California Outdoors Q&As: Buying Bass for Private Lake
Contact: Carrie Wilson, Communications Office,
CalOutdoors@dfg.ca.gov .
*** View this column with images online at
www.dfg.ca.gov/QandA/2009/20090730.asp ***
Question: We want to purchase some bass and bluegill for our four-acre
pond in Northern California. We plan to use catch-and-release techniques
to teach our kids how to fish. What would be the best kind of bass to
buy? I assume largemouth bass and/or spotted bass would work best.
Please advise me as to which type to buy and where to get them. Thanks
very much. (Andrew)
Answer: The best bass for a small pond are going to be either the
Northern or Florida strain of largemouth bass (LAB). According to
Associate Fisheries Biologist Jay Rowan, the Northern strain LAB are
generally easier to catch and can grow to very large sizes in a pond
environment. The Florida strain LAB are a little more difficult to catch
but are thought to have the genetic potential to grow to larger sizes
than their northern cousins. Growth rates and maximum size of the fish
are dependent on the stocking density, food supplies and water
temperatures.
Since this is a relatively small pond in northern California, Rowan
suggests you start out with Northern strain bass for several years to
see how they do. In your pond, the Northern strain fish should get a
longer growing season because they will be less affected by cooler
spring and fall temperatures than the Florida strain would be. And
because of the longer growing season, you may also actually wind up with
larger fish than if you went with the Florida strain from the start. In
addition, the Northern strain bass are not quite as wily as the Florida
strain so the kids should catch more fish.
Bass, as well as bluegill and other forage fish, can be purchased from
the aquaculturists listed on the DFG Web site below. DFG informational
leaflets No. 6 and No. 23, which deal with private stocking permits and
Farm Fish Pond Management in California, respectively, are available
from our Web site and are suggested reading.
Keep in mind that it is not legal to catch fish from one body of water
and then transport those fish alive to stock your pond. The only legal
source of fish for stocking purposes is a licensed aquaculturist.
Private stocking permits are issued on a county-by-county basis and
some counties require new prospective waters to be inspected first by a
DFG fishery biologist or aquaculturist before a permit is issued. You
will need to wait until after January 2010, however, to apply for a new
stocking permit due to a pending lawsuit
(www.dfg.ca.gov/news/news08/08131.html). Once DFG starts approving
permits again, you can get the stocking permit process started by
contacting one of the approved aquaculturists listed on the DFG Web site
at www.dfg.ca.gov/fish/Administration/Permits/Aquaculture.
Question: We are bow hunters and are wondering if there are any
regulations against using the new lighted arrow nocks? They turn on when
shot from your bow and stay on until you turn them off. They operate by
a small lithium battery and will stay on for many hours if needed. The
light makes it easier to follow the path of the arrow once released and
will stay on until retrieved from the animal or wherever it ends up.
(Joe G., Grass Valley)
Answer: There are no prohibitions against this accessory as long as it
doesn't emit light to help find and illuminate potential game animals,
thus giving the hunter an unfair advantage. In this case this component
appears to serve only as a visual lighted marker to help the archer
watch the course the arrow takes upon release.
(Definition of nock: A nock is the slotted portion at the back of the
arrow that sits against the bow string and holds the arrow in place
until the archer is released.)
Question: What are the rules of the second rod stamp? I've heard
that as long as we have this stamp we can now fish with two rods in all
waters of the state. Is this correct? (Theresa L.)
Answer: Not exactly. By purchasing the two rod stamp and affixing it
to your license, licensed anglers and anglers under 16 years of age may
fish with up to two rods in all inland waters that allow for the taking
of fish by angling. The only exceptions are for those waters in which
only allow artificial lures or barbless hooks may be used (CCR T-14
Section 2.00). In these gear-restricted waters, only one rod may be used
-- even if you have a second rod stamp.