View Single Post
  #4  
Old 06-18-2012, 04:40 PM
Duck Butter's Avatar
Duck Butter Duck Butter is offline
Ling
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: South Central La
Posts: 3,903
Cash: 3,267
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by "W" View Post
How many trout have you cleaned with another trout inside???

I clean thousands of trout a year and I look in most of them to see what they are eating....I have Never in my life pulled another speckled trout out of a speck

I have pulled
Shrimp
Mullet
Shad
Sand trout
Croaker
Pogy
Crabs
Hooks
Baits
Snakes
Snails
Never once a speckle trout but I would love to hear how many of you have



Also I find it funny you laugh at J Poe??? He is on the water close to 300 days year and if he says there is less pressure " there is less pressure bottom line "
You sure don't have any time to prove him wrong or laugh at what he states as a fact

Which now makes me dis credit all your theories as you have proven you know zero about our situation
I wouldn't know Jeff P if he was standing in front of me, or any guide on Big Lake for that matter, I just find humor that you complain every single day on here about potlickers and people yet your idol just said there is less pressure but I can find 100 posts where you say pressure is the problem. Flip flop flip flop, its comical

I know plenty about 'your' situation over there, so would any biologist, wetland scientist across the nation without ever stepping foot on a boat out there. Believe it or not Big Lake isn't different than any other place that is attached to a large body of saltwater. The properties of saltwater and vegetation are the same in Big Lake as they are along the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Ocean. If you dig a straight canal to a body of saltwater eventually saltwater is going to get into the system - its not rocket science. And when saltwater intrudes, it changes the landscape by killing the freshwater marsh plants, creates mud flats, and eventually open water, you can get a good look at this by driving down Hwy 1 from Golden Meadow to Grand Isle if you would actually leave Big Lake and see other parts of the state, or you can drive down Hwy 27 to the coast and see the vegetation change and mudflats, open water all along the sides of the road
Reply With Quote