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Drum taking over?


audiochem

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I don't have a long history with Stockton because I've only lived in the area 2 years, but have the drum always been this bad? I seem to be catching 1 crappie or walleye for every 3 drum. At a lake I used to fish growing up, there were no drum. Then one year we started catching a couple. In a couple years, the lake was over run with drum and they definitely had an impact on game fish.

Just wondering if I aught to  start euthanizing them and feeding the eagles.

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1 hour ago, audiochem said:

I don't have a long history with Stockton because I've only lived in the area 2 years, but have the drum always been this bad? I seem to be catching 1 crappie or walleye for every 3 drum. At a lake I used to fish growing up, there were no drum. Then one year we started catching a couple. In a couple years, the lake was over run with drum and they definitely had an impact on game fish.

Just wondering if I aught to  start euthanizing them and feeding the eagles.

Stockton always had drum, small ones (under 5 pounds) are good to eat, just don't over cook them!... When the meat goes opaque they are done! stop cooking!!!!!! baked in foil, salt/lemon pepper, little butter and slice of lyme...its a firmer meat kinda like grouper..if your catching Drum your prob need to fish a bit deeper for Walleyes 2-4 feet off bottom or shallower for crappies(12-14 feet suspended,)  drum hang out on bottom, if you think about it they are like silver freshwater red fish....fillet a couple out of Stockton's clean water you won't be cussing them anymore trust me!

MONKEYS? what monkeys?

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If given a choice, my Chinese inlaws prefer to eat drum over just about any fish. When I'm fishing for bass in the middle of the river and catch a drum, I usually  bring it home.

"Honor is a man's gift to himself" Rob Roy McGregor

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Stockton and Pomme have lots of drum.  I have eaten them, though not nearly as excited by them as others are.  They fillet kind of like a skinny bass.  Good seasoning is very helpful (think cajun).  Sometimes they aren't bad sometimes they were tough as a boot.  And they were all.cooked at the same time. 

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6 hours ago, top_dollar said:

Ive never eaten one but am curious to try.  How do you clean one? Do they fillet up like a crappie or walleye? 

yep less meat for their size though

MONKEYS? what monkeys?

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From my experience Pom has 2 to 3 x as many drum as Stockton.  I think the way to cook them is the old method of baking them on a pine board.  At least that is the way I'd be doing it.

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On 7/30/2017 at 2:57 AM, audiochem said:

I don't have a long history with Stockton because I've only lived in the area 2 years, but have the drum always been this bad? I seem to be catching 1 crappie or walleye for every 3 drum. At a lake I used to fish growing up, there were no drum. Then one year we started catching a couple. In a couple years, the lake was over run with drum and they definitely had an impact on game fish.

Just wondering if I aught to  start euthanizing them and feeding the eagles.

Use them for cut bait

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