fishing spot logo
fishing spot font logo



Old Big Bass 2024


fishing user avatarMainebass1984 reply : 

Three weeks ago I caught the biggest bass I ever caught a 9-1. I took a couple scale samples and sent them to three different biologists to have the bass aged. I heard back form the first biologist today. He aged that fish at 16 years old. The oldest bas he has ever aged. That means that bass was spawned in 1997. I wonder what the two biologist will say.


fishing user avatarflyfisher reply : 

I am shocked that up north they would live that long given the long winters.  Makes you wonder how big that girl would have been should it have grown up in the south because it obviously had some good genetics.


fishing user avatarShane J reply : 

My Northern PB, is also a 9-1, and I kinda figured she was about that old. She still swims today, and we will see how old she is when she's a 10.5 pounder (the state record), because I plan on being the one to catch her. How do you safely take a scale sample?


fishing user avatarWRB reply : 

It's difficult to accurately age a bass with using scale growth rings due to several environmental conditions, good enough for an estimate. It will be interesting if the other biologist are within a year.

Cold water fresh water bass live longer than those in warmer water climates, the oldest known I believe was 26 year old smallmouth from Mass.

It does some skin and nerve damage extracting pore scales from a living bass and pore scales have the easiest growth rings to count.

Tom


fishing user avatarAK-Jax86 reply : 

That's an old bass, older than some members on this site


fishing user avatarMainebass1984 reply : 

Scale samples are taken three or four rows down directly underneath the mid section of the spiny dorsal fin.


fishing user avatarBluebasser86 reply : 

You have to wonder how many times that fish may have been caught and released throughout her life? If that isn't a glowing example of why catch and release of larger fish is important, I don't know what is. 


fishing user avataraceman387 reply : 

Interesting stuff! I never knew cold water bass fresh water bass live longer than the warm water variety do.I swear i learn something new everytime i click on this site.I guess this is why its so addicting.


fishing user avatarBassinLou reply : 

The late bass professor, covered bass aging in his book big bass magic. Colder water bass live longer than bass in warmer water. Metabolism, plays an important role in aging.


fishing user avatarMainebass1984 reply : 

That fish was in insanely good shape for its age. It could have been caught before but it didn't have any marks from being caught previously. A very clean and healthy fish. I wonder how big she will be in a couple years or so.


fishing user avatarShane J reply : 

Over 10!


fishing user avataralberto-1 reply : 

Cold water bass certainly live longer. From what I have been told they dont age as quickly up there because of the shorter growing seasons or something like that.


fishing user avatarSnakehead Whisperer reply : 
  On 12/4/2013 at 7:35 AM, flyfisher said:

I am shocked that up north they would live that long given the long winters.  Makes you wonder how big that girl would have been should it have grown up in the south because it obviously had some good genetics.

 

  On 12/4/2013 at 10:16 PM, alberto-1 said:

Cold water bass certainly live longer. From what I have been told they dont age as quickly up there because of the shorter growing seasons or something like that.

All cold blooded animals will typically grow slower and live longer in colder regions because their metabolism is slower; thus everything (including aging) is slowed, sometimes dramatically.


fishing user avatarMarkH024 reply : 
  On 12/4/2013 at 10:32 PM, Snakehead Whisperer said:

All cold blooded animals will typically grow slower and live longer in colder regions because their metabolism is slower; thus everything (including aging) is slowed, sometimes dramatically.

So what you're saying is that we should all move into the arctic regions?  :laugh5:


fishing user avatarSnakehead Whisperer reply : 
  On 12/4/2013 at 11:05 PM, MarkH024 said:

So what you're saying is that we should all move into the arctic regions?  :laugh5:

Unfortunately this isn't the case for us warm blooded mammals.  :cry:


fishing user avatarMarkH024 reply : 
  On 12/4/2013 at 11:07 PM, Snakehead Whisperer said:

Unfortunately this isn't the case for us warm blooded mammals.  :cry:

Thanks for crushing my dreams of being 150...


fishing user avatarSnakehead Whisperer reply : 
  On 12/4/2013 at 11:09 PM, MarkH024 said:

Thanks for crushing my dreams of being 150...

