by Jimbo Roberts » May 10th, 2013, 6:22 pm
I still don't know what to think about this?
I say there's no good reason for the fish being out of the water for more than 10 seconds to take any picture. And your statement that you would take a 5 second picture laying in the grass over holding the fish out of the water for 30 seconds, I don't think I could agree with either. One I don't think that you can get any kind of picture by picking the fish out of the water, laying on the grass, standing back, taking the pic, then picking it back up and putting it in the water in 5 seconds or less? That would be hard to do, plus you have just removed most of the slime on one entire side of the fish. And like I said before, you get the camera turned on and ready first, before you even think about picking the fish out of the water. Doing this there is absolutely no reason the fish should be out of the water for more than 10 seconds, and easily done in 5 seconds, if you are going to hold it for the pic. If you don't get a good pic the first time, put it back in the water in the net for at least as much time as it was out of the water, and then try again.
I know that you may think that we are harping on this subject, but as on any forum, many newcomers come to learn, and we must teach those people the right way every time. Anything less and we are condoning exceptions, which just leads to their increased frequency, and developing life long bad habits. If it could be done once in awhile, well that's like you condoning it any given time. Nothing is perfect, we are all responsible for some delayed mortality whether we actually see the fish turn belly up or not. But we must put our best foot forward and promote the most ethical treatment of our gamefish. Many before me have said "It's a terrible thing for a sportfish to be caught only once!" And it's a loss everytime for everyone when someone who intends to release a fish alive can't accomplish that with good catch and release habits. Much less the fish dies because someone wanted a picture of it.
I have no picture of the two biggest Trout I have ever caught. One on the Big Horn I caught and the camera was left in the drift boat. The guide stayed where he was with the fish in the water in the net. I hurried back to the drift boat, grabbed the camera, hurried back to the guide, turned on the camera, and handed it to the guide. This took a couple of minutes and the fish was fully revived when I tried to pick her up. I grabbed it's tail, slipped my other hand under it's chin, lifted the fish, and the guide turned the camera off instead of taking the picture. He realized what he had done, told me, so I put the fish back in the net in the water while he turned the camera back on and prefocused the shot. I then tried to lift the fish again, but this time it struggled with all it might. I could have held it in a dead grip to get the shot, but decided instead drop it back into the water in the net again and let it calm down. But she was mad as h@!! now and had her full strenght again. She then jumped out of the net and back into her Big Horn home. That fish was close to 30" and 9-10lbs and I don't regret a thing. I don't need a picture when I have an experience like that.
Jimbo