December 1, 2022
*Capt Hubbard,
We traded Emails a couple
of months ago in reference to my blog post RE: the FWC commissions last minute
amendment to the FWC staff’s proposed Redfish rules for NE Florida. As noted in the post, I was somewhat aggravated that the Commission chose to make a
change to the recommendations – recommendations that Staff had arrived at after
a year and half of research, studies, a Summit, and multiple workshops. In a
nut shell, my attitude towards the FWC has become a bit jaded.
I realize that somehow time
has caught up with me – I’m now one of the “old timers” and my thoughts on
fishing, keeping of fish, and overall conservation may not align as much with
the younger generation. That said, I
don’t like to kill a whole bunch of fish – I subtly encourage my customers to
throw them back, but I don’t begrudge a recreational angler to keep a few for
dinner. I do feel like the times of “loading the cooler” to feed the
neighborhood are long gone, as well they should be.
Plain and simple, I go by
the rules set by the FWC. And again, if there is any hesitation from one of my
customers to keep or release a fish, I encourage them to release it. I recently
“fired” a customer that pressured me to keep an illegal fish.
I’ve had a growing un-ease in my belly that
our industry is being taken over by the “woke”, tree-hugging crowd. Here at
Amelia Island, a number of folks have moved in over the last 10 years and they
seem to be die-hard environmentalist/conservationist, or at best, ambivalent
towards fishing. The island is becoming
more and more anti-boater and anti-anglers. Our boat ramp at the City Marina is
in danger of being closed, our county boat ramps are in need of repair. Heck,
the City built frigging Pentanque courts in the boat trailer parking lot!
Like I said, I go by the
FWC rules. But I’ve always wondered if their research may be tainted by
conservationists bias-all I can do is hope that they are “honorable” scientists
and will do the right thing. I was pleased to hear one of the scientists at the
Summit note that the “NE Florida Redfish stock was doing good”. I was all on board with the NE Florida rule
changes and prepped my customers with notices 2-Redfish per person, 4 per boat
max. Why would the Commissioners base
their decision to change that recommendation on the sentiment of a handful of
people that poured their heart out at the Commission meeting? My gut tells me
the FWC is gauging public sentiment to base their decisions, rather than what
the science tells them. I think they
gauged wrong, but “conservation” is what they are hearing. I feel that there are
adverse ramifications to we guides and all Florida anglers.
I’m a bit concerned that
the FWC Commissioners may be “in bed” with the conservation groups. Those
groups have raised a lot of money and have a lot of influence. Again, all of us
think we’re conservation minded but what do we as Guides/Charter boat captains
do when that public sentiment that the FWC is basing their rules on goes even
further? What if there’s a push to ban boats with gasoline engines? What if
they want to enforce speed limits off shore? What if they want to institute
complete catch and release? What if they want to close the boat ramps? What if
they make the rules so onerous that no one wants to fish? As you know, they’re already doing some of
this in Florida. How far do we let them go before we push back?
Just this week there was an
news article about Whole Foods banning Maine caught lobsters. A move that
affected the entire state industry. In 20 years will Floridians be cut out of
fishing?
FYI I fished three times
this week, Mon-Wed. On Monday we fished
one spot and we were there for 2 hours.
We guestimated we caught 40 Redfish, most of them “rats”, but 8 of them were in
the Slot. My customers kept their limit (2).
On Tuesday we fished and caught only Trout and a Flounder - zero Redfish-not
a one. Yesterday we fished a spot, and again caught over 40 Redfish. Most of
them were “rats”, but the 12yo young lady on the boat counted the slots – 12
slots. They kept their limit (4). When I
was listening the video of the Commission meeting and heard some of the folks
state that “they couldn’t catch a redfish” and “the Redfish stock is down” I was thinking, “you know, it depends on the
day, the tide, the time of year, the spot, the bait, the experience of the angler, and the skill
level” ‘ Some days you catch them. Some days you don’t. For the Commissioners
to base their decisions on those testimonies was just…baloney.
My membership with the
Florida Guides Association is based on how I think ya’ll are addressing these
concerns. If I think you are getting too “buddy buddy” with the conservation
groups and the FWC, then I’ll probably drop the membership. I understand that
we need to work with them. I just don’t think our interests are 100% in line
with the direction they are heading.
Sincerely,
Capt. Lawrence Piper