All these years I thought I couldn't save fluke from the day before for bait. It turns out I was wrong about that. I rarely use any type of bait, there were a few days where it clearly outproduced. Below is a part of the transcript from my recent podcast
Lt. Sean Reilly:
Well, the way the regulations read, you can't filet the brown side of a fluke while you're underway. You can the white side off if you want to use that for bait, but it doesn't actually prohibit you from bringing older pieces back. And then it becomes a judgment issue if the officer believes you, that you possess mutilated fluke from that day or from another day, and often it's obvious when the guy pulls out the Ziploc bag and you can tell that it's strips that have been frozen, that this is not something they caught today. But it does get into an area where it could be off the discretion of possessing mutilated fluke, that we don't have a body to measure for, to know it was a legal five fish.
So is it OK? The last sentence says it all. I for one trust that an ECO could easily tell the difference between a fresh strip and a one to two-day-old one.
Lt. Sean Reilly:
Well, the way the regulations read, you can't filet the brown side of a fluke while you're underway. You can the white side off if you want to use that for bait, but it doesn't actually prohibit you from bringing older pieces back. And then it becomes a judgment issue if the officer believes you, that you possess mutilated fluke from that day or from another day, and often it's obvious when the guy pulls out the Ziploc bag and you can tell that it's strips that have been frozen, that this is not something they caught today. But it does get into an area where it could be off the discretion of possessing mutilated fluke, that we don't have a body to measure for, to know it was a legal five fish.
So is it OK? The last sentence says it all. I for one trust that an ECO could easily tell the difference between a fresh strip and a one to two-day-old one.