- Joined
- Jan 21, 2020
- Messages
- 664
Best Marina ever. BnM!
Best Marina ever. BnM!
No problem. Need some more just to be sure. Just keep loading.Wow dont know whats going on but cant upload pics. sorry fellas im going to try something else as far as a pic goes so it might not make sense to this thread. Bare with me. well old pics are loading up.
Nice haul. I see flies landing on them, good sign. That means they don't have Ciguatera toxin if the flies land on them. That's how you know if a Barracudda is good to eat according to an old Bahamian years ago - he laid the filets out and if flies wouldn't land on it he'd throw it to the sharks, if they landed he'd eat it.
My father would feed a chunk to the cats. If they didn't eat it. No go...
nice catch. looks like Dry Tortugas catch.
Def fishyWow dont know whats going on but cant upload pics. sorry fellas im going to try something else as far as a pic goes so it might not make sense to this thread. Bare with me. well old pics are loading up.
Tell that to a bunch of Cuban old men. Anyways I don't anyone who ever got sick eating barracuda by using the anecdotal method. So it is what it is...Both of these anecdotal methods of testing for ciguatera toxins (and the copper penny trick also) are unreliable, although common.
Wow dont know whats going on but cant upload pics. sorry fellas im going to try something else as far as a pic goes so it might not make sense to this thread. Bare with me. well old pics are loading up.
Both of these anecdotal methods of testing for ciguatera toxins (and the copper penny trick also) are unreliable, although common.
Do you do some work in the field, and if so is there anything that works? That old Bahamian guy said he’d been doing it for an awfully long time, and sure seemed to trust it. With the reefs there, I'd guess it is pretty common.Both of these anecdotal methods of testing for ciguatera toxins (and the copper penny trick also) are unreliable, although common.
i don't do any field work, but i fish a lot, here and in the Bahamas and I've spoken to the company that does the only reliable test for it. also, doctors at Jackson have some specific knowledge about this and know that the test is the only reliable method.Do you do some work in the field, and if so is there anything that works? That old Bahamian guy said he’d been doing it for an awfully long time, and sure seemed to trust it. With the reefs there, I'd guess it is pretty common.
In the 80s I remember a longline boat brought a haul of Hog Snapper from the Tortugas and was selling it to Wholesalers up the coast starting at Key West. It started a ciguatera outbreak everywhere the boat sold fish.
Blew the power head on my Suzuki 350.. this year continues to SUCK ***! probably wont be fishing till sometime next year.