4liters wrote:
And people complain about windfarms lol
But if you build too many wind farms all the wind will be used up...
4liters wrote:
And people complain about windfarms lol
They are not being put there to be eaten, its more so that people can catch and release. no-one in their right mind will eat fish from places like that.Stevieboy wrote:My question is would you actually eat a barra if you caught it out of that water... Obviously if its legal size and all but the looks alone of that water definitely doesn't look too appealing to me. I was there a few weeks back taking out my niece and nephew catching the cichlids that currently reside in there and while I was there kept noticing every so often this black soot layer peeling off the bottom of the pondage and floating on top of the water. No idea what it is but needless to say I wouldn't be eating a barra if I caught one outta there.
they have been in there for a few months already. its only being made public now.FishnMiss wrote:On talking Fishing this evening it was announced that Barra would be released into the Hazelwood dam tomorrow morning but fishing will be off limits for a few months for fisheries to do a study to see how they fare in the pond/lake.
I think there will be a media release tomorrow.
freshwater barra are terrible to eatStevieboy wrote:My question is would you actually eat a barra if you caught it out of that water... Obviously if its legal size and all but the looks alone of that water definitely doesn't look too appealing to me. I was there a few weeks back taking out my niece and nephew catching the cichlids that currently reside in there and while I was there kept noticing every so often this black soot layer peeling off the bottom of the pondage and floating on top of the water. No idea what it is but needless to say I wouldn't be eating a barra if I caught one outta there.
4liters wrote:What do barra need in order to breed? Is there any chance of a breeding population establishing in the pondage?