tycaster wrote:Until the other afternoon when, arriving home from doing some necessaries that I now don't remember at all, I found my wife and a friend just getting ready to settle in and watch a chick flick. Perfect. I'm going fishing.
RSetina wrote:No chick flicks here. That's why I got my wife into fly fishing.
rayfound wrote:So the question Ty asked me about the long skinny fish in question, which he alluded to here:
Would it have good or right to have moved the fish into another pool with a more robust food supply? would that have been "playing God" too much? Or should we let whatever happens, happens?
Darrin Terry wrote:Fish move around on their own all the time. Just because you see the same fish in the same hole seven trips in a row, don't think they won't move if they want/need/can. On the other hand, maybe, just maybe, that next hole has an undercut bank or ledge, or a big boulder with a cavity beneath it. IN that space is another big fish. Maybe one you never knew was there. You release the stunted, but promising fish there only to have that creeks unknown Samson come out and nail your prize. Ooops. Of course, now you know where the real monster lives. So there's that.
Personally, while I have hooked fish in one hole and brought them to hand in a second or even a third hole, I don't move them on my own. I release them where I catch them. I say you do what you think is best. You can't always worry about unintended consequences. Catch the fish. Release the fish. Do your best to revive them in between. Enjoy the experience and don't forget to smile and laugh. Especially if others are watching. A little maniacal laughter does one good.
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