T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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768.1 | rock bass?? | BTO::BATES_R_T | ��t� | Wed Jun 15 1988 08:50 | 4 |
|
Sounds like a rock bass to me....
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768.2 | | BAGELS::DILSWORTH | Keith Dilsworth DTN 226-5566 | Wed Jun 15 1988 10:45 | 1 |
| Sounds like a smallmouth
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768.3 | Bronze Backs | SCOMAN::BACZKO | | Wed Jun 15 1988 11:25 | 15 |
| Sounds like a Smallie to me to.
I have been catching alot of smallies this year, most of them are
real bronze in color with vertical black markings coming off the
top and running down to about the middle of thier body, smallies
are also black and green, Does anybody know they have different
markings? Most of the small mouths I have caught are airborne
on the retrieve.
At a toury this weekend I weighed in 9.5 lbs of bass, three were
smallmouths, two bonze color wth the markings one green/black in
color.
Les
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768.4 | Another vote for Bronze backs | VIDEO::LEVESQUE | I fish, therefore I am. | Wed Jun 15 1988 11:44 | 12 |
| I'd say its a smallmouth. Smallies tend to jump alot, and give a
better fight than a largemouth pound for pound. Most of the smallies
I've caught had the vertical dark bars as mentioned in -.1, but
not all of them, even in the size range you described.
Last year on the Merrimack, I saw a guy catch a smallmouth of about
two pounds. When he got it in, I said "Nice smallmouth." He said,
"Naw, that's a largemouth. Can't you see how big his mouth is?"
Oh, brother!
The Doctah (who_at_least_knows_what_he's_catching)
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768.5 | MAYBE A GAR. | STRATA::WOOLDRIDGE | | Wed Jun 15 1988 12:06 | 5 |
| Definitly a CARP.......... YUK YUK
NIGHTCRAWLER~~~~~~~~
|
768.6 | Carp I Bet | PCCAD2::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Jun 15 1988 14:31 | 3 |
| Sounds, like a carp to me also.
Jim
|
768.7 | yy | PCCAD2::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Wed Jun 15 1988 15:51 | 20 |
| The way to tell a smallmouth from a largemouth is by the location
of the jaw. If you hold the fish broadside the and draw a line staight
down from the eye, the jaw or mouth will extend pass the eye towars
the tail. On a smallmouth the mouth will end in line with the eye.
ex:
_-_-_-_-_-/////_____"
eye---- "o" {{{{ Tail end
jaw--- >>>>> )gil
__________----------
largemouth
_-_-_-_-_-/////_____"
"o" {{{{
>> )
__________----------
Smallmouth
Jim
|
768.8 | SMALLMOUTH | SCOMAN::BING | | Thu Jun 16 1988 00:03 | 4 |
| I'VE SEEN CARP BEFORE AND THIS WAS DEFINITLY NOT A CARP.
I'LL GO WITH THE MAJORITY AND SAY IT WAS A SMALLMOUTH.
THANKS AGAIN.
WALT
|
768.9 | sabor tooth cat bat | SCOMAN::KERSWELL | | Thu Jun 16 1988 08:52 | 12 |
| I Have it, are you sure it wasnt a bird? if it was in the
air more than it was in the water, It could be a sabor tooth
cat bat, deep set eyes, tail like a cat, teeth like a sabor
tooth, and fly's like a bat, I personelly have never hooked
on to one of these but i heard if you hook on to a big one
it can actually pull you off the ground.
thing's to keep in mind!!!
if you hook one and it out weigh's you CUT THE LINE!!
Ronni
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768.10 | | HPSCAD::BPUISHYS | Bob Puishys | Thu Jun 16 1988 09:23 | 7 |
| Boy I thinks some people would die before entring a normal answer
with out give a shot at someone or making fun of the topic!
<flame off>
It is a smallmouth!
|
768.11 | ITZA CARP | SCOMAN::KERSWELL | | Thu Jun 16 1988 10:13 | 6 |
|
That was not meant to be offensive,
I THINK IT'S A CARP!!!
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768.12 | one guy's opinion | VIDEO::LEVESQUE | I fish, therefore I am. | Thu Jun 16 1988 10:41 | 10 |
| I would hope that someone with the brains enough to fish the Quabbin,
would also have the brains to tell a bass from a carp. Let's give
the guy some credit. A carp has a mouth on the bottom of the head,
not in the front like a bass. It's adapted to sucking garbage from
the bottom, not feeding on live things like a bass. That durned
fish be smallmouf!
