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Inshore Saltwater Fishing Discussion Discuss inshore fishing, tackle, and tactics here!

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  #1  
Old 03-25-2014, 02:11 AM
duckco duckco is offline
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Its way over fished for one and two we are not done with winter yet. went out there couple times this month and only caught reds it was slowing going to. There are plenty of bait fish in the waters. I work on the local waters 14 days at a time and see alot. From currents, fish movement, weather etc etc. I study that all the time out here so when i get off i have a good idea. Ive been seeing a ton of tx reg boats on our waters so on top of use local boys we now have our tx friends fishing our spots.
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Old 03-25-2014, 05:45 AM
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MathGeek MathGeek is offline
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Originally Posted by duckco View Post
Its way over fished for one and two we are not done with winter yet. went out there couple times this month and only caught reds it was slowing going to. There are plenty of bait fish in the waters. I work on the local waters 14 days at a time and see alot. From currents, fish movement, weather etc etc. I study that all the time out here so when i get off i have a good idea. Ive been seeing a ton of tx reg boats on our waters so on top of use local boys we now have our tx friends fishing our spots.
There is no hard data showing Big Lake is over fished. Tx anglers pay $90 for the privilege of trying, but they are no more successful at catching trout in Big Lake than Louisiana anglers. The Tx anglers have been fishing Big Lake for a loooooong time, so it's nothing new. There's a big difference between a lake being over fished and the anglers being unable to find the fish.

Big Lake is, well, big. Lack of success fishing can be attributed to three possible factors. 1. There are not enough fish in the lake. 2. The fish are somewhere in the lake other than where you are fishing. 3. The fish are not buying what you are selling.

Anglers tend to gravitate toward "there are not enough fish in the lake" as their preferred explanation because the other options suggest room for growth in their angling abilities. This is fine until they begin exerting pressure on gov't to change the rules to help get more of their "fair share" instead of becoming better fishermen.

Your "fair share" is out there. Go and get it. Just don't blame someone else of the techniques that worked last month or last year aren't working today. The location of the fish and the best techniques to catch them can change quickly for very subtle reasons. Some of the better anglers have stopped posting pics of lots of fish and the details of how they were caught because they prefer more solitude on the water. That is there right.
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  #3  
Old 03-25-2014, 05:48 AM
BradleyPrejean87 BradleyPrejean87 is offline
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Originally Posted by MathGeek View Post
There is no hard data showing Big Lake is over fished. Tx anglers pay $90 for the privilege of trying, but they are no more successful at catching trout in Big Lake than Louisiana anglers. The Tx anglers have been fishing Big Lake for a loooooong time, so it's nothing new. There's a big difference between a lake being over fished and the anglers being unable to find the fish.

Big Lake is, well, big. Lack of success fishing can be attributed to three possible factors. 1. There are not enough fish in the lake. 2. The fish are somewhere in the lake other than where you are fishing. 3. The fish are not buying what you are selling.

Anglers tend to gravitate toward "there are not enough fish in the lake" as their preferred explanation because the other options suggest room for growth in their angling abilities. This is fine until they begin exerting pressure on gov't to change the rules to help get more of their "fair share" instead of becoming better fishermen.

Your "fair share" is out there. Go and get it. Just don't blame someone else of the techniques that worked last month or last year aren't working today. The location of the fish and the best techniques to catch them can change quickly for very subtle reasons. Some of the better anglers have stopped posting pics of lots of fish and the details of how they were caught because they prefer more solitude on the water. That is there right.


EXTREMELYYYYYYYYYYYY well put i commend this response sir!
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  #4  
Old 03-25-2014, 05:51 AM
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slickfish slickfish is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MathGeek View Post
There is no hard data showing Big Lake is over fished. Tx anglers pay $90 for the privilege of trying, but they are no more successful at catching trout in Big Lake than Louisiana anglers. The Tx anglers have been fishing Big Lake for a loooooong time, so it's nothing new. There's a big difference between a lake being over fished and the anglers being unable to find the fish.

Big Lake is, well, big. Lack of success fishing can be attributed to three possible factors. 1. There are not enough fish in the lake. 2. The fish are somewhere in the lake other than where you are fishing. 3. The fish are not buying what you are selling.

Anglers tend to gravitate toward "there are not enough fish in the lake" as their preferred explanation because the other options suggest room for growth in their angling abilities. This is fine until they begin exerting pressure on gov't to change the rules to help get more of their "fair share" instead of becoming better fishermen.

Your "fair share" is out there. Go and get it. Just don't blame someone else of the techniques that worked last month or last year aren't working today. The location of the fish and the best techniques to catch them can change quickly for very subtle reasons. Some of the better anglers have stopped posting pics of lots of fish and the details of how they were caught because they prefer more solitude on the water. That is there right.
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