Jack in Alaska":29sq5g3a said:Check out how old those yellow eyed red rock fish are.
It is a real shame to take them after living all that while.
Halibut are much more prolific and grow much faster.
Just something to consider.
Jack in Alaska":2qdni31u said:I didn't mean to stir up the proverbial pot. Just thought a second or two consideration in taking a 40-50 yr old fish was worth it. I also realize it is hard to differentiate as to what will bite "your worm" on the bottom.
I have never personally caught a yellow eyed red rock fish but have caught plenty of gray cod which react the same way. Bladders out and pecked to death before they can go down. I use them for bait usually.
Anyway...nice catch.![]()
CW":18z83jhv said:According to "How to Catch Trophy Halibut" by C. Batin and T. Rudnick ( a great source, I spent 8 months on a waiting list to get my copy) , they quote the International Pacific Halibut Commission (IPHC) has tagged 350,000 halibut since 1925. Over 35,000 tagged fish have been recovered, some from depths to 3,600 ft. and or 2,000 miles from where tagged. Males mature at 8 years old, females (which grow faster and are largest) mature at 12 years. A few 500 lb. halibut have been documented, and one 700 lb. fish nearly documented. Every year some are caught by rod and reel at 300 lbs. The average commercially caught 'butt is 30-40 lbs. Few males reach 80 lbs. and nearly all over 100 lbs. are females. Halibut 9-14 years old comprise 67% of the commercial harvest. So, no, they aren't nearly as old as the rockfish above. A quick stab with a fillet knife to an air bladder will allow a rockfish to descend rapidly, but yes, my heart has sunk seeing a dead/dying floater around Neah Bay every hundred yards or so from the halibut sport fleet. C.W.
gljjr":pdd1q63v said:I've read several posts on other boards where guys put a milk crate upside down on the down rigger and push the rockfish into the milkcrate and lower them down with the downrigger. Supposedly that reduces mortality to less than 10%. Just going down 33ft would likely suffice to reduce the swim bladder size by a significant amount.
Note that I have never done this as the only rockfish I have caught were all in shallow water (less than 50ft).
breausaw":1pj5ss9o said:I can remember boats returning with lingcod still flopping. I’d fillet them out on the cleaning table, toss them back in the water, and watch them swim away..no s—t.