MigraineMan
Defenestration Specialist
Bring your guns....we can capsize.
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Bring your guns....we can capsize.
.300 Win Mag.
.300 Win Mag.
MD DNR [B]strongly encourages[/B] anglers to harvest and kill any northern snakehead that they catch.
You do not "have" to kill them anymore and many anglers are releasing them now. The DNR would like you too, but there is no law against not killing them any longer.
Read here The DNR has settled on , they are not going anywhere and hope to kill as many as you can. Fines are a PITA to enforce on them and its just open season on them. No size or creel limits. It's a no guilt catch and kill fish.
Code:MD DNR [B]strongly encourages[/B] anglers to harvest and kill any northern snakehead that they catch.
I have caught them on Top water, spinnerbait, jigs, shakey head jigs and flukes. Minnows are their favorite food and what ever is weedless is best!! I have never bothered with a wire leader and never had a problem.
Why would anyone let one go? Those bastards are destructive.
This makes no sense, I guess there are two schools of thought. We can accept them as a potential new sport fish and they are certainly not unique in this sense but they will destroy native as well as introduced sport fish populations.
Two try to hold them back as long as we can. Given their survivability, lack of any suitable apex predator and reproductive rate they probably will be here regardless. These things really are the ultimate freshwater predator.
I still vote for killing them to slow their spread as much as possible.
This makes no sense, I guess there are two schools of thought. We can accept them as a potential new sport fish and they are certainly not unique in this sense but they will destroy native as well as introduced sport fish populations.
Two try to hold them back as long as we can. Given their survivability, lack of any suitable apex predator and reproductive rate they probably will be here regardless. These things really are the ultimate freshwater predator.
I still vote for killing them to slow their spread as much as possible.
There is a tournament at Blackwater scheduled for October.I think the tournaments make a lot of sense. Teams kill off a bunch of them.
There is a tournament at Blackwater scheduled for October.
This makes no sense, I guess there are two schools of thought. We can accept them as a potential new sport fish and they are certainly not unique in this sense but they will destroy native as well as introduced sport fish populations.
Two try to hold them back as long as we can. Given their survivability, lack of any suitable apex predator and reproductive rate they probably will be here regardless. These things really are the ultimate freshwater predator.
I still vote for killing them to slow their spread as much as possible.
I don't know, but here is the notice:Is it rod and reel only or is bowfishing ok?