This picture was taken on Atlantic Beach at sunrise before selling calendars locally. It fits the theme of this post about farming the sea. There are two ways we can farm fish. The way I support is to help nature overcome habitat-related spawning obstacles by incubating fertilized eggs from local specimens to release hatchlings that live wild and free as Natural Selection ensures survival of the fittest. This is a wonderful way to sustainably support historically high abundance and harvest levels using traditional fishing methods. Stricter regulations with less seafood available to consumers opens the door to Public Water industrial fish farming that I strongly oppose for many reasons. Corporate cages full of genetically modified species clogging Public Waters plague native seafood with pestilent sea lice and contagious pathogens as they excrete habitat-degrading levels of antibiotic-laced feces. Farmed fish that would normally swim hundreds or thousands of miles in the wild will live sad lives confined to overcrowded cages. Stocking a wide variety of native seafood is good for recreational and commercial fishermen as well as consumers and the fish we eat. Subsidizing corporate fish farms restricts our freedom to access Public Waters and the resources they support. It hurts local fish and fishermen while leaving consumers with unnatural fish lacking the quality of wild-caught seafood that roamed free in open waters. Now is the time to decide which method of farming the sea we want to see. I choose wild and free!
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This was one of the ugliest pictures taken while selling calendars. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration released a report over a decade ago saying that many fisheries would be mostly catch and release as voluntary and regulatory discards cause some quotas to be met with fish that die from their wounds after being released. Hard deadlines politicians passed for rebuilding mismanaged fisheries are used as an excuse by fishery managers to take drastic measures like completely closing fisheries for a period of time. This starts a vicious cycle of dead discard allocations causing repeated rounds of prolonged complete closures and excessive regulatory discards. A simple solution would be to remove hard rebuilding deadlines and transfer quota currently allocated to assumed dead discards to harvestable quota. This would allow fishermen and consumers to enjoy eating local wild-caught seafood without killing any more fish than we are now. Five MILLION pounds of Red Snapper quota is allocated to assumed dead discards every year as recreational and commercial fishermen combined are only allowed to harvest less than 10% of that for food. Imagine how quickly things would change if all those wasted snapper could be piled high to rot on the steps of Congress. Waste from gross mismanagement is what got me started as an advocate. We should all be offended by the premeditated government mandated wanton waste of our Public Resources.
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freefish7 blogThank you for reading this blog about fishery related issues. Archives
January 2026
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