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Author Topic: Ask a Conservation Officer  (Read 856 times)

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Offline Lee Borgersen

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 :reporter; ... Ask a Conservation Officer:

      When can you keep a foul-hooked fish? :scratch:


Q: While fishing on the St. Louis River near Duluth, I was trolling with a spinner rig and landed a walleye that was hooked in the chin behind the mouth. Can I keep it? :confused:

A: No. Minnesota's statewide regulation for foul-hooked fish states that a person may not intentionally take fish by snagging, or use a snag line, snag hook or cluster of hooks designed to foul-hook fish.


On most inland lakes, as long as a fish that was hooked elsewhere in the body was done so accidentally, it is legal to keep. However, on Lake Superior tributaries and Wisconsin-Minnesota border waters (St. Louis, St. Croix and Mississippi rivers), there is a specific regulation stating that a fish hooked anywhere in the body except the mouth must be immediately returned to the water.

Some anglers may strongly argue :taz: that it is not moral or right to keep such a foul-hooked fish under any circumstances. In a CO's world, this is where we get the phrase, "What seems right isn't always legal, and what is legal doesn't always seem right." :confused:

 :popcorn:
Make sure to check out the Border Waters pages for special regulations in the 2018 Minnesota Fishing Regulation synopsis.
« Last Edit: April 04/19/18, 08:06:19 AM by Lee Borgersen »
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