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No answer to your question, but isn't that the reason they were brought over to begin with? For food... pretty incredible how adaptable they are.Carp are considered a delicacy in many places. Does anyone here catch them in clean enough water and turn them into a meal, or as is the case with that one, a bunch of meals.
I think they would be edible in the area we were fishing. At least people catch and keep small mouth bass, and I assume eat them, in that part of the Columbia. I have never kept a carp to eat, but Clarkman is correct, the carp in the Columbia River are the ancestors of fish brought over from Europe as a source of food for workers that escaped into the river during a flood event or some type of natural catastrophe.Carp are considered a delicacy in many places. Does anyone here catch them in clean enough water and turn them into a meal, or as is the case with that one, a bunch of meals.
I know it’s been shared here or the old site, but here ya go.
Walleye, smallmouth bass?I'm not eating any carp caught in Washington. At least in the spots I usually target them. Definitely not anything out of the Columbia system.
If I was certain a fish had spent all their time in a Columbia trib like the Washougal or Deschutes then ok, let's try it.
I pass on the PCBs and mercury.![]()
I would be more comfortable eating those since they are not bottom feeders. Would I eat a lot of them from the mid & lower big C? NopeWalleye, smallmouth bass?