27
Jun 13

Carl Hiaasen Hates You

He will.

He will.

OK, that’s just being provocative… maybe.

I’ve been listening to a lot of Carl Hiaasen as of late. I love Audible and listening to Carl’s (I call him Carl, not Mr. Hiaasen, we’re tight like that) stories of crime, punishment and crazy ex-governors really helps pass time during my 2,000 miles/month of driving.

His stories happen in places I either like, or would like if I ever saw them myself (and often involve, indirectly, a fly rod). Biscayne Bay, the Keys, the Bahamas. His stories are, on the surface, stories about criminals and low-lifes and the people who go out of their way to deal justice. On a deeper level, those crimes almost always have to do with plowing up some bit of mangrove or draining some bit of marshland (crimes I think deserve Hiaasen-esque retribution). He is certainly not in the pro-growth camp, with a pretty palpable dislike of tourists, snowbirds and anyone who wants to blindly own their own bit of paradise.

If you are thinking of moving to Florida… you should know… Carl Hiaasen hates you.

I understand the threat. I’ve been on Google Earth and seen the Bahamas, subdivided and paved, roads to nowhere that would destroy so many simply wonderful places. It would be so easy to lose so much. The Keys and Florida are more prone to destruction, given our efficiency in such matters.

Subdivided, but not sold... not yet.

Subdivided, but not sold… not yet.

It is a tension. I love those places. I would live in those places if I could (I can’t, Carl, so don’t sick Skink on me), but it is pretty easy to see if we all lived in these places they would be destroyed.

These places seem to always be one bulldozer, one cruise ship, one oil tanker away from going away. Maybe it isn’t hatred. Maybe it’s just fear of losing what he loves. I can understand how Carl feels… and I wish Skink was real.


14
Jun 13

Well done Florida

Bonefish and Tarpon Trust

FWC UNANIMOUSLY VOTES TO MAKE BONEFISH AND TARPON CATCH AND RELEASE IN FLORIDA!

We are pleased to inform you that at their Wednesday meeting in Lakeland, The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), unanimously approved new regulations to make tarpon and bonefish catch-and-release-only fisheries, making Florida the first State to do so. The deliberations by Commission members were brief and entirely supportive. Commissioner Brian Yablonski said, “this is the most significant thing we can do for tarpon.” Following their favorable ruling, Chairman Kenneth Wright added, “there will be a chapter written in a book about what this commission did today.”

Bonefish and Tarpon Trust is pleased with the outcome, which not only protects tarpon in Florida waters, but extends catch and release regulations into federal waters off of Florida. BTT also sends heartfelt thanks to members and supporters who made sure their voices were heard throughout this process. Your support made a huge difference, and several commissioners praised the thoughtful and informed letters they received from Bonefish and Tarpon Trust supporters leading up to the meeting. “It took teamwork on many levels to get these new regulations enacted,” said BTT Chairman Tom Davidson,  “and we are very thankful for the Commissioners’ forward-thinking actions. These new regulations have brightened the future for Florida’s bonefish and tarpon fisheries.”

The newly adopted regulations include the following provisions:

  • Eliminating all harvest of tarpon with the exception of the harvest or possession of a single tarpon when in pursuit of an IGFA record and in conjunction with a tarpon tag.
  • Keeping the tarpon tag price at $50 per tag but limiting them to one tag per person, per year.
  • Modifying the tarpon tag program, including reporting requirements and shifting the start and end date for when the tarpon tag is valid.
  • Requiring that tarpon remain in the water and are released near the site of capture.
  • Discontinuing the bonefish tournament exemption permit that allows tournament anglers to temporarily possess bonefish for transport to a tournament scale (this brings the state in line with similar rules in the National Parks in the Keys).

Thank you to everyone who supported BTT’s efforts and took the time to make phone calls or write letters to the commissioners.  Your support and actions helped make these regulations a reality.


06
Jun 13

Help Florida Bonefish and Tarpon

From the Bonefish and Tarpon Trust…

Dear Angler,

In less than one week, on the morning of June 12 at their meeting in Lakeland, FL, the members of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission will take their final vote on proposed regulations to make tarpon and bonefish catch and release in the State of Florida. Your input is critically important.   If you have already shared your support with the commission or forwarded the call for action to friends, thank you.  If you haven’t taken the time to do so, please let the commissioners know how you feel.  Here’s how you can help.  

  • Complete the email form at this web site
  • Call the staff of the Commission at  (850) 488-4676 
  • Contact them by mail: Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, 620 S. Meridian St., Tallahassee, FL 32399-1600. 
  • Attend the meeting on June 12 in Lakeland, FL, directions to the meeting location.   

