Louisiana
Kicking the can; this time it’s redfish
After the past three months it sure does look like the Louisiana House Oversight Committee and the Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries Commission are playing a child’s game of kick the can.
It happened with speckled trout for the past six months. Now it’s on to redfish.
In November, the House Committee turned down a proposed 18-24-inch redfish “slot” limit with a three-fish daily creel limit proposed by the commission.
That came after Wildlife and Fisheries marine biologists offered the commission an 18-27 inch length limit with a four-fish-per-day take. Current regulations allow anglers to take redfish measuring 16 inches to less than 27 inches with one redfish longer than 27 inches in a daily five-fish limit.
According to records, the House Committee returned the issue to the commission by an 8-2 vote. The State Senate Oversight Committee did not take a vote.
Sources confirmed the stumbling block was the three-redfish daily limit.
So, what did the seven-member commission do during its Thursday monthly meeting?
It kicked the can back to oversight with an 18-27 inch “slot” limit — redfish measuring longer than 27 inches must be returned to the water — and stuck to the three-fish-a-day plan and banned charterboat operators from keeping any redfish on a guided trip.
State biologists have testified redfish are not “overfished” but are undergoing “overfishing,” terms, which simplified, mean size and/or creel limits must be reduced to restore, then maintain, a healthy, regenerative redfish population in our state waters.
Biologists said this new proposal would mean a 17-year road to the recovery of redfish stocks.
Wildlife and Fisheries has scheduled a public hearing for 10 a.m. Jan 22 at the state headquarters on Quail Drive in Baton Rouge.
Again, with legislative oversight hanging in the balance, the earliest this new rule would take effect in March.
More on charters
The commission also passed a notice of intent to change possession limits on speckled trout and redfish for anglers on multiday charterboat trips.
This proposal mimics the long-established rule for recreational anglers who spend multiple days at their on-water coastal camps — three times the daily bag limit for both species.
Other terms in the proposal include:
- Providing a receipt from a licensed charter guide with fees paid and trip dates;
- That the angler has been “on the water or at a remote camp that can be accessed only by water for two days or more;”
- The fish shall be kept whole or whole gutted in separate bags for each species and the bags marked with the species, date the fish were taken, the fishing (basic and saltwater) license number for the angler; and, the fish “shall only be in the possession of the person who took the fish;
- No angler can have more than the daily bag limit while fishing.
For women
Wildlife and Fisheries is teaming with the Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries Foundation to offer two Women’s Fishing 101 Workshops set Jan. 27 and Jan 28 at the Waddill Wildlife Refuge on North Flannery Road in Baton Rouge.
This is seven weeks away, but there’s a Dec. 31 application deadline and these workshops fill fast. Each has a 15-woman limit.
The registration website is wlf.louisiana.gov/page/fishing-workshops
There are open to women 18 and older and cover a variety of skills and education in classes covering fish identification, tackle and cleaning and cooking fish.
Red snapper
Through Nov. 26, Louisiana’s private recreational take of red snapper is up to 845,951 pounds. That’s 88,636 pounds shy of our state’s 934,587-pound annual allocation. The season must end Dec. 31.
The report came from Wildlife and Fisheries through LA Creel data survey estimates.
Louisiana
Normal is unremarkable in and of itself: 2024 Inspirit winners are 'doing something bigger'
The Inspirit Award winners seem to have found ways to thrive in the work they do that is bigger than themselves.
Louisiana
Merry Christmas: good luck with right gift
Ho, Ho, Ho oh no, it’s time to get that last-minute gift for your favorite hunter and fisher.
It’s a challenge, if only because most of these folks are particular about the things they use to pursue game and fish — “persnickety” was the way old folks described this trait decades ago.
What it means is unless you know — and really know — your outdoors recipient then don’t presume the guy or gal at the local or big-box store will know anything more about them than you do.
What it means is don’t buy fishing line, or lures, or shotgun shells, or bullets, or rods, or reels, or firearms cases, or those silly T-shirts with a stunned-looking bass and “Fish Fear Me” written underneath.
