What gun for catfish?

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Harpoon gun:

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Clearly one could use a "Dupont Lure" (that's a 1/4 srick of dynamite) to stun said fish to the surface where he could be dispatched from the Sail Step with a BAR (nods to the Submariner who told the shark watch story).

My 'fishing gun' is a Colt Magnum Carry with a handloded 158 gr sjhp.

But dude... that thing would swamp my canoe.
 
How much good meat would be on that fish? I've heard on some animals like wild boar the bigger ones don't actually have much good meat. Would that hold true on fish?

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The one question I have is.

How the hell did they haul that thing up?

I mean were they using a small crane or wench on the boat?

I know they couldn't have brought it up by hand.

Oh yeah one more thing Harry tuttle I'm a fairly big ol' boy but I wouldn't jump in the water with that monster,that thing would have ya' for lunch.
 
Here's a brief description of noodling and what could lurk in the water.

It's hard to imagine anything dumber than wading out into a muddy river, reaching down deep underwater into a dark hole and wiggling your fingers as bait hoping that a giant catfish will clamp down on your hand so you can pull it out of the hole, without getting pulled in yourself. That's a basic description of catfish Noodling, or the sport of fishing for catfish by hand.
It's a dangerous sport that kills a few people every year and injures many more. There is more than cats that lurk in those holes - snapping turtles or snakes can do damage, not to mention that giant catfish that could just as well drag you down into the hole.


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I'm unclear as to why you want to shoot it to begin with?

But if you're gonna, I'm thinking...............

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Check it out......Missouri's latest:

Updated: 1:28 a.m. ET Dec. 29, 2004

COLUMBIA, Mo. - Next summer, it will be legal to plunge into some Missouri rivers and grab catfish by hand — a type of fishing that is not for the faint of heart.

Known variously as noodling or hogging, handfishing has long been a misdemeanor punishable by fines, because state officials fear it depletes breeding-age catfish. It can also be dangerous: Noodlers hold their breath for long periods under water and sometimes come up with fistfuls of agitated snakes or snapping turtles instead of fish.

That does not discourage enthusiasts, who insist there is great sportsmanship in fishing with your bare hands.

So after years of urging by noodlers, and lopsided legislative support for easing up on handfishers, the Missouri Conservation Commission has approved an experimental handfishing season next summer. Forms of handfishing are already legal in 11 states, including neighboring Oklahoma, Arkansas and Illinois.


“It’s a start,” John Smith, deputy director of the Conservation Department, said Tuesday. “We are moving forward in good faith to answer the legitimate biological concerns that we have, and balance that with the requests for making this process legal.”

Missouri’s biological concerns are that handfishers, who go for the biggest fish they can wrestle from riverbanks or hollow logs, will take too many sexually mature fish from their underwater nests.

The commission agreed to a June 1-July 15 season, during which handfishers who have bought a $7 permit can use only their bare hands and feet to catch a daily total of five catfish. Fish under 22 inches long must be thrown back.

Handfishing will be legal only along specified stretches of the Fabius, St. Francis and Mississippi rivers.

So secretive are handfishers that they have formed a club called Noodlers Anonymous. A University of Missouri-Columbia professor who got the group’s cooperation in surveying its members found that most are men, average age about 40, living in rural areas.

Howard Ramsey of Paris, Mo., president of Noodlers Anonymous, said the season is a “very positive step.”

“I hope this is the first step toward a statewide noodling season,” Ramsey said. “Noodling is great fun and very satisfying and any lover of fishing should try it.”

Full story
 
Marshall if I am not mistaken, that is a 25mm deck gun, which is not the same gun, but fires the same ammo as the AV-8B Harrier II and the LAV AD. I believe that is also the smallest caliber in which Depleted Uranium ammunition is made, (Although I could very well be wrong about that.)

Please, correct me if I am wrong.
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I realize that is a model of a Harrier, but I found that when searching for a pic of a Harrier and was astounded to discover that some Japanese modeler had painstakingly recreated an actual painting of A/C 55 that only existed for about 1 year-it was sanded off when we got home. It was a jet that I actually worked on, and loaded ordnance on. The only reason they let us paint the mouth on it was because we were "at war" during Operation Desert Fox, (Operation Bill & Monica, Operation Wag The Dog, call it what you will.) Amazing.

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