Saturday Shoutout / Restoring Decency

4 comments / Posted on / by

Photo courtesy of Save the Tarpon

Photo courtesy of Save the Tarpon

I have always spoken out strongly against fishing tournaments where fish are killed.

That’s a conviction that I stand by, and before now, I’ve never read anything on the topic that changed the way I felt about it. This essay by Ted Williams, for The Blog Nature just may have. I have always considered only the negative effects of these tournaments on the fish. I never stopped to think about what they might be doing to the angling community.

The trouble with tournaments is not so much what they do to fish but what they do to people.”

This is a thought provoking read. Whichever side of the discussion you may be on, it’s well worth your time. Like me, you may come away seeing things differently.

RECOVERY: RESTORING DECENCY TO TARPON TOURNAMENTS

 

Louis Cahill
Gink & Gasoline
www.ginkandgasoline.com
hookups@ginkandgasoline.com
 https://www.ginkandgasoline.com/hosted-trips/
Sign Up For Our Weekly Newsletter!
 

Follow Gink & Gasoline on Facebook:

4 thoughts on “Saturday Shoutout / Restoring Decency

  1. We all fish for different reasons.

    the fish
    the challenge
    the creativity
    the setting
    the camaraderie
    the tradition
    the travel
    the wildlife
    the weather
    the gear
    the serenity
    the satisfaction
    the excitement
    the purity
    the DNA
    the fight
    the feel
    the tactics
    the water
    the watercraft
    the release
    the food
    the competition
    the ego
    the money

    Excellent article that should give some “anglers” pause for self reflection. Tournament/competition fishing has spurred countless innovations, improving knowledge, equipment, lures/flies, rigging, techniques, and tactics. Like other sports, when completion, ego, and money are at stake, fishing doesn’t develop character – it reveals it.

  2. Competition fishing is ok as long as fish aren’t killed. I’m competing with the fish I pursua every time I’m casting a line. And I refuse to kill one. I don’t use a net to release one even. I choose to use a ketch and release implement and hope to never harm a released fish in any way.

    • By tricking a fish to take a fly you are not doing it any good. Hooking and fighting a fish puts an enormous amount of stress on the fish. Add to that landing, handling, and release.
      I hear what you are saying and I am with you 100% on not doing harm, or killing fish. Fish stress is something we need to be aware of and I applaud the care you take in handling and releasing fish.

Leave a Reply to Joe Slavoski Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.

Captcha loading...