Muskie Discussion Forums
| ||
| Moderators: Slamr | View previous thread :: View next thread |
| Jump to page : 1 2 3 Now viewing page 2 [30 messages per page] Muskie Fishing -> General Discussion -> Have you ever kept a muskie |
| Message Subject: Have you ever kept a muskie | |||
| samuwenn |
| ||
Posts: 163 Location: NoDak | in the poll i answerd that i would only keep a state record, but if my personal best was dying id take it for a traditional mount, but smaller ones that wont make it in my carreer will just feed the ecosystem. dont think i have lost any yet and hope to keep the luck going for my most rewarding adversary. | ||
| Pointerpride102 |
| ||
Posts: 16632 Location: The desert | dfkiii - 3/10/2014 10:19 AM How did you prepare it ? I see quite a few recipes for baked musky online. Pointerpride102 - 3/10/2014 10:46 AM Yep, the smaller ones taste just fine. Like any other fish, fry it or toss it under the broiler. Not much different than a northern. I love northerns for eating. I'm not big on pickling but I had a great pickled northern this winter and need to figure out the recipe. | ||
| Corso Mike |
| ||
Posts: 182 | Brozz88 - 3/10/2014 12:42 PM BenR - 3/10/2014 10:39 AM Yes, back when we first started as kids in the 80's, we actually ate them. They are extremely tasty. BR Oh man don't say that!! I've had a hundred ppl ask "do you eat em? How do they taste? I heard ppl say there good" and I say they stink like hell, are slimy full of bones that you'll choke on and there so fat it's just to fishy tasting you wouldn't want to eat one no way !! At least that's what I say.lol I've never ate one. I have friends ask if I eat them and what do they taste like. Well, they taste like Bald Eagle of course! | ||
| milje |
| ||
Posts: 410 Location: Wakefield, MI | Pointerpride102 - 3/10/2014 4:03 PM dfkiii - 3/10/2014 10:19 AM How did you prepare it ? I see quite a few recipes for baked musky online. Pointerpride102 - 3/10/2014 10:46 AM Yep, the smaller ones taste just fine. Like any other fish, fry it or toss it under the broiler. Not much different than a northern. I love northerns for eating. I'm not big on pickling but I had a great pickled northern this winter and need to figure out the recipe. Dip in egg, then cracker crumbs, then fry in a skillet. Tastes like pike or bass to me. I think we've kept three that died on us. A 47" that we got mounted, a 44" and another that I don't remember the size on (was legal though) that we ate. We've since got quicker with the releases so haven't had one die in a long time that I know of. | ||
| Trophyseeker50 |
| ||
Posts: 791 Location: WI | My grandpa kept one in the mid 80s and had I caught one then when I was young I may have. He taught me catch an release ( probably so he didn't have to clean fish) but I have his musky on my wall. Lots of memories associated with that fish. Would like to get a rep. Of my pb tiger some day. | ||
| Sidejack |
| ||
Posts: 1082 Location: Aurora | I went to separate schools together with someone who kept one. | ||
| muskyrat |
| ||
Posts: 455 | No but I had a Donzi speed boat run one over I just let go. Fish was only 30 feet from my boat and dude musta been going 65mph! | ||
| miket55 |
| ||
Posts: 1352 Location: E. Tenn | One, a 42" in '82.. | ||
| Steve Van Lieshout |
| ||
Posts: 1916 Location: Greenfield, WI | No, I haven't even thought about keeping one myself. Joe Fittante can make a replica which would look better than the fish would look alive. I don't care if someone else in my boat would keep one, but I couldn't imagine keeping one myself for any reason other than if it would not live through the release process. Edited by Steve Van Lieshout 3/10/2014 10:32 PM | ||
| J.Sloan |
| ||
Location: Lake Tomahawk, WI | I have not killed a musky in many years, that I know of. I used to kill two a year for resort fish fry's, and make no mistake, they were delicious. Even then we selectively harvested out of lakes that were over run with mid-30" fish. That time has come to an end. CPR | ||
| lennyg3 |
| ||
Posts: 483 Location: NE PA | Kept one a few years back. I was fishing a creek mouth at the local river and a shore fisherman hooked one hard. He tossed it back and I saw it floating a short time later. I spent about a half hour trying to revive it, but the fish was a goner. Took it home and ate it. I wasn't impressed. Maybe it's just my cooking skills lol. And I had to laugh about going out on the wedding day. Haha | ||
