Re: Good recipe for carp
I was watchin this fishin show on cable one day, one of those magazine sponsored shows. Anyway this show brought a "Professional Carp Fisherman" over the pond from England.<br /><br />He goes about catchin fish, hooks one that turned out to fairly big, 20" +, but he's "fightin it" saying this is a real fighter, she's really puttin up a fight. Well I've had plastic worms fight harder than this fish. The fish was just swimming in as he reeled in line, the rod didn't even bend. Than he released it, like we need to keep more of these out there, and it swam away with all the gusto of a turtle.<br /><br />Evidently Carp fishing in England is big like bass here. They have tournaments, special gear the works. And they like to eat them too; he shared a few of his favorite recipes. <br /><br />The only thing I ever knew Carp to be good for was to excite a kid when trying to get them interested in fishing. Easy to catch, easy to bring in and boy do those little kids eyes light up when they see the big fish they caught. I love seeing that! The tough part is explaining why we aren't takin it home to eat for dinner that night. Everyone I know has always considered them as "Trash Fish" and call them that too, they'll eat anything.<br /><br />Evidently one man's trash is another man's treasure. I guess it's like Catfish, some like it some don't. There are probably people that wouldn't think of eating Bass or Trout.<br /><br />Speaking of Carp, a while back I saw on the news an Asian Carp species some how got introduced into the Mississippi and they are flyin Carp, can fly right over a bass boat, they showed this on TV. People have been hit by them and hurt. They breed too fast for the few predators that eat them. They have no commercial value here or where they came from and the folks in charge don't know what to do with them. Maybe some of you folks that fish the Ol Miss can update me on this, I haven't heard anything about this fish since then. Are they still flyin in your boat and are they really out of control?<br /><br />I guess Carp are there for a reason, the kids, the folks that like them. I always see one or two Carp fisherman on the banks at the lake nearby. I never asked them about their passion. I just dont want one on my line.<br /><br />
