Kayak Fishing Adventures on Big Water’s Edge

Kayak Fishing Adventures on Big Water’s Edge (http://www.bigwatersedge.com/bwevb/index.php)
-   General Kayak Fishing Discussion (http://www.bigwatersedge.com/bwevb/forumdisplay.php?f=11)
-   -   Keeping halibut caught inside harbor (http://www.bigwatersedge.com/bwevb/showthread.php?t=32998)

Tekniks 05-29-2018 09:12 PM

Keeping halibut caught inside harbor
 
Guess it would be depending on what harbor.. but thoughts?

King Saba 05-29-2018 09:45 PM

Chances of you catching a legal regularly are slim. Getting out consistently is unpredictable. Life is a b*tch at times. Bottom line, you'll be fine.

Saba Slayer 05-30-2018 05:43 AM

Send Halibut here...
 
Please send or deliver all Halibut caught in a Harbor to my home address...I'll be sure to have them tested for stuff...:eek:

Ggiannig89 05-30-2018 05:55 AM

I keep them. I try to pick out the worms as I see them and trust me there’s plenty in the belly section. Make sure you cook the meat completely. No sashimi when it comes to halibut.

goldenglory18 05-30-2018 07:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ggiannig89 (Post 293653)
I keep them. I try to pick out the worms as I see them and trust me there’s plenty in the belly section...

That. Sounds. Horrible.

:ack2: :ack2: :ack2:

ProfessorLongArms 05-30-2018 07:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ggiannig89 (Post 293653)
I keep them. I try to pick out the worms as I see them and trust me there’s plenty in the belly section. Make sure you cook the meat completely. No sashimi when it comes to halibut.

I haven’t caught bay halibut, but my understanding is that any non pelagic fish is fine raw so long as your freezer hits the right temp and you fillet quickly/ have good hygiene with your cleaning.

Pretty much any restaurant sushi you eat will have been flash frozen anyway.

Ggiannig89 05-30-2018 07:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by goldenglory18 (Post 293660)
That. Sounds. Horrible.

:ack2: :ack2: :ack2:

I picked the same kind of worms out of a halibut and rockfish I caught out of La Jolla as well. I think it’s alot more prevalent than most of you think. Unfortunately so :(

Iceman 05-30-2018 08:29 AM

I do not think halibut are residents of the bays, they move in and out. I have no issue keeping them.........my wife refuses to eat em so I am not likely to keep any in the bays.

Saba Slayer 05-30-2018 09:25 AM

X2
 
X2 - Andy Says..."I do not think halibut are residents of the bays, they move in and out."
I agree...it's usually about the spawn...:cheers1:

alanw 05-30-2018 09:34 AM

Worms/parasites aren't the problem, its the toxins from the bays you can't see or cut out that's problematic. There is a study floating around somewhere about how bad SD bay is. I probably wouldn't eat anything out of there. http://www.sdcoastkeeper.org/learn/fishable/sediment

Saba Slayer 05-30-2018 09:43 AM

Bugs...?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by alanw (Post 293673)
Worms/parasites aren't the problem, its the toxins from the bays you can't see or cut out that's problematic. There is a study floating around somewhere about how bad SD bay is. I probably wouldn't eat anything out of there. http://www.sdcoastkeeper.org/learn/fishable/sediment

WOW...how about some of those big resident Bugs :lobster:...some of these guys are over 20 or 30 years old. Cockroaches Del Mar.
The EPA...or whats left of it...LOL...has only been around a relatively short while...and the Navy and local commercial businesses have been dumping toxins in there for years....!

Eating the local/resident fish is not wise...but as Andy said...and I agree...a lot of the other smaller harbors have the fish moving in to spawn.
I can't catch Halibut in the harbors most of the year as well as I can in the spring and early summer...:notworthy:

NICKWORN 05-31-2018 07:41 AM

LMAO
 
So all of us who are eating Lobster from the BigBay are going to die!!

:the_finger::the_finger::the_finger::the_finger:

Best thing I've heard all day!!

ful-rac 05-31-2018 09:03 AM

Just eat the halibut...unless there is something visually wrong with them...3 eyes and 2 tails would be a little red flag...I guess I'm lucky, as I have never seen or caught one with 3 eyes or 2 tails yet...

As long as they look good, I don't see any problem with eating them. Worms are just a fact of life, they are easy to spot, just pick them out or cut them out. Here's a tip...when the fish are alive the worms are usually located in the guts of the fish. After the fish dies the worms start to migrate into the meat. So clean them and or gut them asap, otherwise like I said...pick them out.


I wonder if cannibals from the amazon would eat us....? Or if they would worry about all the chemicals, drugs and antibiotics, smog and plastic surgery that people around here have? :cheers1:

Fiskadoro 05-31-2018 10:44 AM

I've eaten halibut from Redondo, Long Beach and San Pedro, but draw the line at MDR. There are big fish in MDR and the are there year round but I don't eat them. Lobsters do not hold the toxins I'd worry about. Last report on them I saw gave them a clean bill of health at all the local harbors. :drool5:

NICKWORN 05-31-2018 11:15 AM

Worm
 
Wouldn't cooking the fish kill all worms? So are we talking about eating Halibut raw, which i wouldn't recommend out of any bay, but cooked, no need to worry.

ful-rac 05-31-2018 01:45 PM

Yes cooking them will kill the worms...but who want's to eat parasitic worms, cooked or not! NOT ME!!!!!!:ack2:

ProfessorLongArms 06-01-2018 08:00 PM

To elaborate on what I wrote above-

Worth clarifying- if you're talking about fish in SoCal, or for that matter fish in general, you're talking about things like Mercury and PCB, which are bio-accumulative.

I'm not sure how much of a difference it makes between harbor and open water, but I have been looking over guidelines like this for a while.

http://pvsfish.org/index.php/souther...ption-advisory

My understanding is that it's not so much _what_ you consume, but how much and how often. Also where it's from will dictate how much and how often.

Halibut's already one of those fish you're not *really* supposed to eat a ton of in a given week.

OTOH, I'm sure us Angelinos are breathing worse. :smokin:

Parasites are pretty much in all fish.

I found this fun reading in my research-
https://munchies.vice.com/en_us/arti...ted-with-worms

I've understood that you want to gut and ice your fish as quickly as possible, lest the parasites leave the entrails and go into the meat.

When it comes to raw fish, which is pretty much my preferred way to eat them, you want a deep freeze that hits -4 Fahrenheit, and you want to let them be frozen for over 7 days. All sushi is flash frozen per health code.

Saltwater parasites aren't a big deal either way because they can't really take root in your body. I hear if you do get them, it's like a stomach bug for a few days and you're done.

Just don't be that smart guy who thinks trout is like salmon and salmon sushi is great. Freshwater parasites apparently like to hang out for a bit.

jorluivil 06-04-2018 10:17 AM

1 Attachment(s)
I've been eating them for years and I'm perfectly fine
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.

wiredantz 06-04-2018 10:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jorluivil (Post 293842)
I've been eating them for years and I'm perfectly fine
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.


I object.....

I rescind my objection... That pretty much how Jorge looks like now

YakHanded 06-04-2018 10:56 AM

Santa ana river mouth, doheny river mouth... any spillway... its all poop these days.. just eat em if you catch one you want to keep.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:22 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
© 2002 Big Water's Edge. All rights reserved.