| Sam Ubl |
| ||
Location: SE Wisconsin | I don't see a point in letting it float if you have one belly up on you. Might as well keep it and do something with it - eat it, give it away or get it mounted. Hopefully you don't have one die one you, but they're fish, they die sometimes, so rather than get down on yourself about it if it happens, make some use out of it. | ||
| Nell |
| ||
Posts: 122 | I agree if one was probably going to die I would keep it, however the law of 48 inches makes that one tough. I saw some kids trolling with a 42 incher probably in the net trying to revive her. Ahhhh their method let's not go there circle net etc... they tried though so I give them credit. It was a sad thing later to boat by and see her floating belly up. She was done for. If legal I would have scooped her up and tried muskie. Luckily I haven't had one die on me, but my husband teases me as I freak about getting them back in the water fast. Lol | ||
| eightweight |
| ||
Posts: 209 | Never yet and don't see why I would in that I do not mount fish ? | ||
| woodieb8 |
| ||
Posts: 1530 | in the 1950 era we live baited muskies under a cork float. steel rods mason black line. every musky met a gaff then a hammer on the head. we cleaned them,fried in fat. then we nailed the heads on the shed wall,or put them in an ant hill. back then ya ate what ya caught. catfish/bullheads were a Friday feed as back then folks ate fish on Fridays. | ||
| JakeStCroixSkis |
| ||
Posts: 1425 Location: St. Lawrence River | Sam Ubl - 3/11/2014 12:02 PM I don't see a point in letting it float if you have one belly up on you. Might as well keep it and do something with it - eat it, give it away or get it mounted. Hopefully you don't have one die one you, but they're fish, they die sometimes, so rather than get down on yourself about it if it happens, make some use out of it. Couldn't have said it any better | ||
| gopackgo |
| ||
Posts: 386 | Never, ever, ever, ever . . . though I do NOT judge people who do. Muskies are, for reason I simply cannot understand, my religion and my law, and taking one would be completely sacrilegious to me. | ||
| Flambeauski |
| ||
Posts: 4342 Location: Smith Creek | Sam Ubl - 3/11/2014 11:02 AM I don't see a point in letting it float if you have one belly up on you. Might as well keep it and do something with it - eat it, give it away or get it mounted. Hopefully you don't have one die one you, but they're fish, they die sometimes, so rather than get down on yourself about it if it happens, make some use out of it. What's more wasteful, removing a protein source from the ecosystem to feed those which don't need it to survive, or leaving it in the ecosystem to feed animals who require the food to survive, and eventually become food for apex predators? I've kept and ate them, but I don't kid myself by telling myself or others that nature will waste it. If you give it to the old guy down the road and it sits in his freezer for 3 years before it gets thrown out, that's wasteful. | ||
| gopackgo |
| ||
Posts: 386 | Flambeauski - 3/12/2014 11:38 AM Sam Ubl - 3/11/2014 11:02 AM I don't see a point in letting it float if you have one belly up on you. Might as well keep it and do something with it - eat it, give it away or get it mounted. Hopefully you don't have one die one you, but they're fish, they die sometimes, so rather than get down on yourself about it if it happens, make some use out of it. What's more wasteful, removing a protein source from the ecosystem to feed those which don't need it to survive, or leaving it in the ecosystem to feed animals who require the food to survive, and eventually become food for apex predators? I've kept and ate them, but I don't kid myself by telling myself or others that nature will waste it. If you give it to the old guy down the road and it sits in his freezer for 3 years before it gets thrown out, that's wasteful. +1 Edited by gopackgo 3/12/2014 11:49 AM | ||
| ShutUpNFish |
| ||
Posts: 1202 Location: Money, PA | The true question is...How many have you released??? Thousands... | ||
| Jeff78 |
| ||
