Friday, May 16, 2014

Future Is In Our Hands


 Future of this Beloved Sport

The future of the fishing industry rests in our hands and not many people know that


Fishing for some people is a hobby, others a competitive sport, and for a few it’s an obsession. But what people don’t know is that the fish we all love to catch need our help every now and again. In this day and age it seems like some aren’t getting the attention they need.

            A species that is rising in both population and media attention is the Asian carp. For people who don’t know, the Asian carp was put into farm ponds down south to clean algae. But when the areas flooded the carp accidentally got into tributaries off the Mississippi river. This happened back in the late 1990’s. Now the carp are traveling up the river and are headed to the great lakes. If the carp are not stopped from reaching the great lakes it could cause horrific damages to the entire great lakes region. A major concern is the bass populations on Lake St. Clair. The fishing there is considered world class and if the carp reach that point they could easily wipe out the bass. They is currently an on going fight to stop these monsters. There has been electric fences put up to scare the carp down but it doesn’t seem to be 100% effective. What you, the average person can do is get it out there that this is happening and what the consequences for this if it is not stopped. Our commercial fishing industry would be wiped out and we wouldn’t have any of our game fish like before. (Asian Carp)




            A lesser known idea that is spreading slowly is the idea of banning or stopping there from being a size limit in order to keep a fish. Let’s say people only take the big fish from the lake or pond. This is going to make the fish adapt to that and spawn at an earlier age and size so they can pass there genes down before they die. So the average fish size lets say… 20 years down the road will be smaller than before because of this. There have also been experiments done on this. For example,

In one lab experiment, scientists harvested 90% of the fish from each of 6 populations. Only the largest fish were taken from two populations; only the smallest from another two populations; and in the final two fish were taken at random. After only four generations, fish in the populations that had lost all their big fish were only about one-third the average weight of those in the random-catch group.” (Fishing Size Limits)


The way we could combat this is to ban the size limit and take out an equal number of fish ranging in all sizes so we have a steady population of bigger fish like bass and walleye in the future. This would also help because the bigger the fish is the more eggs the fish lays come spawning time. So if we take out the big fish we are taking out the main breeder fish in the population.

Overall the future of the fishing industry is a tough topic to talk about. There is a lot involved in it and not one person or group can do everything. So we have to play our part and try to ensure a future for our beloved sport. Doing even one of these ideas above can really help out.


























Works Cited

"DNR - Asian Carp Fact Sheet." DNR - Asian Carp Fact Sheet. N.p., n.d. Web. 02 May 2014. <http://www.michigan.gov/dnr/0%2C4570%2C7-153-10364_52261_54896-232231--%2C00.html>.

"Asian Carp Regional Coordinating Committee." AsianCarp.us. N.p., n.d. Web. 02 May 2014. <http://www.asiancarp.us/>.

"Fishing Size Limits: How Fish Are Gaming the System." Environmental Defense Fund. N.p., n.d. Web. 02 May 2014. <http://www.edf.org/blog/2013/04/25/fishing-size-limits-how-fish-are-gaming-system>.

Friday, May 2, 2014

Reasons For My Madness


My Reason For my Madness

People start their hobbies at many different ages, some younger than other

Fishing is a sport like no other. The ways to do it as well as whom you can do it with are some of the many cool features that some sports just can't provide. But looking at that, how does one get started into this vast world people know as "fishing"? Mine started with hop, skip, and a jump.


I was only a youngster at 4 and didn't know much about...Well anything at the time besides eating and sleeping. My mom and dad had taken me and my sister to
Coldwater which is located in southern Michigan on the Ohio border.(Coldwater) "This was your first time on vacation ever and seeing a lake was the coolest thing to you"my mother said. I was with my mother and sister hanging around our cabin doing all the things a normal 4 year old would do. My dad was out fishing by himself.


I guess I decided to pick up a fishing pole and my mother chuckled, thinking about how my dad was already teaching me how to cast a fishing rod in the back yard. I saw the lake and put 2 and 2 together and went to the dock to try my luck at fishing.  I don't know how I was able to do all this at the age of only 4 but I guess anything is possible.

Using my two tiny hands I managed to bait my own hook and do it all by myself. She thought it was the coolest little thing. The next thing she remembers is hearing me start yelling and she turns around to see that I have this thing on the end of my line and it's coming right at her. She didn't realize it at first
but after she took a good long hard look before having the realization that I had caught my first fish ever.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RD5OJeLeunc

My mom was ecstatic. She was jumping with joy and couldn't believe it. I had done it all by myself. She helped me take off the fish and kept me fishing. I caught one other little fish that day all by myself.  My dad was kind of upset that he wasn't there to see my first fish being caught. He was the one that was
showing me how to fish in the first place. Little did my mom or dad know at the time was that this started my passion for fishing that not many people have. I has loved to fish since then and plan on doing it till the day I die. This was my way of finding out how great fishing was and to this day how it is important in my life and I don't want to stop.(Keep America Fishing)













































Work Cited

 "Coldwater, Michigan." Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, 25 Apr. 2014. Web. 02 May 2014. 


Coldwater "Aquatic Center." City of Coldwater. N.p., n.d. Web. 02 May 2014.

Keep American Fishing - Why Fishing Is The Coolest Sport/Hobby In The World!" Keep American Fishing - Why Fishing Is The Coolest Sport/Hobby In The World! N.p., n.d. Web. 02 May 2014.