The basics of the proposed rules are:

Bonefish

  • As of 2011, bonefish are catch and release only except for an exemption for tournaments that allows for retention of bonefish in a live-well for transport to a weigh-in station. The new draft regulations would remove that exemption, meaning that all bonefish would have to be released at the site of capture (temporarily possessing a fish for weighing, photography, scientific sampling would be OK). IGFA allows world record weights to be obtained as long as the scale is attached to something (such as an angler) standing on the bottom (such as the flat).

Tarpon

  • The intent is to manage tarpon as a catch-and-release-only fishery with allowable harvest and possession limited to possession in pursuit of an IGFA record.
  • At present, there are no regulations on tarpon in Federal waters. The proposed rules would extend Florida regulations to apply in Federal waters off the Florida coast.
  • Tarpon harvest tags will be limited so that they can only be used to harvest or possess tarpon in pursuit of an IGFA record. 
  • The total number of tarpon harvest tags that an angler can obtain in one year will be limited to one
  • Professional fishing guides will be able to obtain more than one tarpon harvest tag per year
  • Tarpon can be targeted with hook and line gear only
  • Tarpon can be temporarily possessed for photography, measurement of length and girth, scientific sampling, and released at the site of capture
  • Tarpon less than 40 inches fork length can be briefly removed from the water for photography, measurement, scientific sampling.
  • Tarpon greater than 40 inches fork length must remain completely in the water

Talking Points:

  • Tarpon and bonefish are important components of a saltwater recreational fishery in Florida that has an economic impact exceeding $6 billion annually 
  • A recent international scientific review ranked tarpon as vulnerable due to significant regional population declines (due in part to commercial harvest in Mexico, Venezuela, Brazil) and fishing pressure and research has shown that we all share a regional tarpon population
  • Tarpon are long-lived (up to 80 years) and late to become sexually mature (they mature at 8 – 12 years of age), they are especially vulnerable and recovery of the population is on the time scale of decades
  • The continued loss of juvenile habitat will delay recovery
  • Given the amount of fishing effort for tarpon, we must take the responsible approach to conservation for the long term
  • The bonefish population in the Florida Keys has declined significantly for reasons as yet unknown
  • Although not well documented, there has been harvest of bonefish by fishermen in South Florida
  • Most, if not all, bonefish tournaments have moved or are moving to an all-release format, meaning that retention of bonefish for weigh-in is no longer necessary

Please take the time to attend or contact the commissioners and let them know how you feel.  This issue is too important to assume that someone else is speaking up on your behalf.

Tight lines,

Bonefish & Tarpon Trust


17
May 13

I’m not going to Alaska… at least not now.

I read the Fishing Poet’s recent submission for the 2013 Blogger Tour, and it got me thinking. I thought I’d go a different rout.

Dear Alaska,

You sound really, really awesome. However, you and I aren’t going to meet any time soon. Let me just say, I am sure you are worth it. I’m sure you are spectacular. First off, you are just so massive. There is so much wild and green and mountain and rock, river, lake in you. I love all those things and I’m positive I would be lost in your vastness. I know as big as you are you face some real challenges. You are beset by resource extraction industries that risk extracting the very heart out of Alaska, before moving on to rape and pillage some other place, or, given your size, moving on to destroy some other adjacent bit of Alaska.

Don't do it.

Don’t do it.

Industries which employ the unemployed and also line the pockets of the powerful are difficult forces to combat. The mantra of “progress” is repeated loud and clear in every statehouse around the country and if you can’t get behind “progress” you get branded a hippie, a lefty or a loon (and maybe all three at once).

The truth is, Alaska, I had no idea there was even a place called the Tongass 77 or the Last Salmon Forest. There are probably a hundred other places I haven’t heard of either. You have so much wilderness there it must be impossible to get to know it all.

I’m not ready to try.

My mind is still focused on the flats. The flats are equally wild, just warmer with slightly fewer mosquitoes and an unsurprising lack of moose. You have trout, the flats have bonefish. You have halibut, the flats have tarpon. You have Grizzly Bears and wolves, the flats have Lemon Sharks and barracuda. You have osprey and eagles and the flats have… osprey. You have months of frost-biting cold, the Caribbean has months of sunshine and pleasant temps with a few months where you risk getting blown away by 100 mph winds.

The flats aren’t threatened by people who want to rip their souls out, but more by those who want to smother them with affection. It is over development or agricultural runoff or the odd cruise ship port deepening that really threatens my flats. It’s a different kind of threat, but the flats are still threatened.

Subdivided, but not sold... not yet.

Subdivided, but not sold… not yet.

It is conceivable that Into the Wild could have taken place in Andros or the Marls of Abaco, although it would be harder to hitch hike to the Islands and white kids running away from things tend to stand out.

In both places there are whole swaths of nature without people. The Alaskan hinterland doesn’t have to deal with all the ocean transported plastic, but the Bahamas doesn’t really have to deal with oil pipelines. Funny that both items are really the same stuff, just in different states of delivery.

Global warming is something impacting both the Alaskan wilds and the reefs and flats of the Caribbean. The polar bears may run out of ice and the corals may be bleached by high ph and warmer temps. So no one wins there.

