Jump to content

live well....what is it good for?


forrest

Recommended Posts

Catch em', kill em', cook em. I do not see livewell anywhere in that sentence. Best way too keep the meat tasty is to kill them right away and put them on ice (yeah, the saying doesn't have "ice" in it either).

 

So are livewells only good for bragging rights,baitfish, tourny's and kids amusement?

 

Forrest

 

pssst.....can anyone help with the baitcaster question?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Might be a good place to keep your pop and water. If you're a live bait type of guy, how about a holding tank for minnows and leeches?

As a last resort, plug the inlet and drain holes and use it as a tackle box or storage bin.

There's also the chance that you killed all the descent fish in the lake last time out, so if you get a couple of dinks, you can keep them in the live well until you decide whether you have enough to bother cleaning.

I can answer your bait-casting questions and teach you how to set your equipment up.

If you're serious PM me.

Garry2R's

Link to comment
Share on other sites

besides keeping bait alive especially for those who use big sucker "minnows" for bait, it's handier than a minnow bucket.

 

for storing fish you plan to keep, it's best to bleed and ice a fish as soon as possible. When fish are stressed out, all the flopping around releases lactic acid into the meat which begins to degrade it. Have you ever seen how the japanese handle their top grade tuna? They spike the skull and run wire or mono up the spinal column. same reason. Lactic acid buildup is the main reason fish die after catch and release also which can occur days after being released.

 

Me, i store the lawn chairs and salmon net in the fish hold. LOL I keep a cooler on deck to store fish, filled with ice and water. they're bled in the water immediately. Try it, you'll see the difference in the meat color. No more opaque, "chalky" colored meat. all translucent even after a full day. For bleeding, you can cut a few gills, but the easiet way is to push a knife right through the arch of the collar behind the last gill. There's a major artery in there and you should see heavy blood flow as soon as you hit it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Might be a good place to keep your pop and water. If you're a live bait type of guy, how about a holding tank for minnows and leeches?

As a last resort, plug the inlet and drain holes and use it as a tackle box or storage bin.

There's also the chance that you killed all the descent fish in the lake last time out, so if you get a couple of dinks, you can keep them in the live well until you decide whether you have enough to bother cleaning.

I can answer your bait-casting questions and teach you how to set your equipment up.

If you're serious PM me.

Garry2R's

 

 

Thats what Ive done and Im glad I did that extra storage space is way more valuable than a brag box.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I use mine to revive a fish, and get things sorted out for picture taking. If the fish is a bleeder, I want to make sure it's not going to survive before just tossing it back in the water. The highly oxygenated water that a live well provides does wonders for a stressed fish. I can't count how many fish that I thought were gone and came back to life after an hour or so in the well. If I catch a real nice fish that I want to photograph, I'll immediately dump it into the live well. I'll let it catch it's breath, and get things organized for the photo. That may mean turning the boat so that the sun will be on the guy holding the fish (I've seen tons of shots on here where the photographer is facing the sun which = a wasted opportunity), getting the camera ready and general cleaning up. My live well is a valuable tool for catch and release fishing and photography. I don't know how I'd do without it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I use mine to revive a fish, and get things sorted out for picture taking. If the fish is a bleeder, I want to make sure it's not going to survive before just tossing it back in the water. The highly oxygenated water that a live well provides does wonders for a stressed fish. I can't count how many fish that I thought were gone and came back to life after an hour or so in the well. If I catch a real nice fish that I want to photograph, I'll immediately dump it into the live well. I'll let it catch it's breath, and get things organized for the photo. That may mean turning the boat so that the sun will be on the guy holding the fish (I've seen tons of shots on here where the photographer is facing the sun which = a wasted opportunity), getting the camera ready and general cleaning up. My live well is a valuable tool for catch and release fishing and photography. I don't know how I'd do without it.

 

I do the same exact thing Dan! :thumbsup_anim:

 

... and if the fish doesn't make, he can go right into the cooler on ice!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am with DanC on that one too, I have an older pic where I actually used my livewell to revive a nice musky.....mind you only about 1/2 the thing or so fit in the livewell, but with the water flowing and aerator bubbling the fish only took a minute of so to liven right up and be on it's way....it may not have been the most conventional way to C&R a musky but it worked like a charm on a fish that may not have made it otherwise...when put back in the water, that fish darted away like lightning :Gonefishing:

Edited by jwl
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I use mine to revive a fish, and get things sorted out for picture taking. If the fish is a bleeder, I want to make sure it's not going to survive before just tossing it back in the water. The highly oxygenated water that a live well provides does wonders for a stressed fish. I can't count how many fish that I thought were gone and came back to life after an hour or so in the well. If I catch a real nice fish that I want to photograph, I'll immediately dump it into the live well. I'll let it catch it's breath, and get things organized for the photo. That may mean turning the boat so that the sun will be on the guy holding the fish (I've seen tons of shots on here where the photographer is facing the sun which = a wasted opportunity), getting the camera ready and general cleaning up. My live well is a valuable tool for catch and release fishing and photography. I don't know how I'd do without it.

 

Ya that!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recent Topics

    Popular Topics

    Upcoming Events


×
×
  • Create New...