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Trident Fishing Week 9

 

Photo of the Week

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Recipe of the Week

Penne with Shrimp and Bacon

Ingredients:
1 pound penne pasta
1/4 pound bacon
1/4 cup frozen peas,
 thawed
1/2 pound medium shrimp
2 tbsp. butter
3/4 cup ricotta cheese
 salt and pepper
1 1/2 tbsp. Grated Parmesan cheese

Directions:
Cook penne in boiling salted water.
In a large frying pan heat bacon until fat begins to melt. Stir in thawed peas and sauté for 1 to 2 minutes before adding shrimp. Cook until just done. Remove from heat and stir in butter until melted.
In a bowl combine ricotta, salt, pepper and Parmesan. Just before serving, add 1 or 2 tablespoons boiling pasta water and whisk through.
Drain penne when al dente and mix in ricotta. Add bacon, shrimp and peas and toss together before serving.

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1.24.2008 Volume IX Issue #3

This Week's Article

The Charleston Boat Show
     In the coldest month of each year there is always one bright spot toward the end in Charleston. There is something about the boat show that gets your blood flowing and gets you thinking about and planning for the upcoming fishing season. For the angler looking for a new boat, especially the younger anglers attending along with their parents, the boat show is very exciting with the promise of finding that new boat during the weekend. I can remember going with my dad and brother and I was not young, but we were considering upgrading our boat and the boat show took on a whole new meaning for us. Walking through several models, getting to check out what we liked and did not like about different models and being able to do it all with the boats being in the same location was great. It really helped to see the differences in a close time frame and in several instances being able to compare the boats within site of each other. This years show will be even bigger than shows in years past. CharlestonFishing.Com will have a booth there and we hope you will stop by and say hello. Below is a copy of the news release for the show with details about show times and admission prices. You can also go to the website, www.TheCharlestonBoatShow.com for more details. We hope to see you there.    Click here to read this article

This Week's News

Coastal Conservation Association South Carolina
3037-B McNaughton Dr., Columbia, SC 29223
Email: ccasc@bellsouth.net  Website: www.ccasouthcarolina.com
     FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: January 23, 2008 CONTACT: Scott Whitaker, 1-803-865-4164
     Feds Cite “Research” For Allowing Swordfish Longline Boats In Charleston Bump Protected Area
     Columbia, S.C. – Over objections from the recreational fishing community, state fisheries committees, and federal regional management councils, the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) has issued Exempted Fishing Permits (EFP) for three commercial longlining boats to fish for “research purposes” in the Florida East Coast and the Charleston Bump closed areas.
     “Even after hearing overwhelming objections from the public and private sectors including the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources Governor’s Cup Billfish Series Board, the South Atlantic Fisheries Management Council, and the Coastal Conservation Association (CCA), NMFS decided to issue the permits” said Mike Able, CCA South Carolina Government Relations Committee Chairman. “Clearly the written and spoken comments they received in opposition to such an action in 2007 were disregarded.”
     In 2000, as a result of a lawsuit filed by conservation groups, NMFS was forced to set up the protected areas in which the use of pelagic longlines was prohibited. The area known as the Charleston Bump is included in the protected areas and is highly popular destination for South Carolina recreational anglers. The 2000 ruling has been heralded by many as a success in helping rebuild many pelagic fisheries such as swordfish. The EFP permit issued by NMFS is the third such proposal to put the longline boats back into the Protected Areas. As new proposals appeared over the last seven years, the stated need for the research has changed. One of the new reasons, as outlined in the permit approval, is to determine whether the protected areas are actually working to restore pelagic fisheries.
     “The 2000 ruling has been heralded by many as a success in helping rebuild many important pelagic fisheries such as swordfish as well increasing the abundance of wahoo, sailfish, and dolphin” said CCA South Carolina Executive Director Scott Whitaker. “The idea that longlining for a year in these protected areas is the best practice for determining their effectiveness in rebuilding pelagic fisheries is, quite frankly, absurd. Their fishing practices research could be done outside of the protected areas.”
     CCA South Carolina’s sister chapter, CCA Florida, also noted in its opposition to the permits examples of inequitable allocations of fisheries to small numbers of commercial longline boats. In the Gulf of Mexico, the federal process has determined that as much as 81 percent of red grouper harvest should be taken by commercial interests. Recreational fishers have been continuously reduced to the point where the recreational bag limit is only one fish, with the addition of another one-month closure. CCA filed a lawsuit in 2005 against NMFS when it attempted to enact Interim Rules to close the entire Gulf of Mexico to all recreational take, for all groupers, for three months. CCA won the lawsuit and only red grouper was limited. During the battle, it was shown that commercial longline boats take the majority of the commercial allocation of red grouper. It was also shown that just 25 commercial longline boats took more red grouper than what was allocated to all the recreational fishers in the entire Gulf of Mexico.
     CCA South Carolina will continue to oppose such actions to put commercial longline boats back into protected areas were longlining has been determined to be detrimental in the overfishing and exploitation of marine fisheries.


Tide Chart

 24 Thursday
 02:48AM LST -0.9 L  09:07AM LST 5.9 H  03:25PM LST -0.5 L  09:32PM LST 5.2 H
 25 Friday
 03:35AM LST -0.6 L  09:49AM LST 5.6 H  04:06PM LST -0.3 L  10:17PM LST 5.1 H
 26 Saturday
 04:22AM LST -0.3 L  10:28AM LST 5.3 H  04:46PM LST -0.1 L  11:01PM LST 5.0 H
 27 Sunday
 05:08AM LST 0.1 L  11:08AM LST 4.9 H  05:25PM LST 0.1 L  11:46PM LST 4.9 H

For more Tidal / Lunar info, Click here


The Final Word

     The fishing this past week has been a little slow. The wind and cold temperatures early in the week made for some tough fishing. A little later in the week the winds did settle down and there were some fish being taken inshore. Reds are schooled up thick along the flats and some reports have them eating and others have them being very sluggish and not taking bait. The fish are slower this time of year due to the cold water and they can also be very cautious in their feeding and movement due to fishing pressure and the ever present pressure from hungry porpoises. The trout fishing is still good with a variety of artificials working. A very slow retrieve is necessary if you want to catch them. Offshore the bottom fishing is really good with nice catches of grouper, snapper, and black sea bass. We will be at the Charleston Boat show this weekend, so if you come to the show, stop by the booth and say hello.

Tight lines…
Andy Pickett
CharlestonFishing.Com

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