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This is Crazy!!
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Re: This is Crazy!!
Quote:
Leif |
Re: This is Crazy!!
I've seen them on carp up at the St. Lawrence but haven't seen one on a Jersey fish yet. This carp had a few hanging off of him and one even came out of his tookus. You can see one hanging on by the tail. I put one in a water bottle in the daytime and took come cool pics.
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7087/7...5430eb22_c.jpg http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7071/7...5456c699_c.jpg |
Re: This is Crazy!!
Looks like that thing from Prometheus.
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I foul-hooked a dead one (yes, you read that right) while I was catfishing in gap a couple years ago. It was probably 2 feet long and a couple of pounds and had already started decomposing. Stunk like hell. Only one I have ever seen, anywhere, dead or alive.
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Re: This is Crazy!!
....btw....cool pic Matt.
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Ahh, Reminds me of the days when I used to breed and raise Lamprey's. I'm KIDDING!
Jesus, WTF, that thing is really large and Gnarly! How'd you like that attached to your Back?! Yillll!:eek: Sorry for the jokes. Thank you for posting. Sea creatures are incredibly interesting. Even more so when they arrive in our rivers! How's the saying go "we know more about the surface of the Moon than we do about the deep sea", or something like that. Great find. SAXMATT - Kool info, always informative...thanks brotha! Cheers |
Re: This is Crazy!!
I've seen them in a few catskill rivers and even caught trout with round scars from them but have yet to see any in NJ....
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They are definitely in the BIG D and have been for a while. Guys that fish the river use them for bait but I personally have never used them. I was fishing the river 7 years ago in march and they were all over the place, floating around dead and decomposing. There was a was a gnarly stench that day. This was at the Delaware Water Gap @ rt 80. Nasty lil bastards but i hear they're awesome bait.
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Re: This is Crazy!!
A sea lamprey, parasitic only in saltwater, they enter freshwater rivers to spawn, after which, they die. After one dies, the remaining mate stays close by until it , too, succumbs.
Both adults build a circular nest out of rocks, & guard their young. The young migrate to the ocean to begin their parasitic ways. The only other NJ lamprey is the American Brook Lamprey. It is much smaller than the S.Lamprey, and totally non parasitic. Spends its entire life in freshwater streams. These are the ones that anglers harvest as primo walleye bait. |
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