies or
rekey it for this note?
Thanks.
John H-C
|
764.34 | Try the world record Smallmouth ! | MSDOA::CUZZONE | Clear the ropes! | Thu May 09 1991 14:26 | 8 |
| >>>Do any ponds or lakes in the south have smallmouth bass?
John, how far south are you talking? We have lakes in east Tennessee with
more smallmouth than largemouth. There are also lakes with LM,SM and
spotted bass. Some of these are just north of the Ga, Al and Ms
borders.
-SSS-
|
764.35 | South of south | GEMVAX::HICKSCOURANT | | Thu May 09 1991 14:45 | 7 |
| Sorry, I don't think of Tennessee as south. (My friends from Tennessee
take this as a personal affront, but I hope you don't.) What I meant
was the area known as "deep south," I guess. Soupy, very productive
water that is perpetually warm.
I don't have any of my reference books handy, but next time I'm logging
in from home, I'll post the south-specific species.
Anyway, did the article specify which bass species was studied?
|
764.36 | | PACKER::BASSCO::BACZKO | Now, for some fishin' | Thu May 09 1991 14:50 | 19 |
| Here is a curve ball,
If you let all the bass and other fish spawn and the survival rate
is way up there on the fry you will end up with a lake full of stunted
fish. Thats the reason they ended up putting some of the tiger muskie
in some lakes to get rid of the populations. I fish lake that has no
pressure at all, the sunfish are barley bigger than your palm and the
bass ae all 1 pound or less. This lake is STUNTED, they say that it is
due to over population but I am not the expert on that.
I talked with a fisherman yesterday that has been fishing Kiv's
favorite spot for 50 years, he take 5 fish out of there about 5 times
a week, yesterday he got a female about 5 lbs, in the bucket it goes,
He obeys the laws but he is in his right to take them. He knows right
where the spawning beds are and goes there every spring catching fish.
That lake still produces some of the best fishing I have had. What
does this mean?? I DONT KNOW I am rambling.............
Les
|
764.37 | You be the ump | GEMVAX::HICKSCOURANT | | Thu May 09 1991 15:26 | 20 |
| You be the ump on that pitch:
Was the lake in question (hypothetical lake that it be) ever stocked
with anything?
I've seen more than my fair share of lakes and ponds where there are
almost NO fish at all, but those that are there all look small enough
to be juveniles. Something is severely wrong with those lakes, and my
own suspicion is that the bottom has been killed. [Yes, that IS
speculation.]
If the bluegill and pumpkinseed are small, then the predatory bass
should have easy access to food to grow on, no?
I have fished quarries that had nothing but largemouth bass in them. (I
suppose the bluegill were either all eaten or well hidden.) Bass of all
sizes came out of those quarries.
On another note, I have been under the distinct impression that muskie
and pike were introduced to take care of certain pelagic fish, such as
the yellow perch, that occupy all of a lake's zones pretty much all of
the time, thus crowding out other species, small- and large-mouth not
being one of them. Can anybody corroborate that?
John H-C
|
764.38 | Comments from the Slammer | SOFBAS::SULLIVAN | | Thu May 09 1991 15:49 | 31 |
|
Can I colaberate?
You bet!!
I'll colaberate that since man tied a string and a hook together,
slapped some bait on it and started fishing there's been fish. Back
then it was more of neccessaty than sport. Today's times seem to yield
the opposite.
Why do you old ladies get so worked up about these things. Fish is
fish. They spawn in the spring. If all goes well we'll have more fish
in the fall.
Who basically gives 2 hoots weather or not the mail or female guards
the nest, I don't , What fish do and who watches the nest is thier
business. I thinks that's a private matter. Kind of like having
a bass peek in the ole bedroom to see who guards the sheets. You
should listen to yousrselves. Probing vent tubes? My god have
you really lost it. It's a FISH.
Time to get back to fishing ... you guy's should do the same.
