There's a Mexican proverb I always think of when this topic comes up - Ni tanto que queme al santo, ni tan poco que no lo alumbre. It comes from the Catholic tradition of lighting votive candles in front of statues or paintings of Christ, the Virgin Mary or a favorite saint who you want to hear your prayers. Literally it means “not so much that you burn the saint, nor so little that no light is cast upon him.” What it really means though is that a middle ground is usually the best path in most things in life, and you hear this proverb often in all kinds of situations.
In the C&R debate there are two logical extremes. The first is that if one really wants to do all they can to protect the fish, they will stop fishing. The other is the feeling that you need to keep every fish you catch every time you go fishing and stack them up in your freezer like cordwood (to be tossed in the trash periodically to make room for more). Many of us, me included, came to C&R from the latter position. Now we are all trying to figure out where on the spectrum of the many possible middle positions we fall. Some possibilities:
Barbless: All the time; some of the time depending on the type of fish; only when forced to by law; never; etc.
Pictures: Every single fish caught; only the big fish; only the first fish; only the special fish; no fish ever; only in the net; only if someone else can snap a quick pic as you lift the fish for one second from the net; only in the water as you reach down to unhook it; etc.
Handling: don’t know or care and use dry hands; handle but with wet hands; don’t ever handle under any conditions; handle some but not all; place fish on dry ground for a picture; don’t even let the fish touch a net; only use certain types of nets; etc.
Fighting fish: No concerns – catch fish, fight fish and let fish go; varying degrees of concern for rod weight used in fighting the type/size of fish you are targeting; varying degrees of concern for the tippet size used in fighting the type/size of fish you are targeting; length of time you will fight a fish before allowing it to break off (if any); temperature of the water in which you will fish (if any); etc.
Those are just some of the main points, there are certainly others. I think that for most of us, our positions are usually in flux. For me, as long as someone is in the middle of the extremes, -Ni tanto que queme al santo, ni tan poco que no lo alumbre, then that is a heck of a good start. These kinds of articles and debates on forums are helpful periodically so that people become more educated on the issues, but the important thing is to not become so fanatical that our own personal stance is the one and only correct one and by insisting on it fervently we force others into one of the extremes. I think that a lot of people who might be thinking about moving towards C&R are often turned off by that fervor and that is part of what continues to get fly fishers labeled as elitists. Not everyone, especially those new to fly fishing and/or catch and release, are as educated as some of us on the subject and they aren’t going to be convinced if they get slammed hard for their first posts where they might have put a fish on the ground, or taken a picture of every 20 cookie-cutter rainbows they caught on their last outing. Another helpful saying is that you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar.
Personally I am comfortable with the position that I currently hold. Wet hands, are of course a given, but I now take pictures of many, many fewer fish than I used to. I try to take a picture of my first fish, any fish that are especially colorful and large, and usually a few representative fish of what I catch during an outing. For example, if I am catching 15-20 browns from the Big Reedy that are all in the 9-13” range, I might take a picture of 3-4 of them. Thus, many of my fish are now released with either zero to very minimal handling, most aren’t even netted. However, I am far from eliminating taking pictures from what I do on a fishing trip. If we did that, there would be a heck of a lot of fly fishing magazines and photographers who would be out of work and leave a lot of us who like looking at those pictures distraught. Nevertheless, we are still only talking about the position that
I have decided to take (for now). If someone else wants to take a picture of every fish they catch, or not take any pictures at all, then that is there right and long as they are practicing C&R (and refining their own positions over the months and years) then that’s good enough for me.
I’ve just realized that I started writing this post at halftime between the Bears and the Jets, and not only has that game ended, but it is now the end of the first quarter of the Patriots-Jets game. Didn’t mean for it to get so long – all I really wanted to say was that the debate is important and informative one to have from time to time, but we just have to remember not to burn the saint.
Now it’s time to finish this up and watch the BOSTON Patriots win this game.