Maybe we can look to the sloth for inspiration on this. ;)


fishing user avatarinrll reply : 

The most simple way I heard it explained was all living things have a certain amount of heartbeats so if a bass stays colder for longer portions of the year then it will take longer to use up its heartbeats.


fishing user avatarWRB reply : 

Most LMB reach a maximum weight then start to decline as their health fades. This bass may be at her prime condition now and may weigh a pound more during the late pre spawn period next year.

Tom


fishing user avatarMainebass1984 reply : 
  On 12/4/2013 at 11:52 PM, WRB said:

Most LMB reach a maximum weight then start to decline as their health fades. This bass may be at her prime condition now and may weigh a pound more during the late pre spawn period next year.

 

I will let you know how much she weighs in the spring when I catch her again. If I miss her in the spring then I will find her in the fall.


fishing user avatarDwight Hottle reply : 
  On 12/4/2013 at 8:34 PM, Mainebass1984 said:

That fish was in insanely good shape for its age. It could have been caught before but it didn't have any marks from being caught previously. A very clean and healthy fish. I wonder how big she will be in a couple years or so.

 

 

That's because she had fat dripping off her fat! She was very well fed. Hope she lives long enough to get caught again. When female fish like that reach that age she probably is not spawning anymore just eating.


fishing user avatarroadwarrior reply : 

This is what I have heard:

 

In the Mid South a smallmouth can grow to 5 lbs in 4-5 years, but they generally only

live to 8 years or maybe 10 at the max. It takes about 10 years for Great Lakes smallmouth

to reach 5lbs, but they live to about 18, maybe 20 years max.

 

 

 

:xmas-115:


fishing user avatarWRB reply : 

If a femal bass isn't sick, they produce eggs throughout their adult life cycle. Spawning is hard on the older females and it can kill them, usually by bed fisherman.

You read a lot of misinformation regarding big bass. It was believed that Florida LMB only lived 10 years max, not true, they often live over 15 years, if they have cooler water in the 70's during the summer period.

Tom


fishing user avatarRatherbfishing reply : 

Huh!  This morning I woke up with a piece of scalp missing!  Do you suppose some aliens were trying to determine my age?  I don't want to know why my butt hurts!


fishing user avatarMarkH024 reply : 
  On 12/5/2013 at 5:31 AM, Ratherbfishing said:

I don't want to know why my butt hurts!

Pretty sure no one wants to know that answer either.


fishing user avatarRatherbfishing reply : 
  On 12/5/2013 at 5:35 AM, MarkH024 said:

Pretty sure no one wants to know that answer either.

 

True that   :grin:  


fishing user avatarFishinDaddy reply : 
  On 12/4/2013 at 11:52 PM, WRB said:

Most LMB reach a maximum weight then start to decline as their health fades. This bass may be at her prime condition now and may weigh a pound more during the late pre spawn period next year.

Tom

A couple of years ago I caught a 28" LM that only weighed a little over 8 lbs. She had a bad eye and was in poor shape. She would have been way over 10 a few years before.


fishing user avatarKyakR reply : 

Congrats! You must have caught her in Maine!   Just curious.....what were you using? How deep was the water? I won't ask you where, but you can tell me if you really want to   :eyebrows:


fishing user avataraceman387 reply : 
  On 12/5/2013 at 5:31 AM, Ratherbfishing said:

Huh!  This morning I woke up with a piece of scalp missing!  Do you suppose some aliens were trying to determine my age?  I don't want to know why my butt hurts!

I think you have been hanging out at the wrong places    :grin:




12405

related General Bass Fishing Forum topic

Bloody Tails
night fishin??
Help with cold muddy pond
In-Fisherman Magazine for $6. Wow.
Bites To Catches - What Is Good Number?
One Thing!
Kind of ticked at BPS
Hunting Night Crawlers !!!!!!!
How many new people
Found the Reel!
How do y'all learn new techniques?
Colors that Bass See?
Sad day
Girth and using the weight estimator...
Largemouth population?
How can I get my freind to practice C&R
Courtesy of Fishing Spots
RESULTS ... Predict Your '07 Hawg
If you could fish any lake?
Hooked Myself



previous topic
The Fatigue Of A Minimalist Bass Fisherman -- General Bass Fishing Forum
next topic
Bloody Tails -- General Bass Fishing Forum