Lets say you caught a fish, and by misfortune, the fish got a eye injury. Will it be allright to fend for its self, or should I kill it and feed it to the cat for humain reasons.![]()
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signed tunaman
Lets say you caught a fish, and by misfortune, the fish got a eye injury. Will it be allright to fend for its self, or should I kill it and feed it to the cat for humain reasons.![]()
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signed tunaman
It'll be fine. I have caught a few fish with one eye and they were still healthy enough to chase down my lure. About two years ago I caught a Largemouth Bass out of Lay Lake that went close to 8 lbs. and it only had one eye, the other was missing but had almost completely filled in with new skin.
Casey
Fish are very adaptive creatures tunaman. I used to be an avid aquarist once having several tanks and used to successfully breed Discus fish and other varieties of cichlids. These fish have extremely territorial behaviour and often I had a fish lose an eye. I even had a fish once lose both eyes and it still managed to survive and find the food although it ended up in the freezer because I thought it was a little unattractive.Having aquariums for so many years certainly helped me learn about fish behaviours and their adaptability and I know that releasing a one eyed fish doesn't hamper their chances of survival unless there is a dolphin under the boat waiting for it.
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Poodroo
He who aims at nothing is sure to hit it.
Gus Gould is one eyed and has survived ???
I'd kill it, fancy becoming an instant Collingwood supporter, poor bugger
Jtlands, Gus Gould is a cockroach, and they can survive a nuclear blast I heard.....![]()
HA HA HA LMFAO
Collingwood ... cyclops..
hoo- have n't had a giggle like that for a loooong time.
LOL at Jitlands and Marlin_Mike
Joel
Fishing for the thrill, not for the kill
LMAO.![]()
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. So I guess a one eyed fish is all good, but
how does a no eyed fish battle on.
signed tunaman
I once had a red jewel cichlid that had all it's fins chewed off and it was suspended upside down, but eventually its fins grew back and it survived a good 6-7 years in my fish tank.
If that aint survivin' chew my eye out!!
rowdy
Sh$t. Fish are more tougher than I thoughtI guess the will for
survival is greater than the disability.
signed tunaman
When you say you wouls kill it for humane reasons, do you are you refe3ring to humane reasons for the fish, or the cat, or both![]()
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Horny
Live every day as if it's your last - for one day you're sure to be right!
No. Just the fish. If the cat chokes thats its problem![]()
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Our cats name is garfeild, this thing would eat all day. I said too the missus, if you dont put this pillow with legs on a deit, Jenny craig will
have a warrant for its arrest.
signed tunaman![]()
Gus Gould should be killed & fed to the cat !!!
and I'm a cockraoch.
Why I asked this Question is because if a bigger fish came from its blind side, its chances for survival wouldnt be good.
So useing it for bait or cat food would be doing it a favour, so to speak.
By the way, the cat loved it.
Poodroo. I dont think it would be the same for a tank fish,
coz it has nothing to worry about, excepted for being snapped frozen![]()
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But I think I did the right thing.
signed tunaman