We will put it this way large bass in Washington state take years to develop and taking a few of them out a gene pool can really devastate a lake. I think people that don't bass fish much specifically don't realize that the 7#er they are killing is potentially as old as they are. So think about this when you are killing a fish like that with the intention of eating it. What has that bass that is known for eating pretty much everything lately and how could that be potentially bad for your health or even the taste of the fish. I know plenty of people that love eating bass but the smaller ones because they are a great white meat. But once they really get above the slot limit size of 17" they begin to taste like mud is what I have been told.
The other aspect is the destruction of lakes by keeping the larger fish that reproduce. I know plenty of people that used to catch big fish consistently in a few lakes but due to some meat hunters taking those big spawning fish out of the gene pool the outcome is smaller fish overall with way more stunted fish because nothing bigger Is eating them. There are some stunted lakes that taking a limit of 12" bass can actually help because it frees up more food for the other bass in the lake to grow to larger sizes.
In todays society with technology we have the ability to take a picture on a smart phone and basically upload it to many places in a matter of seconds. I know I get great joy in releasing big bass to fight another day and knowing that the younger generation may have the potential to catch that same fish. I have caught 4 bass over 7# this year and every single one is still swimming waiting for me next year. To prove catch and release works I will use this as an example back in 2010 I was fishing a local lake and caught a smallmouth on a bed that went 3# 8oz. next year the bed is in the same spot and the exact same fish on it from last year although this time it was a 4# 6oz fish. last year same fish same nest and it was 5# 1oz. The same fish three years in a row that grew a pound and a half. To me there is nothing better then seeing the fish in your local lake grow up into tremendous monsters.
People may bring up the argument about well I want to get it mounted. With todays technology all you need is a photo and length and girth measurements of the fish and you can have a way more realistic longer lasting mount made of that truly once in a lifetime catch.
My last few words about this rant are as follows. Before you kill that bass that is over the slot limit think about the negative effects it can have on a lake for your future trips, your kids future trips and their kids future trips. If everyone was to keep the big bass they catch in these lakes all we would be left with are the runts of the litter so to say. So ill leave all you with this. When you think about killing that big bass think of everyone and everything you are hurting or destroying in the process. Think of the negative repercussions that those actions will cause.
When you are done thinking bout that take that piggies picture and send them on their way to swim free until the next fight.
