texasfishingforum.com logo
Main Menu
Advertisement
Affiliates
Advertisement
Newest Members
Bobby J., JPhillips1973, RTFishal, H1 ranger, T-RigLunkers
119177 Registered Users
Top Posters(All Time)
hopalong 120,963
TexDawg 119,754
Bigbob_FTW 95,288
John175☮ 85,918
Pilothawk 83,274
Bob Davis 82,275
Mark Perry 72,469
Derek 🐝 68,321
JDavis7873 67,416
Forum Statistics
Forums59
Topics1,038,791
Posts13,952,892
Members144,177
Most Online39,925
Dec 30th, 2023
Print Thread
Snipping a gill on a small bass #12721514 04/18/18 04:07 PM
Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 865
R
RandallC Offline OP
Pro Angler
OP Offline
Pro Angler
R
Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 865
I was wondering if snipping a gill on a small bass works to feed bigger bass. I just started helping a friend manage her 10 acre tank, and we need to take out between 200-250 lbs of bass. I would hate for her to come to her tank and find dead bass floating everywhere when I could have moved them to different tanks.

Also, when you catch a 2 pound bass with the head of a 4 pound bass is it a candidate for removal, or should it be left?

Thanks

Re: Snipping a gill on a small bass [Re: RandallC] #12721572 04/18/18 04:42 PM
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 50,023
fouzman Offline
Methuselah
Offline
Methuselah
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 50,023
Originally Posted By: RandallC
I was wondering if snipping a gill on a small bass works to feed bigger bass. I just started helping a friend manage her 10 acre tank, and we need to take out between 200-250 lbs of bass. I would hate for her to come to her tank and find dead bass floating everywhere when I could have moved them to different tanks.

Also, when you catch a 2 pound bass with the head of a 4 pound bass is it a candidate for removal, or should it be left?

Thanks


No idea about clipping a gill. Yes, a 4 pound head on a two pound body is an older, stunted fish. Take it out. Sounds like you need to remove 250lbs of bass as a starting point. May need a larger harvest if the lake is full of stunted fish. After that, she needs to come back in with a BUNCH of baitfish.


"Things turn out best for those who make the best of the way things turn out" - Zachary Troy Schrah - a young man with vision far beyond his years.
Re: Snipping a gill on a small bass [Re: RandallC] #12721692 04/18/18 06:32 PM
Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 865
R
RandallC Offline OP
Pro Angler
OP Offline
Pro Angler
R
Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 865
Thanks Fouz

Re: Snipping a gill on a small bass [Re: RandallC] #12722759 04/19/18 04:31 PM
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 3,327
M
Meadowlark Offline
TFF Team Angler
Offline
TFF Team Angler
M
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 3,327
Its a practice I routinely employ in my ponds. I never understood the old recommended methods of just throwing them out on the bank to go to waste. Forage is just too valuable to waste.

Do larger bass eat them? Absolutely yes. I have observed it for years. Alternate uses of the small bass include table fare (excellent) and stocking resource for other ponds. Wasting them is not a viable option on my place. I've never seen one "floating everywhere" but I also normally only sacrifice a few at a time.

Any/all bass with a relative weight less than about .8 and/or all bass less than about 13 inches are sacrificed here.

Does it work? Hard to attribute results to just this practice alone because so many other things come into play...but 6 bass over 8 pounds in this share-a-lunker season would seem to indicate that my practice isn't hurting anything.

Re: Snipping a gill on a small bass [Re: RandallC] #12722773 04/19/18 04:39 PM
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 27,562
Uncle Zeek Online Happy
aka "Dad"
Online Happy
aka "Dad"
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 27,562
Where is this tank located? You could get a couple TFF volunteers (like me) to come take a few coolers worth of small fish out.


"Decency is not news; it is buried in the obituaries --but it is a force stronger than crime" ~ Robert A. Heinlein
Artim Law Firm, PLLC
Estate planning & tax attorney
2250 Morriss Road, Suite 205, Flower Mound, Texas 75028
972-746-0758 mobile
zac@artimlegal.com
Re: Snipping a gill on a small bass [Re: RandallC] #12722879 04/19/18 05:59 PM
Joined: Jun 2011
Posts: 6,602
B
BrandoA Online Content
TFF Celebrity
Online Content
TFF Celebrity
B
Joined: Jun 2011
Posts: 6,602
I never thought about snipping the gills but I like that option. We have 13 other tanks/lakes on the ranch so I plan on transporting fish to those as well.