The doctah
ps I thought the bit about the cat bat was funny, not offensive.
|
768.13 | Q'est que C'est Rock Bass? | TARKIN::GOODY | The answer is ...... 42. | Thu Jun 16 1988 10:49 | 6 |
| My first guess on the mystery bass would have been Rock Bass also
because of the "Bloodshot eyes". If this is a smallmouth, which
I am certainly not questioning, what does a Rock Bass look like?
Or is this just another one of those "5 names for same fish..."
Mike
|
768.14 | BUT SERIOUSLY FOLKS | SCOMAN::WOOLDRIDGE | | Thu Jun 16 1988 10:53 | 12 |
| YO,
Have a laugh once in a while guys! One more thing,
RE: .12 - You are very wrong about carp not feeding on live things.
They will also readily feed on the surface if food is
available, ie; bugs or other floating yum yums. They
will TEAR UP worms.
(I was'nt serious about the fish being a carp. I really
think it was a bullhead)
NIGHTCRAWLER~~~~~~~~~~~
|
768.15 | I did not want to start trouble, but worm you onlty enter jokes! | HPSCAD::BPUISHYS | Bob Puishys | Thu Jun 16 1988 11:06 | 12 |
| A rock bass is smaller, silver in color with a big red eye, (i not
sure if it has a black center or not), The fish almost looks like
a crappie or a panfish. It has a small mouth, and a very big big
eye.
A small mouth (bronze back) are brown/bronze could have balck
or green, with small dots or a black tail. The eye is not really
red, but maroon lik the bass note stated.
Hope this helps..
Bassin Bob
|
768.16 | Rockbass w/bloodshot eyes | SA1794::CUZZONES | God, I love this place!!!! | Thu Jun 16 1988 11:19 | 17 |
|
Serious reply RE: rockbass.
The rockbass I have caught (many) are a mottled black/brown with
white or sometimes grey/black belly and fins. It has a mouth like
a largemouth (I'm not sure if it extends beyond the eye). The eye
is a definite red and they don't usually run very big. The biggest
I have caught was under 2 pounds and they are more often under a
pound and shorter than 10". I find them the same places I find
sunfish and other panfish. They are common but they are not found
in all waters. They do not fight as well as bluegill or largemouth
and I have never seen one airborne.
They are known by other names (goggle-eye, red-eye, etc). What
fish isn't?
Steve
|
768.17 | A MYSTERY OF LIFE | SCOMAN::WOOLDRIDGE | | Thu Jun 16 1988 11:48 | 12 |
| YO Bassin Bob,
I don't ALWAYS make jokes. Look back in the file.
My fishing expertise shows up all over! ha ha.
Fine I'll get serious (god I hate this), There is NO WAY any
of us know what it was. We were not there. We can only guess. (or
make a joke) If I am forced into guessing I will say SMALLMOUTH.
If I feel like a joker I'll say it had to be a flounder.
NIGHTCRAWLER~~~~~~~~
|
768.18 | Many Have No Brains | PCCAD2::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Thu Jun 16 1988 12:12 | 10 |
| re:12
> I would hope that someone with the brains enough to fish the Quabbin,
> would also have the brains to tell a bass from a carp.
Er, ah,....I hate to break this to you, but the guy said he was
fishing Wachusett res. Besides it doesn't take brains to fish
Quabbin, like the guy who anchored his boat in the middle of the
trolling lane out at gate #8, and was using surface plugs.
Jim
|
768.19 | Back to Wachusett after lost at quabbin | SCOMAN::WOOLDRIDGE | | Thu Jun 16 1988 12:33 | 7 |
| re: .18
ha ha ha!
If he was using surface plugs he must
have been fishing for catfish. Sounds like
that kind of fisherman.
NIGHTCRAWLER~~~~~~
|
768.20 | Fishy Tale | CIMNET::DSULLIVAN | | Thu Jun 16 1988 12:34 | 14 |
| Well,
Looks like you need a Green Water Wizard to straighten this here
fish tail.
1) Fish was definetly a smallmouth
2) Fish was not a Karp
3) Fish was not a Rock Bass.
For fun catching smallmouth, largemouth, and large krappies (rock
bass) goto S. Watupa in Fall River, Ma.
- Dave
|
768.21 | are things getting out of hand | SCOMAN::KERSWELL | | Thu Jun 16 1988 12:42 | 13 |
|
Nothing beats a good topic, sounds like time for a tourney,,
to see who's going to catch the mysterious fish, I'm stunned I
never caught a rock bass, i'm just familier with, L.mouth,
S.mouth and calico,,
no hard feelings
S.T.C.B
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768.22 | THE AUTHORITY | SA1794::CUZZONES | God, I love this place!!!! | Thu Jun 16 1988 13:40 | 12 |
| RE:??
