Sheepshead tips....

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ILikePike
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2008/07/16 20:57:41 (permalink)

Sheepshead tips....

Last night i was fishing in the mohawk (in waterford) and i caught a 6 lb. sheepshead. This is the first sheepshead i've ever caught, and i was wondering if anybody here fishes for them, and if anybody has any tips/spots that they could help me with.
I got this one on a live crayfish with a 1 oz. weight sitting on the bottom.
Any help would be appreciated.
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    HookLineSinker
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    RE: Sheepshead tips.... 2008/07/17 08:18:19 (permalink)
    I've only gotten them by pure accident.

    When hell freezes over, I'll fish there too.
    #2
    backin79
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    RE: Sheepshead tips.... 2008/07/17 13:12:04 (permalink)
    I caught my first few freshwater drum last year in lk. onieda.. and again this june we managed a few in the boat.. we released them but heard the meat tastes or resembles the flesh like seascallop? one thing i know is they fight good on light tackle.
    #3
    ILikePike
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    RE: Sheepshead tips.... 2008/07/17 14:36:23 (permalink)
    Thanks for the replies. The one i caught put up a really nice fight, it was a lot of fun. i've talked to a couple people who said crayfish works best, i guess it just happens to be random luck. you never know what your going to pull out of the mohawk......
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    backin79
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    RE: Sheepshead tips.... 2008/07/17 15:38:59 (permalink)
    I suppose this time of year the mohawk is big and deep enough to sustain  a good fishery of warm water species. I never fished it! I'm always going towards the delaware system. Good luck  
    #5
    REEL FORCE
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    RE: Sheepshead tips.... 2008/07/17 18:43:27 (permalink)
    The freshwater drum, also known as the sheepshead, thunderpumper, bubbler, grinder, white perch (maybe they'd taste better if you called 'em that), gaspergou, goo, croaker, silver bass or grunt, is a deep-bodied silvery fish with a hump-backed appearance and a range extending from the Great Lakes to Guatemala. It is a bottom-feeding species with a diet of immature insects, crayfish, minnows and mollusks. They even eat live mussels and snails, crushing the shells in the gizzard. Most fishermen use earthworms or crayfish as bait, but you can also catch them using other natural or artificial baits or even wet flies. The freshwater drum is an important commercial and sport fish in the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, so apparently a lot of people do eat them. Commercial harvest in the Mississippi has been over 300,000 pounds each year in the past decade. The problem may be that you don't know how to cook drums. They lose their flavor quickly if they aren't filleted and put on ice promptly, but putting the live fish on ice is another way to preserve them until you get home.



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