That T-shirt thing only makes your favorite angler the target for his sharp-tongued fishing buddies, who will tell him the thing he feared most was being afraid to tell his gift-giver that the T-shirt was going to be a target for barbed comments. Oh, he’d wear it for you, but not around his buddies.
So, what’s left?
Size matters, and it’s important when trying to make a gift of the just-right hunting jacket, warm boots, cooling fishing shirts and shorts, warm gloves and hats.
And don’t buy that tackle box because it “looks big,” unless you were with your fishing-frenzied, Christmas-present target and he or she admired it with piscatorial lust in their eye.
That leaves us with gift cards. Sure you can go shopping and make a reasonably good guess about hunting things and fishing things, and here’s where you find prices and buy a gift card for that amount.
It’ll send them to a store where they can get the just-right fit, the just-right style, the just-right camo pattern, the perfect handle, weight and length for a fishing rod, and things like the fishing line, lures and boxes they want.
What’s best is you’ll send them to a Christmas-night rest with all kinds of sugared thoughts that will turn into dreams of that hopefully marked-down shopping spree.
Merry Christmas!
Under the tree
An important bill awaits President Biden’s signature to take hold for our country’s anglers, and another is moving forward after passing a committee vote.
ACE — America’s Conservation Enhancement Reauthorization Act — passed a U.S. Senate vote last week and sits on the president’s desk.
This act continues the National Fish Habitat Partnership, a voluntary, non-regulatory, and locally driven program that has funded more than 1,300 on-the-ground aquatic habitat improvement projects throughout the country.
“The $230 billion sportfishing industry and America’s 57.7 million recreational anglers applaud Congress’ efforts to advance fish habitat restoration and conservation,” American Sportfishing Association spokesman Mike Leonard said.
Included in its many pages is reauthorization of the North American Wetlands Conservation Act and a provision that traditional tackle will not be banned by the Environmental Protection Agency for five years.
The second bill, EXPLORE — Expanding Public Lands Outdoor Recreation Experiences — had the backing of more than a dozen hunting and recreational organizations. This new bill is designed to expand recreation opportunities, improving infrastructure and removing barriers to allow more access to federal lands for hiking, camping, fishing and hunting.
Striped bass
Yes, Louisiana waters, mostly from the Mississippi River east into the Pontchartrain Basin and to the Pearl River, has an annual fall-winter run of sea-run striped bass.
Now, Wildlife and Fisheries wants fishermen taking to those waters to help collect striped bass samples.
More than 20 years ago, a mid-fall trip to the Mississippi River produced three striped bass among the largemouth, spotted and white bass and redfish caught near Fort Jackson.
This project is one of four main items currently listed on the agency’s website.
To get details, description of this species and instructions, go to the LDWF website: wlf.louisiana.gov
Expertise needed
The Committee on National Statistics has a call-out for nominations for “experts” to review the standards and evaluate the survey and data standards of the Marine Recreational Information Program, the long-debated federal fisheries data collections and reporting plan.
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine has formed the committee and has a Dec. 31 deadline for nominations. Google this organization for details.
Louisiana
Louisiana Tech transfer DT David Blay commits to Miami
Miami received a commitment from its first defensive lineman of the winter transfer portal window. Louisiana Tech transfer David Blay pledged to Miami Saturday afternoon.
He chose Miami over Illinois, Oklahoma, Penn State, and USC.
In three seasons, the 6’4″, 300-plus pounder recorded 101 tackles, 23 tackles for loss, and 11.5 sacks. He played 443 snaps in 2024.
According to Pro Football Focus, Blay has a 76.9 run defense grade, an 80.2 tackling grade, and a 64.7 pass rush grade.
Blay is a Philadelphia (PA) native and played for D-2 school West Chester University before transferring to Louisiana Tech.
According to Rivals.com Blay was an unrated player coming out of Truman High School in Levittown, PA.
Blay will join an interior defensive line group in Miami that includes Ahmad Moten and Justin Scott.
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