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Speaking of croaker

6.7K views 23 replies 20 participants last post by  texcajun  
#1 · (Edited)
So, like everybody else I've caught a few croaker in my days. But none of them was even big enough for me to consider a frying up, till about a 14 years ago. Let me step back for a second.

I started/help out with the fishing tournament here in Sargent. The first several years there was this fisherman from Rosenberg. I'm not going to mention his name (it's Chec and I'm not to sure how it went lol), but he was/is a great guy, grandfather who had a place down here and shared with his sons, daughter-in-laws, and his grandkids. He he had them all involved in a tournament and they are a beautiful family. This really has nothing to do with Croakers, but I just really like the guy. I hadn't seen him around in a while though. Anyway, he was always turning in really really nice flounder. The first couple of years I think he even won the flounder division. So, after one year, I said man you really got your flounder game on. I even told him that flounder was my favorite fish to eat in the bay. He said his favorite fish to eat with croaker. I said really? He said yes sir. Their place was down in the canals and he said that at a certain time of year that they just slay the croaker. Nice big ones and they always have a fish fry with Croaker. I said okay.

Now to step forward me and a couple buddies were drift fishing in the bay not too long after that and I caught this really really nice croaker. Matter of fact, it was the biggest ones I've ever caught. At first, I was looking at it and I was kind of confused on what it was cuz it was so big. I thinking it was some kind of hybrid striped bass. My buddy said that's a croaker. I said wow, I'm going to fry that sucker up. Anyway, I fried him up with a couple other fish and I was really really impressed how well it tasted. I haven't kept too many Croaker since then because, I hadn't really caught anything that big worth frying and eating. But if I ever catch another good size one, he'll be in the Fry Daddy for dinner.
 
#6 ·
When I was a kid, big golden croaker where a prized fish. Considered one of the best eating wise........And big eating sized ones could be caught in large numbers. Fill up an ice chest if you wanted to numbers.

Ahhh..... The golden croaker runs of yester year. The boom in shrimp boats scouring the bay didn't help them out. TPWD reduced the overall now number boats shrimping. But then the juvenile croaker grew popular as trout bait.

I think to see the big eating croaker regularly we will have to stop netting so many juvenile croaker for bait.

I'm not saying outlaw the use of croaker as bait but maybe cut the mass netting of them out. Make it where a person has to catch their own for bait.......Or limit how many pounds a boat can net a day.


We need to do something that's for sure.
 
#12 ·
When I was a kid, big golden croaker where a prized fish. Considered one of the best eating wise........And big eating sized ones could be caught in large numbers. Fill up an ice chest if you wanted to numbers.

Ahhh..... The golden croaker runs of yester year. The boom in shrimp boats scouring the bay didn't help them out. TPWD reduced the overall now number boats shrimping. But then the juvenile croaker grew popular as trout bait.

I think to see the big eating croaker regularly we will have to stop netting so many juvenile croaker for bait.

I'm not saying outlaw the use of croaker as bait but maybe cut the mass netting of them out. Make it where a person has to catch their own for bait.......Or limit how many pounds a boat can net a day.


We need to do something that's for sure.
Ok I'll say it. Yes commercial netting of croaker for bait needs to be banned. It will return the croaker fishery back to the good ole days and significantly help the trout population. It's a win win. Everyone knows it, but no one is willing to step up and do it. Will take money out of the croaker guide pockets. They will have to work harder and fish with shrimp and piggies. I get it but how long do we have to wait and watch the trout population plummet to nothing until something is done?
 
#13 ·
Man you are so so so right.
We need to hurry and mobilize to immediately BAN all skitterwalks and sidescan and powerpoles and spotlock and braided lines too..... quick quick....

It's those pesky TPWD fishing reports in the chronicle that made the fishing too easy for the last decades. And NOW they just put it online for everyone! Unreal....
 
#14 · (Edited)
Man you are so so so right.
We need to hurry and mobilize to immediately BAN all skitterwalks and sidescan and powerpoles and spotlock and braided lines too..... quick quick....

It's those pesky TPWD fishing reports in the chronicle that made the fishing too easy for the last decades. And NOW they just put it online for everyone! Unreal....
Missing the good ole days when trout and reds were commercially netted? There wouldn't be a guide business in Texas saltwater today had they not banned the practice 40 years ago. Not to mention, no market for boats to catch fish that aren't there any more. Or hotels and food joints and marinas and bait shops catering to anglers who stay home because all the fish have been netted and sold.

Just like there's virtually no fishery today for eating sized croaker. Some of us miss them. Especially those of us who fish with kids and love sand trout and croakers, if only to take a few small ones home and fry them up to keep the kids interested in fishing. That's how I started out before I learned to catch legal specks and reds and flounder- which are getting fewer and further between as angling pressure creeps up with population count.

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#16 ·
At the fishing show 2 years ago a guide was offering trophy trout trips at his booth. I was going to take advantage of the discount from the show until he told me it was a croaker trip. It left me wondering if I caught a 30" on croaker if I would tell anyone, probably not. Nothing against croaker soakers or guys that use live bait to catch fish for fun and to eat but if your after a true trophy fish it takes from the challenge and experience IMO.
 
#17 ·
It probably doesn't amount to a hill of beans, but I stopped buying croaker at the bait shops. Reading what's happened to that species, I just don't feel like I should contribute to that. I have no interest in burning the industry to the ground, I'm just making a personal choice not to participate. So I've recently started exploring catching my own bait, and I've actually caught some croaker. Those I'll use, and catching them myself is fun and rewarding.

Truth be told, I don't care for buying live bait at all, but the wife enjoys using it...