LeeRevell
Well-known member
That's why we caught them along the coast. They tended to school around the oyster beds, which meant constant net repairs. Sometimes once we had them corralled in the seine, Dad would practice with his cast nets. I used them sometimes too, but didn't really do it enough to get good with it.
Worst was getting seajellies caught in the net (stings! and netting by accident a huge school of little pinfish, that basically tangled the net up. We would just pack it onto the boat, return home and stretch the net out to get rid of the trash fish. Some of the useless trash fish we threw away are now high dollar menu items! Such is the seafood industry. There are excellent seafood restaurants all along the Gulf Coast. You can drive the coast and get some mighty good eating!
Dad's home built coolers were about 4 inches thick Styrofoam. Often we'd get back late in the day, tired as heck, so the fish remained in the coolers overnight. The blocks of ice made it frigid! Took awhile sometimes to get all the fish out, as I'd have to wait and warm my hands up before reaching in again! There would be some ice and cold water in there nearly a week later! No drain plugs, so I used a bilge pump to get the water out, then tipped the coolers on their sides in the boat and hosed them out.
After we quit fishing, those coolers got repurposed into "worm boxes", used to raise earthworms for lake and river fishing.
Worst was getting seajellies caught in the net (stings! and netting by accident a huge school of little pinfish, that basically tangled the net up. We would just pack it onto the boat, return home and stretch the net out to get rid of the trash fish. Some of the useless trash fish we threw away are now high dollar menu items! Such is the seafood industry. There are excellent seafood restaurants all along the Gulf Coast. You can drive the coast and get some mighty good eating!
Dad's home built coolers were about 4 inches thick Styrofoam. Often we'd get back late in the day, tired as heck, so the fish remained in the coolers overnight. The blocks of ice made it frigid! Took awhile sometimes to get all the fish out, as I'd have to wait and warm my hands up before reaching in again! There would be some ice and cold water in there nearly a week later! No drain plugs, so I used a bilge pump to get the water out, then tipped the coolers on their sides in the boat and hosed them out.
After we quit fishing, those coolers got repurposed into "worm boxes", used to raise earthworms for lake and river fishing.