A Crappie and a Rock Bass are not the same fish even though both
are known as calicos from place to place. A Krappie is another
thing entirely but DonMac doesn't like us to talk about it here.
I think the rest of you ought to purchase a copy of the Audubon
Field Guide to North American Fishes like I did. Until I read one,
I didn't know doodlysquat about fish (Note: I said fish not fishing).
Now I do.
Steve
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768.23 | books? we don't need no stinking books! | STRATA::WOOLDRIDGE | | Thu Jun 16 1988 14:06 | 7 |
| re. 22
Thanks for pointing out our stupidity. Will it have pictures
and everything!!? Gosh....
NIGHTCRAWLER~~~~~~~~~~
(who don't need no stinking
book!)
|
768.24 | WITH A "C" PLEASE | STRATA::WOOLDRIDGE | | Thu Jun 16 1988 14:08 | 4 |
| PS ...RE: .22
Oh yeh, "AUTHORITY". It's spelled CRAPPIE!!
NIGHTCRAWLER~~~~~~~~~~
|
768.25 | Tooshay Jim! | VIDEO::LEVESQUE | I fish, therefore I am. | Thu Jun 16 1988 14:18 | 11 |
| Details, Details! Quabbin, Wachusett... well at least I remembered
it was a reservior. And, Jim, I bet you "hated to break it to [me]":-)
Keep me on my toes. Even the doc isn't always right. But it WAS
a smallmouth! I know, I was there! Yeah, that's it! I was there.
That's the ticket. And I caught it. Yeah. And it was three feet
long. Yeah. :#)!
the Doctah (who's_on_his_toes_now!!)
|
768.26 | nice picture | SCOMAN::KERSWELL | | Thu Jun 16 1988 14:30 | 7 |
| RE:25
HEY doc was that three footer a centerfold in the
help me identify my fishy's book, or did you by the
special offer poster!!!!!!!!!
I hope ya know we're just twisting line and not trying
to break it
|
768.27 | its easy! | WLDWST::GARRISON | | Thu Jun 16 1988 14:55 | 2 |
| it seems very obvious to me it was a smallmouth carp rock bass. having
caught many of these trophy fish i knew right away what it was.
|
768.28 | Did It Float | PCCAD2::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Thu Jun 16 1988 16:08 | 3 |
| Its starting to sound like the ones swimming in Boston Harber.
Jim
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768.29 | THEY FLOAT SOMETIMES TOO | STRATA::WOOLDRIDGE | | Thu Jun 16 1988 17:32 | 3 |
| The ones swimming in the Boston Harbor are BROWN CRAPPIE.
NIGHTCRAWLER~~~~~~~~~~
|
768.30 | Chew wuz lucky!! | DPDMAI::BEAZLEY | | Thu Jun 16 1988 18:39 | 5 |
| Wit dem maryoon eyes it musaben a newclear fish. Did it glow?? Sumtimes
dey jes op an take off in a big muskroom cloud. A mos dangeroose
fish!!
Coonass
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768.31 | ALIEN FISH | SCOMAN::BING | | Fri Jun 17 1988 04:31 | 10 |
|
O.K. O.K. I GIVE. IT WAS REALLY A KIVVER, AND WITH THE HIGH LEVEL
OF MERCURY IN THE REZ. IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN A NUKED FISH OR
IT COULD BE A NEW PROTOTYPE FISH THAT THE RUSSIANS SENT OVER HERE
TO SEE IF THEY COULD DESTROY OUR WATER SUPPLY BY HAVING THE FISH
EXCRETE MERCURY OR IT COULD HAVE BEEN A ALIEN FROM OUTER SPACE IN
DISGUISE OR IT COULD HAVE BEEN......JUST A PLAIN OLE SMALLMOUTH.
(NEXT TIME I TAKE MY CAMERA)
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768.32 | hybrids undoubtably | FINALY::WOLFETM | | Fri Jun 17 1988 12:59 | 17 |
| I intend to settle this with the following information;
I observed the planting and subsequent difficulties of the species
in question.
You see the fishermen in the Mass area had complained that they
needed a better fish than was available and with the cooperation
of the F&G and a large group of Biologists the developed several
types of hybrids.
The first was a cross between the Coho Salmon and the Walleye
(remember the maroon eye). This hybrid was called the COWALL and
was fairly successful but not quite what was desired.
This fish you caught was evidently the second hybrid which was
developed by crossing the COWALL with the Muskie.
This hybrid looks right and is called a COWALSKI. The only
problem is that you have to teach the thing to swim...
Michael
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768.33 | have fun on this one | SCOMAN::ZILINSKY | | Fri Jun 17 1988 14:03 | 7 |
| (ONE MORE FOR THE FUN OF IT)
Now guys, we all know it was an oversized shinner.
bartender
I need another drink!!!!!!
