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I've caught some on the flyrod whenever I've gone up there. The problem from a bait perspective is that they're running over 2 pounds. A big striper has no problem eating one that size but I prefer them a little smaller if I can get them (not that I fish with live bait much anymore).
They have been thicker outside the mouth of the canal than they have been up in the discharge in my experience. Try weighting your sabiki rig so you can get it down deeper and still fish it fast. If you still have no luck at all, sometimes as a last resort I can catch a few downstream around the ash pond discharge. You've got to have a good bait tank or you've got to hurry though, or they'll die on you before you can get back to the Plant and get set up. bd |
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Tennessee Tarpon <'TK><
My experience when guiding and catching skippies for bait was this ... Not the bait so much or color ... But the retrieve presentation.... Hint I used Microlite open faced spinners ... Try holding the reel handle ridged an cranking the rod ... This gives the sabiki rig a jerking motion that makes them strike .... <'TK>< :p
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I have a 1oz weight on sabiki rig now. Maybe I will fish the mouth by the channel more.I also double rig trout magnets, which is usually very deadly. It's just been slower this year.
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bd |
I will vote 1 for tastiness
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I understand ... <'TK><
Striperfan, Like you ... I have eaten a lot of fish, freshwater and saltwater ... and I have lived in every costal state in the south (I went to 15 schools before graduating from High School) and eaten a lot of saltwater seafood ... And Fried ... Well ... everything is good !! ... When I was younger I wouldn't eat anything hardly unless it was fried ... (AS EMIRL SAID ... LARD IS KING!!!!) As I have gotten older and two Stints later ... Virgin olive oil and no batter is the extent of my fried foods ... But you know ... to each his on .... I love calves Liver and onions ... But going on 48 years of marriage my wife still won't cook it for me ... LOL !!! <'TK>< :p
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For most fish - bass, bluegill, crappie, walleye, white bass, and sauger, I usually fry them in a seasoned cornmeal breading.
Occasionally I will take a few crappie or white bass fillets, lightly seasoned, stuff them with crab cake and lump crab claw meat, bake them over a bed of baby leaf spinach, and drizzle hollandaise sauce over the top. Trust me, you haven't lived until you've tried this. It is good with tilapia too if you don't have any other fish handy. I prefer catfish either fried or pan seared with heavy seasoning. In my opinion it vastly improves catfish to shave off the thin layer of fatty meat next to the skin - it's not as dark as the red meat on a striper but it lends a similar strong flavor. Striper or salmon I like grilled or baked. For trout, I usually season them, coat them with finely crushed toasted almonds, and bake in the oven. I do the same thing with halibut when I have any. bd |
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Yum yum !!! <'tk><
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Every now and then...
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All this talking about food has made me hungry. :D
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I'm serious about the thing with stuffing the fillets with crab and then covering with hollandaise sauce. It's really a very easy recipe to prepare, but it tastes amazing and you will impress everybody with your gourmet chef skills. bd |
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