Posts: 1660 Location: central Wisconsin | ShutUpNFish - 3/12/2014 11:52 AM The true question is...How many have you released??? Thousands... I thought of asking this question but figured it would turn into a d**k measuring contest. Edited by Jeff78 3/12/2014 12:04 PM | ||
| fins355 |
| ||
Posts: 280 | gopackgo - 3/12/2014 11:22 AM Never, ever, ever, ever . . . though I do NOT judge people who do. Muskies are, for reason I simply cannot understand, my religion and my law, and taking one would be completely sacrilegious to me. Not sure how many you have released but if as someone said it is "thousands" then you have probably killed more fish than many who may want to keep one for a skin mount have caught or will catch in a lifetime. Many who fish muskies will spend a week or 2 in the quest. For a lot of guys catching 3 maybe 4 legals in that time period is a very good trip. Many prolific fishermen and guides claim to put over 100 fish in the boat every year. Not all those will live even though carefully handled before release. Edited by fins355 3/12/2014 12:40 PM | ||
| wild |
| ||
Posts: 101 | Kept first legal- 52"....will keep first over 60" as well when I catch her....until then CPR | ||
| banditman |
| ||
Posts: 167 Location: Tomahawk, WI | I've kept a lot of muskies over the years. The only one in recent times has been a 45" that went belly up after we worked on it for over two hours. That was my fault for fishing when the water was at 80 degrees. Shame on me!!! We don't kill them to eat anymore, CPR on every fish that can swim off on its own. I do know a few guys that still keep one every year to smoke. | ||
| bucknuts |
| ||
Posts: 441 | I kept a few, back in the late 1970's. I was just getting out of high school. I would take trips up to Winchester, Wisconsin, with my buddies. The bait shop in Manitowish Waters, across from the Pea Patch, would have weekly contests. I would enter some of the bigger muskies, and usually win the weekly prize. Those were the good ole days. We would fish all day, then go to The Bear Bar, or the Oasis Bar, at night. We were 18, and it was legal to drink. That is where my obsession, for muskies, started. I fished muskies for about five years, then gave up fishing muskies, and obsessed with bass. I didn't fish muskies for almost twenty years, then picked it back up, around 10 years ago. | ||
| ARmuskyaddict |
| ||
Posts: 2026 | Do people even measure ducks? | ||
| ShutUpNFish |
| ||
Posts: 1202 Location: Money, PA | fins355 - 3/12/2014 12:37 PM gopackgo - 3/12/2014 11:22 AM Never, ever, ever, ever . . . though I do NOT judge people who do. Muskies are, for reason I simply cannot understand, my religion and my law, and taking one would be completely sacrilegious to me. Not sure how many you have released but if as someone said it is "thousands" then you have probably killed more fish than many who may want to keep one for a skin mount have caught or will catch in a lifetime. Many who fish muskies will spend a week or 2 in the quest. For a lot of guys catching 3 maybe 4 legals in that time period is a very good trip. Many prolific fishermen and guides claim to put over 100 fish in the boat every year. Not all those will live even though carefully handled before release. This is certainly true, but as long as we make the effort to do the best we can for fish we plan to release....All we can do. That said, I'm confident with the routine that we have in my boat, the survival rate of released fish is very very high....It should be, it has been practiced over and over many times...At this point, any better would be to quit fishing all together. | ||
| Cal |
| ||
Posts: 176 Location: ON | ARmuskyaddict - 3/12/2014 9:47 PM Do people even measure ducks? Whacked a 24" full plummage Mallard last December, full ring. Pretty bird. | ||
| Flambeauski |
| ||
Posts: 4342 Location: Smith Creek | Was it pining for the fjords? | ||
| ESOX Maniac |
| ||
Posts: 2754 Location: Mauston, Wisconsin | None yet. But if it died and was legal length, its fish fry time...... Northern Pike is mighty tasty with Italian bread crumbs. Have fun! Al | ||
| Jump to page : 1 2 3 Now viewing page 2 [30 messages per page] |
| Search this forum Printer friendly version E-mail a link to this thread |


Copyright © 2026 OutdoorsFIRST Media |