I’ve been up near Alaska in the middle of BC. It was spectacular. I saw several grizzlies beside the big, broad Babine River. I saw the thick virgin forests and enjoyed both the technological solitude and the company of my fellow anglers. I skated dry flies to feisty steelhead and swung freight trains and felt the tug and heard the reel scream and admired the silver flanks of the hens and the blushing cheeks of the bucks. I know I would love you, Alaska, but I have another mistress at the moment and I can only handle one at a time. I’m not French.

There's my biggest steelhead.

There’s my biggest steelhead.

So, for now, I’m going to think about bonefish and tarpon (I’m not even spiritually ready to think about permit), and I’ll put off our meeting until this has run it’s course.

Until then,

Bjorn

 

This is kind of, but not really, my submission to the Trout Unlimited 2013 Blogger Tour, sponsored by FishpondTenkara USA and RIO, and hosted by the Outdoor Blogger Network.


17
May 13

Mangroves are important

In case you didn’t know… mangroves are critical to the health of the fisheries we love.

 


11
May 13

Some practical advice from G&G

Gink and Gasoline has a really nice post about bonefish handling, appropriately called “Holding Your Bone.”

They do some fine work over there.

It always kills me to see an angler new to bonefishing, grinning ear to ear, with a huge slime print on his shirt. Nobody will say anything because they don’t want to spoil your moment but that slime belongs on the fish not your flats shirt. It’s their protection from harmful bacteria. Hugging them does not show that you love them.

Awesome.

Nice fish.

Nice fish.


09
May 13

Tarpon Petition

I know… there has been a lot on here as of late about tarpon, but here’s another thing… a petition you should affix your name to.

I usually don’t go in for petitions as they often replace actual action. “I signed the petition,” usually doesn’t mean much, but this is such a specific issue and one that is probably not that interesting to elected officials and will likely stay unimportant as long as we (and by “we” I mean anglers with a soul) don’t make our voices heard.

Please sign, for tarpon.

I am.

I am.


07
May 13

When in doubt, sue.

Save the Tarpon must be pretty effective. How else can you explain the PTTS deciding to sue Save the Tarpon basically to tell them to hush up their mouths?

(For those not familiar, Save the Tarpon is a group dedicated to preserving the tarpon fishery at Boca Grande in Florida where the Professional Tarpon Tournament Series holds it’s annual “competition, an event full of the snagging and mishandling of tarpon to the extent that reasonable people start to get kind of pissed off.)

PTTS is claiming $500,000 in damages because those pesky radicals at Save the Tarpon insist on exercising their First Amendment Rights. The nerve!

I’d say things are going just swimmingly.

Way to go Save the Tarpon. Keep it up.

Sounds like a great idea.

Sounds like a great idea.


05
May 13

Not ready to let this go… Tarpon Spearing

Awesome shot by Jim Klug.

Awesome shot by Jim Klug.

Let me be clear… I don’t intend to give the “other side” equal time on this blog. I think spear fishing tarpon is wrong and I’m not willing to indulge the moral relativism they’d like to engage in.

I’m also glad to see that Fly Life Magazine isn’t ready to let it drop either.

I’m not against spear fishing. I’m against the bravado fueled killing-for-the-sake-of-killing exhibited by these guys.

They say “thousands of tarpon are killed by fly and conventional anglers every year by fighting fish to exhaustion or by inadvertently feeding the fish to sharks who are lurking in the shadows. All that is wrong and we only kill a few tarpon so you guys need to deal with the non-spear fishing tarpon fishery problems before you come and talk to us about killing only a few fish.”

This argument is, pardon my French, un sac de merde.

It is like saying “You don’t like me shooting dogs for fun? Well, thousands of dogs are killed every year by motorists on roads all over the country and we only kill a few dozen dogs. You need to deal with your dog-running-over problem before you come and talk to us about killing only a few dogs.”

Their argument also ignores the fact that most fly anglers are extremely opposed to things like the PTTS that Save the Tarpon is working against so tirelessly.  They also ignore the new tarpon regs that look like they are coming down, pushed by fly anglers and legit conservation organizations like the Bonefish and Tarpon Trust (which, I’d add, does a heck of a lot of research and doesn’t need to get spear caught tarpon to do it).

This appears to be at least some of the research done by Dr. Stein. The study cites three tarpon caught by the spear fishing club, but there are sure more than three tarpon kills in evidence from the various pics around the web of various Hell Diver members.

Douchebaggery

Douchebaggery

This just has to stop.


28
Apr 13

I love mangroves

Mangroves give life to so many of the things I love. Amazing that so many of them are gone… either that or it is amazing there are any left. Development is the main enemy. Mangroves ripped out to build condos or the flat filled in to make land or pulled out to make a channel or a marina. We need to protect our mangroves.

 

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