Not again

Interesting thought.... a big ol bass might have inhaled and broke off an amount of Texas rigged worms in its day. Who's to say a couple ounces of tungsten couldn't naturally end up in a bass belly?
I think the article mentions there was no sign of them being in there for a while. Stomach acids reacting to them or the lack thereof ??
 
Interesting thought.... a big ol bass might have inhaled and broke off an amount of Texas rigged worms in its day. Who's to say a couple ounces of tungsten couldn't naturally end up in a bass belly?​
You might have a bright future in a different career as a very specialized sort of attorney.

PINK NIGHTY
~~~
FISH LAWYER​
 
Funny, I hadn't seen your post yet, but was thinking about this issue just last night. That is from the 1st time a guy went viral for getting busted like that. And the reason I was thinking of it was because an account I follow on IG has a friendly client bonker steelhead derby.

Well, their numbers for weight, length & girth are all over the place. Here's a screen shot.
The guy in 3rd should be the winner. Haha!
1773374940367.png

And if you know who this is, please don't make a fuss. They're good-hearted friendly people. Math is just a little fuzzy. I'm guessing the weighing and measuring is done by the angler so maybe wet nets and bad tapes are involved or something.

Or maybe 3 of these fish took hook, line and a BIG sinker. :ROFLMAO:
 
Funny, I hadn't seen your post yet, but was thinking about this issue just last night. That is from the 1st time a guy went viral for getting busted like that. And the reason I was thinking of it was because an account I follow on IG has a friendly client bonker steelhead derby.

Well, their numbers for weight, length & girth are all over the place. Here's a screen shot.
The guy in 3rd should be the winner. Haha!
View attachment 180018

And if you know who this is, please don't make a fuss. They're good-hearted friendly people. Math is just a little fuzzy. I'm guessing the weighing and measuring is done by the angler so maybe wet nets and bad tapes are involved or something.

Or maybe 3 of these fish took hook, line and a BIG sinker. :ROFLMAO:
What's your formula for calculating weight of a steelhead with length and girth known? 40"X21"?
 
What's your formula for calculating weight of a steelhead with length and girth known? 40"X21"?
There's a few out there. This one has been up forever-

They all put a fresh healthy steelhead that is 30" long and a girth of 16" just under 10#...9.90967741935484. 😁
Any math guys in the room?

If they're skinny upriver summer bonkers like in that contest then a 30" fish is only 7 or 8#.

For healthy fresh fish you can usually guesstimate the following-
26"=6#
27"=7#
28"=8#
29"=9#
30"=10#
Then it gets a bit off since by the time you get to 38" it could be a 20# fish.

Skinny bucks weigh a bit more than skinny hens because of the bigger head. And a 16 ounce lead sinker weighs 1#. 😁
 
Math is just a little fuzzy.
32.75" and 14.5" would be a snake. 29" and 13" would be unlikely to hit 8lbs. 31" and 15" should be right around the 10 lb mark.

Unless you regularly retain fish it's hard to get a feel for weight just going off length/girth. These are the stats from the 50 biggest wild rainbows caught at the camp I go to...grey were released, but the rest were verified measurements. You can't just go off the length below though because these were also some of the fattest fish caught.

1773411799725.png

Here's a fun chart. Data from 482 wild stillwater rainbows in the 4lb+ range caught since the 1960s. Not shown are the majority of fish in the 19"-23" range that didn't quite make the 4lb+ cut on the scale.

1773413052319.png
 
Yeah, if I had a dollar for every "about 10 or 12 pounds" steelhead I've heard out there. I had a guy say that on the Sky one morning when he knew I had clearly seen his fish at fairly close range. It was a cookie cutter 8 pounder winter hatchery fish. Ok, man, whatever you say. 😁
 
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