I Had to Call the Game Warden While Fishing

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Published 2023-07-31
I Had to Call the Game Warden While Fishing

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All Comments (21)
  • @cannibalholiday
    Since people from all over will watch this, here's the official position when fishing in Ontario Canada: "If you catch one, you must destroy it right away so it can’t reproduce or spread. Don’t return it to the water." Part of the Ontario Anglers Action Plan on Invasive Species. So it will change depending on locale. Happy fishing, folks :)
  • @FunksIncKeys
    I'm a Florida fisherman too. I would never tell you that you couldn't release a snakehead back into the wild. However, if you do catch one, you probably should destroy it. Along with Pacu, Clown featherbacks, Asian carp or piranha. There really are a bunch of invasive species in our waterways.
  • @kkopacz
    Leave it to the government to not want you to record their answer to a question that affects citizens.
  • @jontiller6475
    Brad slipping that hybrid joke in got me! 😂🎣🤙🏻
  • Always fun to watch your road trips. It also gives me ideas when I get to come down there. Thank you great video.
  • Props for taking the time to educate yourself and a wider audience, as well as expressing the difference between what is legal and what is right.
  • I finally got my wife to watch an episode with me…she’s convinced you’re just a guy that makes up names for fish “bullseye snake head clown knife Donald Duck fish”
  • @PissBoys
    Hi, 25 year ornamental aquarium fish veteran here. When people say ‘illegal to release’, they usually are leaving out the ‘from captivity or into another body of water’ part at the end. As others have said, it is currently legal to rerelease that fish into the same body of water it’s caught from, but not a great idea. I get that the problem of invasive species in Florida seems enormous and insurmountable, so why bother with eliminating invasive species when you catch them? But it doesn’t help the problem to throw them back. It’s like littering; throwing your trash into a bin instead of the side of the road doesn’t seem like it does much, but remember that it’s all additive, if everyone is doing it it DOES make a difference. Ultimately large eradication programs will need to be enacted to remove these species from Florida waters, and with the current political climate and what the state government is deciding to spend its time worrying about that may not happen any time soon, so it’s up to us as responsible outdoor enthusiasts to do our parts to help the overall effort. Especially with snakeheads. They are incredibly nasty little bastards that will eat anything and are extremely detrimental to natural waterways.
  • Hey Grant, so i actually did a ride along with an FWC officer a while back when i was working towards a career with them. Essentially you are correct, it is illegal to release any animal into the wild that was previously kept in captivity, however, when talking about invasive fish specifically, in the state of Florida, you CAN release any catch including invasive species into the SAME BODY of wster they were caught in. It is definitely frowned upon, as the FWC prefers that they are destroyed when caught (kept for food, used as fertilizer, or otherwise dispatched appropriately). The officer i did my ride along with said that you shouldnt be ticketed for releasing them back tk where they were caught but you would most definitely get funny looks 😅. Also, you can not leave with any invasive species alive if you deecide to keep them. They must be dispatched if being kept. Ethicalky i really believe its up to you whether you release them or not, although personally, ny preference is to destroy any invasives i catch. Living in tampa i fished a few public parks and lakes that bad a tremendous amount of common plecos, oscars, myans, and tilapia, i always dispatched them humanely and if i didnt eat them i used them as ferterlizer or fed them to my pets.
  • “Large cock” had me laughing. These guys roasting Brad are your typical guys that are pissed off about everything…..great vid Brandt!
  • @landonoliver
    Love the videos. Thanks for all the work and posting.
  • @brianjeffrey1790
    Great video Brant what a great day catching invasive species definitely a fun day 👍
  • @thepeople7737
    Enjoy watching the channel and all the fishing info, but invasive species are definitely a problem throughout Florida. As an avid fishermen, outdoorsman, and diver Florida resident I’ve seen it first hand. We gotta try and do our part when we can to keep Florida beautiful for the future
  • @danver1971
    "It's frowned upon". 😂 I 100% agree with what you're saying, though. One guy, harvesting two snakeheads in single session, does absolutely nothing to reduce their population.
  • @jacobbouser4190
    For that type of fishing, what length of fishing rod and what pound test line are you using?
  • @BigAl444
    Every guide I've gone with in Florida always tells me how hard it is to catch peacocks on artificial lures. Yet here it is. Always used lip-hooked shiners. Oh now I hear him say he's using shiners. Just looks like a lure.
  • @scottc543
    Brant, you always tear them up. Thanks for an other great video.