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Old 11-14-2005, 07:14 PM   #1
striperman36
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One word ---- BYCATCH = offshore mortality

It's a small mesh fishery right?
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Old 11-14-2005, 07:31 PM   #2
tattoobob
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I am all for the ban, I do think the high water and storms in the spring had a lot to due with the low counts. I am also glad it is a total ban and just not the recs. this should be good for both fisheries

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Old 11-14-2005, 07:33 PM   #3
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the bycatch is some thing that can't be stopped unless they stop netting all together

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Old 11-14-2005, 07:33 PM   #4
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always cutting the thoat's of the land based crowd..full steam ahead for the offshore guy's..thing's will never change untill the money donations from the corperations that own these large boats to your rep's are cut off.

if the owner of these boats had to be behind the wheel in order to go out, 2/3's of them would never leave the dock's.THAT would bring the fish back.

BOAT fish do count.
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Old 11-14-2005, 07:37 PM   #5
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its a good thing there are no herring runs in RI
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Old 11-14-2005, 07:41 PM   #6
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This means NOTHING until the Federalies get onboard
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Old 11-15-2005, 07:45 AM   #7
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IMHO is about time. Now RI should do the same.

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Old 11-15-2005, 09:03 AM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nebe
its a good thing there are no herring runs in RI
Yeh, and just wait until some of the mass and ct guys, jonesing for livelining, come down to the already depressed herring runs in RI.

Has anyone seen anything close to a comprehensive report on the herring situation? Inshore and offshore? We hear fragmented bits and pieces of here and there but little or big picture (not that I expect the big picture to be correct)...

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Old 11-15-2005, 09:41 AM   #9
MoroneSaxatilis
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnR
Yeh, and just wait until some of the mass and ct guys, jonesing for livelining, come down to the already depressed herring runs in RI.
But John, isn't it a moot point since even simple possession of river herring in Mass waters is not going to be allowed? I suppose that some Mass guys might simply fish RI, but I know that myself and the guys that I (boat) fish with, wouldn't. We don't trailer our boats, and it's unlikely that we would bother to steam all the way to RI and have to learn new bottom. Plus, we would still have to transport them to/from Mass which will be illegal. I, for one, would not be willing to take the chance.
Am I way off base here?
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Old 11-15-2005, 11:04 AM   #10
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Not off base at all. Some, a few, will come to RI and get the herring into Mass or CT, some will come to RI to fish. Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that all,most, or even half of the CT & Mass guys will be invading RI, and that is not the impression I'm trying to make. My point is that RI likely has as much of a herring problem as Mass or CT. My hope is that RI herring get's closed (with defined triggers to reopen) and my fear is that even if that happens, it still does not address the "offshore mortality" that is happening with these fish....

RI had some odd rules in the recent past which allowed excessive take from a few runs when done downstream of the saltwater demarcation point which I saw with my own eyes had people taking thousands of fish at amounts and on days that were illegal on the freshwater side. Guys taking litterally several hundreds of fish in an afternoon because they were not in the "freshwater" portion of a run. Fortunately, that was addressed last year.

But, there were times when I saw Mass guys taking advanatage of those older rules and filling up with herring. Not picking on Mass guys as a whole (remember I am/was one), just an observation. And it was not illegal at the time. In talking to people pretty active in the herring situation, they say they have seen out of state plates going to runs late at night on "off' nights getting herring.

Quote:
Originally Posted by MoroneSaxatilis
But John, isn't it a moot point since even simple possession of river herring in Mass waters is not going to be allowed? I suppose that some Mass guys might simply fish RI, but I know that myself and the guys that I (boat) fish with, wouldn't. We don't trailer our boats, and it's unlikely that we would bother to steam all the way to RI and have to learn new bottom. Plus, we would still have to transport them to/from Mass which will be illegal. I, for one, would not be willing to take the chance.
Am I way off base here?

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Old 11-15-2005, 11:20 AM   #11
MoroneSaxatilis
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnR
...they say they have seen out of state plates going to runs late at night on "off' nights getting herring.
Point taken. And these sorts of people would probably be willing to take the risk of illegally possessing herring in Mass as well.
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