Clean enough to eat out of

SwoleyGuacamole

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Mar 10, 2021
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104
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Antioch, TN
Hey everyone,

Newer angler here. took my son to fish today for his first time with just a simple hook and worm, same with me, down at Percy. Unfortunately we didn't catch anything. It wasn't only us having a rough day, couple of guys were on a boat a bit down the bank and weren't catching anything either. Once I got home I got interested in how to use my jigs. I have a few swim, and shaky head jigs. As well as a blooper and a few selections of plastic worms. Apparently there's a whole lot more than I realized to those baits. Hopefully I can use those to my advantage in the future to catch some good fish once I get the hang of it.

Which brings me to the question:
Id eventually would like to go out and catch dinner every so often. Is there a stream fairly close to Middle TN that is clean enough to eat the fish out of? Percy and Cumberland is out of the question for me, but I was curious about upstream Old Hickory? Hell, don't even mind having a nice scenic trip to a good place out in BFE.

My interest in fishing and hunting is increasing and the unfortunate thing is that, being inexperienced, I have to start from the bottom up. Though thats also where I learn the most, through trial and error. Id eventually would like to do the same with hunting big game.

SG
 

SwoleyGuacamole

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104
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Antioch, TN
Save yourself a lot of trial and error time and learn on youtube. There's a million how to fishing channels. One guy that's really good IMO is Flukemaster.
Thats what ive been doing all morning. Its more of the trial and error of correctly using the bait. Ill give that channel a look.
 

Pilchard

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Swoley- I'm sure my opinion is unpopular here but I agree with you PP is nasty water… that said, I have not found a freshwater fish that didn't require being fried or blackened to be edible. I'll eat bream and crappie and won't complain but bass, catfish and others that I have tried aren't suitable table fare.

The one exception to that is a walleye I ate from a cold tail water. it was wonderful.
 

SwoleyGuacamole

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Antioch, TN
Swoley- I'm sure my opinion is unpopular here but I agree with you PP is nasty water… that said, I have not found a freshwater fish that didn't require being fried or blackened to be edible. I'll eat bream and crappie and won't complain but bass, catfish and others that I have tried aren't suitable table fare.

The one exception to that is a walleye I ate from a cold tail water. it was wonderful.
are you speaking in general or out of the waters of TN? admittedly the only fish I have not had fried is salmon. Catfish is better fried than grilled in my experience, at least when I had gilled it.
 

WTM

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SwoleyGuacamole

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Antioch, TN
here are the TDEC advisories. i would pay attention to the "do not eat" which are mainly in easy tenn. precaution doesnt mean you cant eat fish it just means limit yourself. most of the precautions are for bass and larger cats. probably the only fish i wouldnt eat would probably be that 5 mile stretch around nashville.

not surprising that Cumberland is on there, looks like I may be heading north to Old Hickory.

edit: maybe not. reading old hickory is pretty Nasty too
 

WTM

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to be honest all the saltwater fish ive tried is kind of mild like freshwater fish. it was either blackened or slathered in sauce. cant stand salmon, trout or mackeral. couldnt drink enough whiskey to get the taste out of my mouth. cant stand the thought of oysters. they smell like the cooking pits where we would cook nhead mussels to remove the meat from the shells.

lobster, shrimp, clams, and scallops are a different story. cant get enough of tgat.
 

Spurhunter

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Munford, TN
to be honest all the saltwater fish ive tried is kind of mild like freshwater fish. it was either blackened or slathered in sauce. cant stand salmon, trout or mackeral. couldnt drink enough whiskey to get the taste out of my mouth. cant stand the thought of oysters. they smell like the cooking pits where we would cook nhead mussels to remove the meat from the shells.

lobster, shrimp, clams, and scallops are a different story. cant get enough of that
I liked all the saltwater fish I've tried at restaurants, but I've never had any that compared to sauger or bluegill with crappie being a close 3rd. 1 to 2 pound largemouth are good as well. Catfish is ok but only if the dark meat is removed when cleaning and most people don't do that. Maybe it's what you are used to. I've known some people that are just saltwater fish snobs so to speak.

I absolutely love scallops and shrimp any way you want to fix them. I've tried oysters several different ways and they are not edible.
 

SwoleyGuacamole

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I liked all the saltwater fish I've tried at restaurants, but I've never had any that compared to sauger or bluegill with crappie being a close 3rd. 1 to 2 pound largemouth are good as well. Catfish is ok but only if the dark meat is removed when cleaning and most people don't do that. Maybe it's what you are used to. I've known some people that are just saltwater fish snobs so to speak.

I absolutely love scallops and shrimp any way you want to fix them. I've tried oysters several different ways and they are not edible.
ive always loved salt water fish, including shellfish. Ive not had fresh water outside of salmon, cat, fried bass, and tilapia. So bluegill, sauger, and crappie would be an absolutely new thing to me.
 

fisher01

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Mar 27, 2017
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I've been bank fishing Percy Priest for over 30 years now and have no issues with the quality of water. Eating several meals each week of fresh fish is part of my standard routine. Priest can supply one with Hybrids, White Bass, Crappie, Bream, Large or Smallmouth bass, all which are excellent to eat. My cooking methods vary from cast iron skillet, smoking, boiling, deep fry, baking and grilling.

Water clarity in PP depends upon the type of bottom in the area your fishing. Many locations the water is clear because of the rock bottom, others with sand/mud type bottoms will be more cloudy because of the sentiment in the water, especially during windy days.

Fishing during these hot summer months is more difficult, as the best months for PP from the bank are February-June. This time of the year I would suggest early morning or early evening hours as the best time to fish. There's plenty of bluegills and catfish to catch right now.
 

WTM

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benton co.
water clarity doesnt have a lot to do with if fish is safe to eat or not but it can make them taste more "fishy".

its the stuff you cant see, like pcb's, methylmercury, chromium, etc. im not seeing anything in the TDEC testing report regarding PP except one creek.
 

fisher01

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Mar 27, 2017
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As Priest has plenty of fresh water springs feeding the lake, I'm not worried about a large amount of chemicals in the water. I've talked to many people over the years who have associated water clarity with safety which is why I mentioned it in my previous post.

Freshwater fish which tastes fishy or smells fishy IMO was not handled properly. Fish should be kept alive until one calls it a day. My routine is to keep the fish alive, once I'm done, bleed them out, and place in cooler with ice. Once I'm home, all fish are filleted,vacuum sealed and placed in freezer. Typical length of time from water to freezer 30-60 minutes.
 

WTM

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benton co.
catch em out of tannic backwater and theyll taste fishy if you dont know what you are doing, and sometimes like algae or leaves. you can soak them after you filet them but the easiest way ive found is cold shock killing them. it sends them into hypothermia and the blood is pulled out of the meat into the organs. keep em on ice for a few hours and filet them. easy peazy.
 

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