Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Dead chicken squawking

 

<Leafcutter ruminations>

If you couldn't get through the post about killing, plucking, and gutting chickens without getting queasy, I recommend you skip this video.

However, if you liked that post and want more, click play.

Background: When I gut chickens, I take out the crop and the tubes (trachea, oesophagus) as a last step. Not sure if that's the proper technique, but it works for me. On this day, I found out, quite by accident, that if you have your hand inside of a gutted chicken just right, forcing air through the intact trachea will still illicit a squawk.

At first it freaked me out a little, but very quickly all the kids gathered around (you can hear one laughing in the background) and were quite entertained.













Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Trinidad kayak salmon

<<Otter fishing report>>


Epic morning for me on the north coast! Woke up at 4:30 and headed for Trinidad. Got to the beach at 5:00 and bumped into Crash. Super nice guy who gave me the lowdown on where all the good reefs and kelp beds are. He was taking his buddy out rock fishing since it was his buddy's first time.

I launched solo into the fog and headed around the corner to try some rock fishing. Without GPS or a companion I was nervous in the fog. After jigging the kelp for 30 min or so I worked up the courage to head out to the whistle buoy. I couldn't see it but I could hear it and figured I could use the Lighthouse fog horn to find my way back.

I got out to some deeper water and deployed my trolling gear. Dog whistle sinker release with a uv krippled anchovy and a 1.5 # ball. Nothing for a while but when I got closer to the buoy I started to see lots of murre working the surface.  Soon the water started to change color and then bam hookup!! I took a couple extra strokes to make sure he was hooked well and then proceeded to fight my fish. Mid fight a whale exhaled right behind me and scared the crap out of me!

The whale continued to swim directly under the boat and scared the fish into a dogged charge straight down. Couple small runs later and I had him in my woefully inadequate and half broken folding promar net. Why I passed up buying the new lininger the day before I will never know. :)

After bonking the first one I started trolling again with a fresh bait and a new weight. The adrenaline is still coursing through my veins when I'm hooked up again! This one is a brute and manages to bust off my fresh 40# leader. I think it was tangled with the sinker release so it wouldn't drop the weight. :(

After quickly rerigging with a deep six and an rsk and a chovie I dropped in again. Less then five minutes later and I'm hooked up again! Stoked at my good luck I bring this one to the yak with little drama in spite of my lame ass half broken net.

I considered releasing him to try for a bigger one but being solo on the water with the swells building I opted to head for the barn. I tried several times to hail Crash to call him into the good bite but I couldn't raise him on the radio.

They are not the biggest salmon by any means but good enough to stoke me out for days and feed my whole family for the rest of the week down in Petrolia.






Monday, May 27, 2013

Salmon near HMB

<<Otter fishing report>>

Epic day with Khahn on the Connie T. We fished away from the fleet in the fog about 15 miles outside Hmb. Bait and lures both worked but a blue dancer or a krippled chovy both behind a dodger seemed to work the best.

Most bites were at about 30 ft with a good ten pound average to the fish. We had doubles, triples and probably three quads! Almost like tuna fishing. We could barely get the gear in the water.

I can't wait till these fish move inshore a bit. It would be awesome if we had a good Linda Mar bite or the north side went off within yak range.




Sunday, September 16, 2012

Guess this fish!

<<Leafcutter ruminations>>

Suppose your hubby goes out fishing with a friend on his Boston Whaler on a Sunday morning, and he sends you a text with this picture and a single tantalizing question:

Guess this fish...



To the untrained eye, this is little more than a tail sticking out of a bucket of bloody water.

To the wife of a Eliotter fisherman, it can only be a salmon with its gills cut, being bled out!

Yes, ladies and gentlemen, fish bleed. Sometimes not so much, sometimes a lot. Herring, not so much. Salmon or tuna, very much. I don't bring up the topic of blood to gross anyone out, but to remind us all of the simple, yet brutal fact that fishing = killing, and eating meat = killing animals, and dying animals = blood.

Anyone who has ever gone fishing will know that once you get the fish out of the water, it flops like crazy until it doesn't. It's standard sport fishing MO to toss the fish aside and let it slowly suffocate to death on the dock or the deck of a boat. After all, who wants to grab a slimy fish and bonk it on the head and cut its gills to bleed it out? Easier to just look away and let it flop until it stops. That's the easy way out.

But to truly respect and honor the fish, we have to stop its suffering and preserve its flesh to the highest possible quality. How do you do that? Simple: knock it the F out and bleed it. You can literally see and taste the difference between a properly bled fish and one that hasn't been shown the same respect. 

So the next time you land a fish, the thrill of the fight is over, and all you want to do is toss the fish aside so you can cast out again, think about respect and honor and do the right thing. Knock it the F out and bleed it. Your karma and your taste buds will thank you.













First-ever salmon (and a mystery guest) from the Whaler

<<Leafcutter fishing report>>

Hubby and a friend dragged the Whaler down to HMB on reports of a hot salmon bite. They were rewarded with a handsome (properly bled) salmon, and a mysterious, gelatinous sea creature.










Sunday, August 5, 2012

Local Rockfish from the Whaler

<Leafcutter fishing report>

Hubby took the Whaler out for a spin and scratched up a tasty local rockfish out by the Ritz-Carlton.




Monday, July 18, 2011

First halibut of 2011

<<Otter fishing report>>

Finally caught my first halibut this year. After three tries it felt good to finally connect. It wasn't big but still a decent keeper @ 28" that will go great on the barby.

Weather was decent even though it was a late trip. Didn't get on the water till 1 pm and off the water by 4 pm. Caught a half limit of schoolie-sized blacks as well.

We fished with live anchovies on the typical three way live bait rig with 2/0 owner mosquito hooks tied on via perfection loop. Weights varied from 4 to 6 oz but even an 8 oz would have been useful with the way the currents were running.