_SLAM
---------
/ @ @ \
/ ^ \
/ \_____/ \
/ \
|
764.42 | Smallmouth reproductive habits | GEMVAX::HICKSCOURANT | | Thu May 09 1991 21:29 | 61 |
| Took me a little while to track it down, but here is the "book copy"
that explained my own observations on bass reproduction.
The author is John F. Scarola. The book is "Freshwater Fishes of New
Hampshire." The publisher is the New Hampshire Fish & Game Department.
Reproduced without permission.
Smallmouth Bass
Reproduction : In our area [New Hampshire] the breeding season of the
smallmouth bass usually begins in late April and extends through early
June. The determining factor is water temperature: it must be at least
59 degrees [Fahrenheit] for the commencement of nest building, and
between 62 and 65 degrees for the start of egg laying. The male bass
constructs the nest by sweeping material away from the bottom with his
tail and rooting out coarser material with his snout. The preferred
nesting site is in 2 to 12 feet of water on a gravel or rubble bottom
with some nearby cover such as a boulder or submerged log. Upon
completion, the nest is a conspicuous saucer-shaped depression which
measures from 2 to 3 feet in diameter depending on the size of the
male. Nest construction may require up to 2 or more days. When the
nest is completed, any female who comes into the shallows and
approaches the male in search of a mate is immediately coerced onto
the nest for spawning. Often the female must be repeatedly driven back
to the nest before she is made to remain. While spawning, the fish lie
side by side on the bottom of the nest facing the same direction. The
male remains in an upright position with the female turned partly on
her side as the eggs and milt are extruded. The female is driven off
after spawning but another may soon replace her and add eggs to the
nest. A 10-inch long female produces roughly 2,000 eggs; one 18-inches
long, 10,000 eggs. The male remains over the nest after spawning and
zealously guards the eggs, which he keeps free of silt by gently
fanning with his fins. Egg incubation requires from 2 to 10 days,
depending on water temperature. Upon hatching, the transparent young
live on the bottom of the nest between the stone crevices. In a few
days they become jet black and rise in a swarm over the nest. In about
a week's time --- when the young are about 1-inch in length --- they
move from the nest. For as much as a week they are herded about in a
school in the shallows by the male, after which they disperse and
begin to fend for themselves. Water temperature is crucial to both the
development of the eggs and the young. It has been shown that if the
water temperature rises as high as 73.5 degrees, eggs in the final
stage of development will be killed. The male will desert the nest if
the temperature of the water suddenly drops below 60 degrees due to a
cold snap, [and] the eggs or young will be left vulnerable to
predators.
The author notes that, in New Hampshire, largemouth bass are generally
much smaller than elsewhere in the country, with a 6-pound largemouth
being considered a very large one. The reproductive habits of the
largemouth bass in NH are very similar to those of the smallmouth
excepting some small differences in temperature sensitivity and some
marked differences in nest-building habits.
For the record: I believe that every body of standing water is unique.
I have never seen two that looked exactly alike, either in bottom
topology or visible inhabitants.
John H-C
|
764.45 | Ah, well..... | GEMVAX::HICKSCOURANT | | Fri May 10 1991 10:44 | 10 |
| Apologies to all excepting one.
This, unfortunately, is the only file where I occasionally find people
who give an expletive about freshwater. I assumed there were a few folk
interested in ichthyology among all of the ichthyophagous creatures
here.
My mistake, apparently.
John H-C
|
764.46 | you guys are too much | DONMAC::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Fri May 10 1991 14:23 | 12 |
| Unfortunately I have to put the dusty mod hat back on for a few...
Most of the replies in the "Back Home Bass" topic after reply #23 were
moved here, to a more relevant topic - a few were moved into the rathole.
Discussions of all biological aspects of the bass, or any fish for that
matter, are welcome in this notesfile.
If you do not want to take part in this discussion, quit whining and
simply ignore this topic.
-donmac
|