Super User everythingthatswims Posted December 21, 2015 Super User Posted December 21, 2015 Caught this big nasty thing today. Saw it sitting near the bottom about 10 feet out, figured it was about to die but I would run a bait past it anyways. I paused the shad rap right in front of it and it smoked it! Put up a pretty good fight for cold water. This is in a river with a max depth of 8' so to see it in 4 feet of water isn't that crazy I guess. She was blind in one eye and that's why she didn't spook while I was standing there. 23"long, 5th citation this year 7 Quote
Super User A-Jay Posted December 21, 2015 Super User Posted December 21, 2015 That's one Battled & Beaten Bass ~ Way to Keep that Citation streak going Congrats A-Jay 1 Quote
jbw252 Posted December 21, 2015 Posted December 21, 2015 Nice catch. She's got some miles on her. 1 Quote
Super User soflabasser Posted December 21, 2015 Super User Posted December 21, 2015 Solid Bass!She is definitely beat up and looks like a old one. Quote
Super User Bankbeater Posted December 21, 2015 Super User Posted December 21, 2015 Nice bass, but it looks like its been through the ringer. Quote
Skunked again Posted December 22, 2015 Posted December 22, 2015 Nice job. What is a "citation streak" ? Quote
Super User everythingthatswims Posted December 23, 2015 Author Super User Posted December 23, 2015 16 hours ago, Skunked again said: Nice job. What is a "citation streak" ? Citation is like a "master angler" fish they have in some states. In VA if a fish meets length or weight requirements it is considered an exceptional or outstanding catch (something like that). You can get a certificate for it but they cost $5 each so I stick with the satisfaction of knowing I caught one haha. In VA, Largemouth is 22" or 8lbs, I've caught lots of those, and smallmouth is 20" or 5lbs, I've only caught one of those. Quote
Bass newb Posted December 23, 2015 Posted December 23, 2015 That is the nastiest looking fish that I've ever seen. Are those battle scars or festering skin legions or what? I caught a 2+lb fish that had a bloody gash on his side but nothing like that before. Quote
Super User everythingthatswims Posted December 23, 2015 Author Super User Posted December 23, 2015 5 hours ago, Bass newb said: That is the nastiest looking fish that I've ever seen. Are those battle scars or festering skin legions or what? I caught a 2+lb fish that had a bloody gash on his side but nothing like that before. I'm not really sure. I know a couple of the spots were lesions but the big one looked like a gash or scrape. Lots of otters in that area, I see them every time I fish, so she may have had a run in with one of them. Quote
Bass newb Posted December 25, 2015 Posted December 25, 2015 On 12/23/2015 at 1:59 PM, everythingthatswims said: I'm not really sure. I know a couple of the spots were lesions but the big one looked like a gash or scrape. Lots of otters in that area, I see them every time I fish, so she may have had a run in with one of them. My fiancée is a board certified zoo veterinarian and she says that those are battle scars, not legions or septic issues within the fish. Otter fight likely she said they are usually in pairs so a gang of them could have teamed up on ol' lady. 1 Quote
hawgenvy Posted December 25, 2015 Posted December 25, 2015 I've seen a lot of marks like that on bass and suspected they had had a run in with a gar, gator, or otter. One would like to find for forensic purposes more distinct teeth impressions, like a row of triangular teeth marks from a gator or gar, or the paired vampiric stab wounds from the long canines of otters, or the stripes of their claw marks. Perhaps those fish with the most diagnostic marks have the worst prognosis, and the majority end up being killed and thoroughly consumed by, say, an otter family. I have fished opposite a pair of otters in very good humor on the opposite bank chowing down a five or six pound bass, disassembling and consuming it quite expertly. Predators do tend to complete the job more often than not -- and I think a still viable, merely injured fish is unlikely. An exception is, of course, the human predator of bass, who surely has a bad reputation among other predators, for we injure and capture the bass, but then take the hook out and return him or her to the water, hoping the fish will be "okay." Thanks so much for that adventure, Mr Human! The honest predators must see the immorality of our actions, and I am as guilty as any. We humans frighten and abuse a ton of fish without killing and eating, just for sport. Oh, but it is really great fun! Sometimes, to seem a more useful animal among the natural fauna, I donate some bass to a local charity, namely the great blue heron that follows me around the banks. He flies over to stalk behind me when he sees me fishing. I talk to him but he does not answer back -- just looks at me. He's thinking, "Give me a fish, idiot." Anyway, I usually do. I toss it on the bank and he clamors over for it, stabs it, and flies off. Once, when I tossed the bird a larger bass, the heron decided to mortally stab the fish once and allow it to swim off. The bird stood there, attentively. Ten minutes later, when the fish had finally succumbed, the carcass rose to the surface and the bird swept in, picked it up and flew off with it. Anyway, we in Florida don't get a citation for a big one per se, but we can get the "TrophyCatch Award." I believe it involves a $100 gift certificate from Bass Pro and they put your name in a drawing for a fancy bass boat. All you have to do is show them a photo of the fish hanging from your scale weighing 8 lbs. or more. 2 Quote
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