Re: Snipping a gill on a small bass [Re: RandallC] #12728693 04/24/18 04:19 PM
Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,130
S
salex Offline
Extreme Angler
Offline
Extreme Angler
S
Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,130
Originally Posted By: RandallC
I was wondering if snipping a gill on a small bass works to feed bigger bass. I just started helping a friend manage her 10 acre tank, and we need to take out between 200-250 lbs of bass. I would hate for her to come to her tank and find dead bass floating everywhere when I could have moved them to different tanks.

Also, when you catch a 2 pound bass with the head of a 4 pound bass is it a candidate for removal, or should it be left?

Thanks


Yes, snipping a gill on bass 9" and smaller might be a great idea. I think bass much bigger than 10" would be very difficult for any other very large bass to eat. So, I would harvest bass bigger than 9".

Yes, remove 2 lb bass with a body of a 4 lb bass.

Unsolicited opinion. Removing 25 lbs of bass per acre on a severely stunted lake is likely not enough. When we sign up a new lake, we often remove 40lbs to 50lbs per acre . After 2 years of aggressive harvest we see weights really increase. Of course, catch rates plummet. But, it is all part of the management game. Water fertility plays ah huge part in harvest numbers. Understanding if your lake is "blooming" with zooplankton or phytoplankton is critical to the volume of harvest.


Steve Alexander
salexander@privatewaterfishing.com
www.privatewaterfishing.com

Re: Snipping a gill on a small bass [Re: RandallC] #12729080 04/24/18 08:05 PM
Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 680
UTMallard Offline
Pro Angler
Offline
Pro Angler
Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 680
Believe it or not, gill snipping does not always work. We cull 300+ fish/year from our pond and I culled about 50 fish one weekend by snipping their gills. Went fishing 2 weeks later and caught a handful of fish with already snipped gills from 2 weeks prior. Now I whack them in the head a couple of times with heavy pliers and it dispatches them quickly.

Re: Snipping a gill on a small bass [Re: UTMallard] #12730161 04/25/18 03:25 PM
Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,130
S
salex Offline
Extreme Angler
Offline
Extreme Angler
S
Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 1,130
Originally Posted By: UTMallard
Believe it or not, gill snipping does not always work. We cull 300+ fish/year from our pond and I culled about 50 fish one weekend by snipping their gills. Went fishing 2 weeks later and caught a handful of fish with already snipped gills from 2 weeks prior. Now I whack them in the head a couple of times with heavy pliers and it dispatches them quickly.


I believe it. Mother nature can be very resilient.


Steve Alexander
salexander@privatewaterfishing.com
www.privatewaterfishing.com

Re: Snipping a gill on a small bass [Re: salex] #12873752 08/23/18 02:49 AM
Joined: Jan 2018
Posts: 89
M
Marc K Offline
Outdoorsman
Offline
Outdoorsman
M
Joined: Jan 2018
Posts: 89
Originally Posted By: salex
Originally Posted By: UTMallard
Believe it or not, gill snipping does not always work. We cull 300+ fish/year from our pond and I culled about 50 fish one weekend by snipping their gills. Went fishing 2 weeks later and caught a handful of fish with already snipped gills from 2 weeks prior. Now I whack them in the head a couple of times with heavy pliers and it dispatches them quickly.


I believe it. Mother nature can be very resilient.


Amazingly at times.....

Re: Snipping a gill on a small bass [Re: RandallC] #12885879 09/03/18 07:55 PM
Joined: May 2011
Posts: 1,869
P
pil,b Offline
Extreme Angler
Offline
Extreme Angler
P
Joined: May 2011
Posts: 1,869
Put a couple of dozen 5-6 lb. blue cat in the the lake and they will help manage it for you. plus stock it with blue gill and other perch.

Previous Thread
Index
Next Thread

© 1998-2022 OUTDOOR SITES NETWORK all rights reserved USA and Worldwide
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.3