Wait till you have paddled 15 or 20km in a kayak and then have a few fish to fillet when you get home. Needless to say they dont get done the same day
Against all of the sentiments by the people who are ridiculing the original poster, I have to say that whilst I would never pay anyone to fillet my fish, it is not a chore that I look forward to after a fishing session, either. Indeed, it is rare that I would fillet the fish on the same day because I am often too buggered after a trip.
My wife usually offers to do it for me but I reckon that as I am the one who got the enjoyment out of catching them, I should be the one who does the yucky stuff also.
I have a good fish cleaning table but it is still a chore when you catch a few and cleaning something like a big jew is like dressing a sheep.
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Wait till you have paddled 15 or 20km in a kayak and then have a few fish to fillet when you get home. Needless to say they dont get done the same day
to be honest I am stuffed too after a days fishing and cleaning the fish is thought to be a chore
I do however love cleaning fish I love cleaning the days catch whilst the skipper tends to his boat (as only he knows how)
fish filleting is a skill I keep trying to master as is sharpening a knife, I keep reading on A/F to learn more
so I went out in my boat and fished for 8 hours on Monday and bought nothing home so i got to clean the boat without stress of cleaning fish
cheers murf
How good is that filletting machine!!!
I'm hearing you Charleville - try to fillet a big red is no easy task either.....that bone behind the back of their head is as hard as a rock.
Thanks Shane C I will keep that in mind. Just so you all know, I dont actually mind paying someone to do it, money, bait a fillet.. I had a mate in Rocky who worked as a decky and he'd nailed out about 30 plus fish an hour, skinned and boned. 30 Fish takes me about 3 times as long!
I probably should do as most of you said and keep practicing to get better. I live in a block of units as well so I dont really have the facilities although if I start dropping some frames down the back creek, I might get that croc from Nudgee to come visit.
Oh just one other quick question - just double checking but can you fillet at sea? Isnt there a size limit eg the fillets have to be bigger than 45cm or something? You just have the leave the skin on?
hey guys
read this and had a chuckle---- s***T mate take me fishin and i'll fillet the lot..
you have to clean the boat--- fairs fair
lmao
Ronnie
G'day NF,
the way I read the regs and had bill corten explain them to me recently, there is no restriction in filleting Rocky fin fish at sea, the problem is reef fin fish - the fillets have a minimum size - somewhere around 45cm as my memory goes but I certainly stand to be corrected - and the regs may well have changed - the bureaucrats love justifying their jobs by changing the rulZ!
cheers
Rhys
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Life is a mystery to be lived, not a problem to be solved, Gabriel Marcel
I thought the fillet had to be 40 cm with the skin on
Stuie
IF IT CAN'T EAT A WHOLE PILLY I DON'T WANT IT
found it
Skin, fillet and pectoral fin removal
In relation to coral reef fin fish, a recreational fisher:
• must not possess on board a boat a fish other than in any of the following forms—whole, gilled, gutted or filleted
• may possess on board a boat a fillet of a fish other than a blue spotted coral trout (Chinese footballer) as long as the length of the fillet is at least 40 cm, and the skin and scales of the fillet are attached to the fillet
• must not return fish to a boat that have been taken ashore from a boat and filleted, unless the length of the fillet is at least 40 cm and the skin of the fillet is attached to the fillet
• must not possess a dead coral reef fin fish unless a pectoral fin has been removed from the fish
copied and pasted from here
http://www.dpi.qld.gov.au/documents/...shing-regs.pdf
Stuie
IF IT CAN'T EAT A WHOLE PILLY I DON'T WANT IT
coral reef fin fish, a recreational fisher:
• must not possess on board a boat a fish other than in any of the following forms—whole, gilled, gutted or filleted
so does that mean you CAN fillet coral reef fin fish at sea (from a NSW bloke)
cheers Murf
yes as long as the fillet has skin on and is over 40 cm in length
IF IT CAN'T EAT A WHOLE PILLY I DON'T WANT IT
Its simple, the more you fillet n skin the quicker and better you will get, and good sharp knifes are a must.
After a while it becomes so quick and easy its a breeze!
Cheers
Jim