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768.34 | | SCOMAN::ZILINSKY | | Fri Jun 17 1988 14:05 | 4 |
|
re::.33 I meant shiner or could it be a smelt....
bartender
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768.35 | MORE ON THE COWALSKI | STRATA::WOOLDRIDGE | | Fri Jun 17 1988 14:47 | 7 |
|
The COWALSKI (I'm die'n here haha) has an excellent sense of smelt
too.
NIGHTCRAWLER~~~~~~~~~
|
768.36 | call it stash | STRATA::TADRY | | Fri Jun 17 1988 16:40 | 3 |
| I wonder if the COWALSKI likes to bowl?, maybe a fish league? I
wonder if they'll bite kelbasa with a bit of white horseradish?
|
768.37 | FISH BOWL? | GENRAL::HUNTER | from SUNNY Colorado, Wayne | Sat Jun 18 1988 12:55 | 2 |
| If the COWALSKI likes to bowl, then does he do it in a FISH
BOWL???? I'll bet he has small pins, too!
|
768.38 | ..so long and thanks for all the fiche... | CHEFS::BUXTON | | Mon Jun 27 1988 04:32 | 17 |
| The Cowalski is pretty rare in England; my 'field-guide' dosn't
mention it and it's really good to hear about the new species you
guys keep discovering.
Black Bass are found in Europe but there is only one location in
England where they have been introduced. My guide tells me that
their are two main types: Smallmouth and Largemouth. The sallmouth
actually has a smaller mouth, it says, has no separated dorsal fin
as in the largemouth and also has smaller scales having from 68-72
in the lateral line where the largemouth will have from 60 - 68.
It dosn't say what to do if the fish in question has exactly 68
scales in the lateral line: perhaps it's a Medium Mouth?
Bucko...
Reading England...
|
768.39 | one step at a time | FINALY::WOLFETM | | Mon Jun 27 1988 12:07 | 5 |
| I shouldn't wonder that the Cowalski is not in the "field guide"
the poor thing has just been taught to swim recently not to walk
across fields...
Michael
|
768.40 | No more holes | GENRAL::HUNTER | from SUNNY Colorado, Wayne | Mon Jun 27 1988 16:25 | 3 |
| Not to mention that they are now trying to teach the Cowalski
how to ski so that the ice fishermen don't have to drill holes in
the ice.
|
768.41 | a real flap | FINALY::WOLFETM | | Tue Jun 28 1988 17:20 | 3 |
| The attempted cross with the flying fish was trashed due to the
potential FCC licence requirements.....
|
768.42 | ident info requested please | CHEFS::BUXTON | | Wed Jun 29 1988 09:05 | 13 |
| Just in case this species does turn up in the river system of England
how should we recognise it?
Please describe: Number of scales in lateral line
Fin and spine arrangement
Colo(u)r
Typical size and weight
Shape of mouth and barbles
Usual habitat
Size in bowling shoes
Regards...Bucko, Reading England...
|
768.43 | The meek don't want it! | FINALY::WOLFETM | | Wed Jun 29 1988 14:11 | 44 |
| re .42
Number of scales in lateral line:
Three....This species only has four scales and the Hobart scale
located at the lower rear is the only one out of alignment.
Fin and spine arrangement:
Retracable dorsal fin and four pectral fins (which are used for
holding bottles and cans while feeding)
Spinal column is slightly crooked as this species is quite prone
to osteoporosis.
Colo(u)r:
Bloodshot red in early hours, turning to grey later in life.
Typical size and weight:
Basically categorized as follows:
category sub category size weight
Fry Pan 1 to 3 inches 2 oz
Fingerling Middle 4 to 5 inches 4 oz
Juvenile Smoker 12 inches 2 lbs
Adult Coker 2 to 3 feet 1 lb
Senior Stroker 12 inches 6 lbs
Weight and size changes occur most in the head area.
Shape of mouth and barbles:
Mouth usually pursed into a tight "o".
Barbles normally in the 125kilo class.
Usual habitats:
Normally found near shoreline especially around docks and Kiosks
where alcoholic beverages are consumed.
Size in bowling shoes:
Same size as they are naked.
I hope this will assist in species identification for Reading...
Roses are red, Violets are blue, I'm schizophrenic, and so am I!
Michael
|
768.44 | I know that fish. | STRATA::WOOLDRIDGE | Worm fishermen have stiffer rods | Thu Jun 30 1988 17:48 | 5 |
| YO,
Vericose veins in the nose area are common as well.....
NIGHTCRAWLER~~~~~~~
|