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| Nebraska Pond Management A place for Nebraskans to discuss issues specific to farm pond management. |
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#1 (permalink)
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Kearney
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I am wondering how harmful snapping turtles are to a lake if they are over abundant. I am not positive that they are over populated either, the lake is 190 acres, northern sandhills, has large mouth, perch, bluegill, and crappie. On a normal day you will see between 15 to 30 snappers, in different areas. |
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#5 (permalink) |
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2007 NEFGA Angler Of The Year Finalist
Join Date: Aug 2006
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Turtles live a long time, a big one could be decades old.
They're primarily scavengers, although the will pick off live, swimming fish. I saw two snappers with live bluegills in their beaks last summer. I think the biggest danger to small ponds is bank and bottom degredation, because they do like to dig things up. They can create mechanical turbidity in the same way that anything stirring up the bottom can. I knew one farmer who had them digging in his dam, so removed them to protect his dam. In a 190 acre sandhill lake, I can't imagine the probable harm, and it doesn't sound as if it's over-populated if you see some turtles when you go out there.
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#6 (permalink) | |
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Director
Join Date: Aug 2006
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Received this. Thanks, Jeff!
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#7 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Bremerton Washington but from Naper, Nebraska
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Don't let these guys lead you astray. Turtles aren't all that tough to clean. Just a little tedious.
1) Put on a big pot of water to boil 2) Cut off the head 3) Throw a loop of wire or cable around the foot pad and extend leg. Carefully scald with boiling water. Do this to each leg, tail and neck. 4) Use burlap or rag to strip algae/gung buildup off these apendages. 5) Use a sharp fillet knife to cut around each apendage hole, remove, split skin and chunk out meat. 6) If you really want a cool piece of milky white meat, split the top and bottom shells at the hinge. Peel off the top shell and with a hammer and sharp chisel, cut each rib at the inside top of the shell, remove and get that piece of meat. 7) Flour, salt & pepper. Brown meat and then throw into a casserole dish. Pour in a can or two of Cream of Mushroom soup (depends on dish size and amount of meat). Bake at 350 for 45 minutes. 8) Or dip chunks in batter and deep fry. |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Apr 2007
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this summer i caught snapper that weighed about 45lbs while camping on some private land by midway lake i think it was, we were curious as to what it really tasted like so we butchered it and threw some of it on the fire.....it was really good, just put some salt and pepper on it and cooked it thoroghly....yum yum.
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#12 (permalink) | |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
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Quote:
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2008's Total Catch: LMB:205 - SMB:83 - Wiper: 24 - Rock Bass: 6 - Yellow Bass: 9 - White Bass: 4 - Eye:9 - Sauger:7 - Saugeye: 12 - Crappie:71 - Perch:5 - White Perch:6 - Gill:47 - Cats:9 - Drum: 16 - Bull Frog: 1 2008 Hunting Pheasant: 8 - Chukar: 5 - Green Wing Teal: 3 - Shovelers: 2 - Widgeon: 1 - WoodC: 1 - WT/Buck: 1 - WT/Doe: 1 |
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| Pond » Snappers | This thread | Pingback | 03-04-2008 03:03 PM | |
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