
TL
PS. I'm less upset by hearing this than I was by watching two kids throw two full stringers of trout into the trash can at Pine Lake last year. That was just plain disrespectful, wasteful, and ignorant

Definately a female,..males usually don't get much bigger than 4lbs max,..since it was a child that kept it,..how critical can we really be,..?crankbait42 wrote:a bass that size takes a long time and i dought that there are alot in the lake. and that bass if it was a female could have passed on its jeans to hundreds of fish. a picture is just as good anyway because big bass are from what i hear not very good to eat.
smoke14 wrote:I can only imagine being 12 and catching a fish that big, it would go home, hell for that fact I would probably keep it today. Catch and Release has its place but keeping ONE fish does not hurt the population of that lake, there are probably many more as big if not bigger. The people that take a limit of 5 bass hurt the lake more than that one fish. Just my 2 cents.
95% of the people that fish that lake would have kept it....It's a put and take lake, and most of the fisherman are looking to bring home anything they catch....fishingmachine wrote:Ckim i understand your poitn but the fact is there arent many big fish in the lake and all the big fish need to be released in order to preserve those bass in the lake
Keeping a big female like that out of a 100 acre lake has a decent impact on the lake. Keeping 5 dink bass doesn't do a thing, but removing one of the few egg barges with those genes is a definite loss to the lake. You are right, there are probably a few other bigguns in there, but not many in such a small lake like Beaver.smoke14 wrote: Catch and Release has its place but keeping ONE fish does not hurt the population of that lake, there are probably many more as big if not bigger. The people that take a limit of 5 bass hurt the lake more than that one fish. Just my 2 cents.
i knew someone would mention this thanks lemagoat that fish was a 4 that grew with the story!:colors: FM IT HAPPENED AND IT IS WHAT IT IS ALL YOU CAN DO IS CONTROL TODAY GO CATCH A FISH!:compress:lemagoat wrote:You gotta remember one thing FM, alot of people claim they have a 7 or 8 lb bass and it's only 4.5 or 5 lbs I cant count how many times I have disappointed many anglers with my scale, who know's maybe it was 8lbs but i'm willing to say the odds are it was a nice 5lber but then again I wasnt there. it has happened to me twice just this year where the person said they had a 7lber and wanted me to take the pic since they were fishing alone and I took one look and said gee let's weigh that thing! knowing darn well it was no more then 4lbs. jmo, and I feel the same as you about those bigs guys, hey I released an 8.3 this year.
Anglinarcher wrote:WOW, that is about all I should say.
I'll bet each and every one of you "kill the kid for taking the bass" guys would have done the exact same thing as the kid did when you were his age.
I'll go so far as to call you all hypocrites. Probably 2/3 of you would still have taken it TODAY, but not bragged about it on WL.
IF the bass was 12 pounds, then it was likely near the end of it's life anyway. Bass at that age are not egg barges anymore. I just love the amateur biologist that think they know so much just because they are part of the BASS FISHING RELIGION/CULT. Cut the kid some slack!
Here is what I see - a lot of jealousy because it was not you that caught the fish. Skill will get you more big fish on any given day, but the biggest fish is almost always luck. Get over it!
Now, for the record, I support C&R, but there is a reason the state has the rules they way they do. If you don't like the rules, do what the Muskie guys did and lobby to have them changed. In the mean time, teach, don't crucify!
Geezs, I think I go out and catch some BIG BASS for dinner tonight.![]()
Because our salmon runs are in great shape right???? WDFW has done a fantastic job there right????smoke14 wrote:
My thoughts exactly , the state biologist that help establish size limits do so in a manner that is the best for the fish not the fisherman.