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Retirement and forum shutdown (17 Jan 2022)

Hi,

John Howell who has managed the forum for years is getting on and wishes to retire from the role of managing it.
Over the years, he has managed the forum through good days and bad days and he has always been fair.
He has managed to bring his passion for fish keeping to the forum and keep it going for so long.

I wish to thank John for his hard work in keeping the forum going.

With John wishing to "retire" from the role of managing the forum and the forum receiving very little traffic, I think we must agree that forum has come to a natural conclusion and it's time to put it to rest.

I am proposing that the forum be made read-only from March 2022 onwards and that no new users or content be created. The website is still registered for several more years, so the content will still be accessible but no new topics or replies will be allowed.

If there is interest from the ITFS or other fish keeping clubs, we may redirect traffic to them or to a Facebook group but will not actively manage it.

I'd like to thank everyone over the years who helped with forum, posted a reply, started a new topic, ask a question and helped a newbie in fish keeping. And thank you to the sponsors who helped us along the away. Hopefully it made the hobby stronger.

I'd especially like to thank John Howell and Valerie Rousseau for all of their contributions, without them the forum would have never been has successful.

Thank you
Darragh Sherwin

They won't get my Snakeheads!!!

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27 Nov 2012 15:49 #1 by JohnH (John)
I just copied this from Yahoo news - it's in the public domain so shouldn't cause a copyright issue.

U.S. chefs' solution for invading Frankenfish? Eat 'em
ReutersBy Ian Simpson | Reuters – 25 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The northern snakehead is known as "Frankenfish" and "rattlesnakes with fins," and some chefs say one way to stop the predatory, fast-spreading fish is obvious - with a fork.

With a reputation as fearsome as its name, the voracious snakehead fish has intruded throughout much of the Potomac River basin in Virginia and Maryland in the last decade, snapping up anything that gets in front of it.

Putting the torpedo-shaped snakehead on the menu is Washington-area restaurants' way of helping to control the Asian newcomer. Chefs said they have a key weapon on their side - humans' zest for eating up other species to the vanishing point.

"When man turns its attention to an animal, it's very difficult for the animal. He (the snakehead) is dangerous, but chefs are more dangerous," said David Stein, executive chef at Tony & Joe's Seafood Place in Washington.

He praised the snakehead for its dense, meaty, white flesh with a mild taste that is ideal for anything from grilling to sauteing. But given the name, snakehead ceviche might be going too far.

"The guy that orders that gets it for free," Stein said.

The northern snakehead, or Channa argus, has joined a tankful of invasive fish that U.S. authorities are urging people to control by eating them.

Lionfish in the Caribbean, Asian carp in the Mississippi River basin and blue catfish in Virginia rivers are among other newcomers that environmentalists want to see on a dinner plate.

SLAB-LIKE FLESH

But the snakehead stands out among its invasive peers because its slab-like flesh and its minimal shrinkage is seemingly ideal for white-tablecloth restaurants.

Some four restaurants in the Baltimore and Washington area serve it regularly, according to the Maryland Department of Natural Resources.

At Tony & Joe's, snakehead appetizers cost $10 to $11, and entrees about $26. Maryland is the only state with a commercial market and the limited supply is keeping prices high.

"They're really amazing. Probably if it was called any other name than snakehead, people would be more willing to give them a try," Stein said, admiring a 7-pound (3-kg) fish that had been killed by bow and arrow.

Snakeheads are hardy, fast-growing, voracious and prolific. They got their start in the Potomac through releases from aquariums and the live fish trade, and have turned up in such places as California and Florida. The name comes from its coarse scales, boa constrictor-like colouring and a reptilian snout with a mouth featuring dog-like teeth.

The fish are air breathers that can last for days out of water. Even when gutted and with their throats cut, they gape for breath, said John Rorapaugh, director of sustainability and sales at ProFish, a Washington wholesaler.

"Once they get to mature size, they are on top of the food chain and are ravenous," he said.

Mice, birds, frogs, other fish, and even AA batteries have turned up inside snakeheads, Rorapaugh said. The fish weigh from about 8 to 15 pounds when mature.

He said he pays about $5 a pound ($12.50 a kg) for snakehead, and has shipped some outside the Washington area, including to New York's upscale Gramercy Tavern.

Josh Newhard, an expert on the snakehead with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said it was too early to say what the snakehead's long-term impact would be on its invaded environment.

Native species have shown no sign of decrease despite the fish's "remarkable" spread, he said.

"The potential is really high for them to impact other fish species. The fact that people want to remove them from the system is really good," he said.

(Reporting by Ian Simpson; Editing by Patricia Reaney and Maureen Bavdek)

John

Location:
N. Tipp

We're just two lost souls swimming in a fish bowl - year after year.


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28 Nov 2012 01:10 #2 by christyg (Chris Geraghty)
It's all down to how fashionable it becomes to 'dine on it'. Our own humble pike is pretty much frowned upon in this country for the table but our German cousins go mad for it. I think they developed a taste for it after their rivers got so polluted that salmon and trout disappeared and pike were the main fish that could survive. They became so overfished that they soon became scarce. There are many German anglers come to the Shannon river system in the summer looking for pike.

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28 Nov 2012 01:21 #3 by JohnH (John)
They would do well to find anything like a decent Pike in the Portumna area!

Come to think about it, they'd do well to find anything other than jet-skis and people being towed around my high speed motorboats (water-skiers).
The Europeans decimated Pike stocks in the seventies and eighties and just when stocks were beginning to build up again along have come the Eastern Europeans - who take NO PRISONERS!!! everything, no matter how small or large goes into their plastic bin liners!
I fear I've seen the best of the Fishing in Ireland - in the sixties! (Never to return I'd say).
John

Location:
N. Tipp

We're just two lost souls swimming in a fish bowl - year after year.


ITFS member.



It's a long way to Tipperary.

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28 Nov 2012 03:12 #4 by stretnik (stretnik)
Replied by stretnik (stretnik) on topic They won't get my Snakeheads!!!
I have witnessed Scuba Divers come out of the Sea by the Shelf in Dunlaoighhre with bags containing every type of living thing, from Limpets to tubeworms, Anemones etc. When told they shouldn't do so we were told to Free Unlawful Carnal Knowledge off!!

Kev.

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