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Recipe of the Week

Baked Crab

Ingredients:
1 lb Crabmeat
8 sl Bread; toasted, crushed
1 c Milk
1/4 ts Salt
1/4 c All purpose flour
3 tb Butter
1 tb Worcestershire sauce
4 Eggs; hard boiled, chopped
1 c Celery; finely chopped
1/2 c Onion; chopped
2 tb Parsley; chopped
1 sm Green pepper; finely chopped
1 c Mayonnaise

Directions:
Combine first 7 ingredients in large mixing bowl; mix well, and set aside. Melt butter; add flour, salt, stirring until smooth. Cook 1 minute, stirring constantly. Gradually add 1 cup milk; cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until mixture is thickened and bubbly. Remove from heat. Spoon sauce into crabmeat mixture, mixing well. Add toast crumbs, reserving 1/4 cup; mix well. Stir in mayonnaise.
Fill 12 crab shells or 6 oz custard cups with crabmeat mixture; sprinkle reserved toast crumbs on top.
Bake at 400 degrees for 20 minutes.
Serve immediately.

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12.13.2007 Volume VIII Issue #45

This Week's Article

Christmas Time!
     Silver bells, silver bells, silver bells, silver bells, it is Christmas time in the lowcountry and man does it feels like Christmas with highs in the low eighties this week. If you are like me you are really struggling this year to get into the Christmas spirit making it even harder to come up with gift ideas for that already hard to buy for sportsman. Since I struggle every year with ideas I usually try to put together a brief list of things to help everyone out. I compiled the bulk of this list over the last couple of years and have added just a few new ideas for this year. Some of these ideas are quite obvious, others may not be; hopefully this will help you figure out a gift for your fishing partner or give you some ideas to put on your own list to Santa.
Click here to read this article

This Week's News

Council Approves Amendment to Rebuild Fish Stocks
Rebuilding plans outlined for snowy grouper, black sea bass, and red porgy

     The South Atlantic Fishery Management Council approved stock rebuilding plans for three economically important species found in the snapper grouper management complex during its recent meeting in Atlantic Beach, North Carolina. Amendment 15A to the Snapper Grouper Fishery Management Plan (FMP) will determine long-term rebuilding plans for overfished stocks of snowy grouper, black sea bass, and red porgy. The Council is required by the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act to develop the rebuilding plans.
     The rebuilding plans specify the schedule or timeframe in which the stocks will be rebuilt as well as the management strategies used to recover the stocks. A rebuilding strategy gives managers the ability to establish an annual total allowable catch (TAC) based on the long-term plan for stock recovery. For example, the amendment outlines a rebuilding schedule for black sea bass of 10 years, beginning in 2006. The rebuilding strategy maintains a constant catch throughout the rebuilding timeframe, with a TAC for 2009 set at 847,000 pounds whole weight. The TAC would remain in effect beyond 2009 until modified through the stock assessment process. For snowy grouper, a much longer-lived species found in deeper waters, the Council has designated a rebuilding schedule of 34 years with a strategy to continue a 2009 TAC of 102,960 pounds whole weight. A red porgy TAC of 395,281 pounds whole weight has been set for 2009 and 2010. The TAC can be adjusted as stock assessment data become available and the stock continues to rebuild. Amendment 15A will be submitted later this month to the Secretary of Commerce for final review and approval.
     The Council held a series of 10 public hearings from Marathon, Florida to Manteo, North Carolina in November and early December to solicit input on Amendments 15A and 15B to the Snapper Grouper Fishery Management Plan. While rebuilding plans were approved through Amendment 15A at the December meeting, the Council will continue to receive comments on Amendment 15B until January 11, 2008. The majority of comments received during public hearings involved actions in Amendment 15B, including those to address the sale of recreationally-caught snapper grouper species and allocations of snowy grouper and red porgy between recreational and commercial fishermen.
     Opinions were divided regarding the issue of recreational sale, with some supporting the Council’s preferred management alternative to eliminate the sale of recreational bag limits for snapper grouper species harvested from federal waters in the South Atlantic. However, comments were received from fishermen, primarily in North Carolina, that supported the ability to sell recreational bag limits without possession of a federal snapper grouper commercial permit in order to allow continued flexibility for area fishermen with a state commercial permit. Amendment 15B also includes alternatives for the implementation of a plan to monitor and assess bycatch, measures to reduce the impacts of incidental take on sea turtles and smalltooth sawfish, permit renewal and transferability, and management reference points for golden tilefish. Copies of the Amendment 15B Public Hearing Document and details on how to comment can be found on the Council’s web site at www.safmc.net.
Other Actions
     Work continued on a list of management alternatives required to reduce harvest and end overfishing for vermilion snapper and gag grouper. Alternatives in Amendment 16 to the Snapper Grouper FMP include a gag spawning closure January – April that applies to both recreational and commercial sectors and to all shallow water groupers, a gag quota where harvest and possession of shallow water groupers is prohibited once the quota is met, two separate quotas for gag (one for the Carolinas and another for Georgia and Florida), and modifications to the gag and black grouper aggregate bag limit. Management measures for vermilion snapper include seasonal closures, two commercial quotas occurring at two different times of the year, and adjustments to the size and bag limits. Additional alternatives include exclusion of the captain and crew on for-hire vessels from possession of the bag limit for shallow water groupers and vermilion snapper, and a requirement of dehooking tools, venting tools, and the use of circle hooks for both commercial and recreational sectors. Allocation alternatives between commercial and recreational sectors are also included in the document. The Council is scheduled to approve Amendment 16 for public hearings during its March 2008 meeting.


Tide Chart

 13 Thursday
 03:31AM LST 0.3 L  09:59AM LST 5.6 H  04:25PM LST 0.5 L  10:06PM LST 4.6 H
 14 Friday
 04:15AM LST 0.4 L  10:40AM LST 5.5 H  05:09PM LST 0.4 L  10:52PM LST 4.7 H
 15 Saturday
 05:05AM LST 0.4 L  11:25AM LST 5.4 H  05:55PM LST 0.3 L  11:45PM LST 4.8 H
 16 Sunday
 06:02AM LST 0.5 L  12:16PM LST 5.3 H  06:46PM LST 0.2 L  

For more Tidal / Lunar info, Click here


The Final Word

     Is it late September or December? I get confused when the water is slick calm and the air temps are hovering in the low eighties. Oh yea, that right it is dark by 5 pm messing up my after work fishing opportunity, it must be a warm week in December. Slow trolling for Trout has been producing some great fish. The Trout are hitting grubs, gulps, and mud minnows with the slow troll. Oyster beds, drops, points, rocks, docks, and all other structure are holding Trout as well. DOA shrimp under floats, Mirrorlures and other plugs seem to be the ticket over the structure. Redfish action remains good in the creeks and in the deep holes. The Sheepshead are at the rocks, and a few are starting to move to the artificial reefs. The reefs are still holding some Weakfish as well.
     Offshore a few Wahoo and Sailfish are still around. Swordfishing has also been fair. Bottom fishing action remains strong from 60 feet and beyond.

Tight lines…
Captain Tim Pickett
CharlestonFishing.Com

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