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captnemo
02-27-2009, 08:21 AM
How to Handle Sea Birds While Fishing: when Pelicans Attack

February 26, 2009 by captdallas2
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A Brief Interview with Kelly Grinter of the Marathon Wild Bird Center

Kelly Grinter, of the Marathon Wild Bird Center, consented to a short interview this morning to explain how to handle sea birds while fishing. When you hook a pelican or seagull just reel them in slowly and get control of them so you can remove the hook. Pelicans have large bills that make a perfect handle for holding them. Just grab and hold the top beak or both and gentlely control the bird. Seagulls have smaller beaks but are handled much the same way. The first thing a seagull will do is try to bite you when you reel them in close. Just extend your finger and let gull bite then grab the top beak between your thumb and finger.

Once you have control of the bird remove the hook and unwrap and remove any fishing line. If the hook is buried to the barb, you may need to push the hook through and snip the barb off to get the hook out. Then release the bird. If the bird was hooked in the leg, it may need antibiotic treatment to prevent infection. In that case, give your local wild bird rescue center a call for more instructions.

In the photo Kelly has just removed a jig head from a juvenile pelican. She calls pelicans that hang out around the dock moochers because they are always looking for a hand out. While feeding these birds can be fun, it is one of the worst things you can do for them. Kelly said these pelicans are like 16 year olds that want a beer, they don't need to have a beer, but someone will give them a beer. So feeding pelicans is like giving alcohol to a minor, not a good thing.

Pelicans have eyes much larger than their stomachs. They will eat fish that are much too large for them to digest often ending up in trouble. So when you are cleaning fish make sure that the pelicans don't get to your fish or the carcasses. To my surprise, you may need to start watching out for your fillet knives as well.

"I got a call from one of the captains at Keys Fisheries that a pelican had swallowed his fillet knife. I drove down there knowing that could never have happened. The captain showed me the bird. When I reached my hand down its throat, sure enough there was the fillet knife," said Kelly.


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hookset
02-27-2009, 05:58 PM
I put a rag over their heads if possible. It quiets them down so I can more easily remove the hook.

DarkSkies
12-14-2011, 08:01 AM
Hookset, I did just that the other night. Birds were over a large body of bait and wouldn't budge, flying back to re-position themselves as they got pushed around by the waves. I was casting to the edges and working the bottom for predators. Inadvertently hooked this gull. She was angry...and I was by myself.

I got her in, she was squawking and agitated. I had no one to help, but always try to carry a small towel or rag. Unfortunately, that night my rag was pretty small, and it barely covered her head. You can see it peeking out in the bottom center of the pic. In situations like this, as you said, you have to be firm and forceful with the bird, without hurting it. You may have to make several attempts to get that rag over her head. which was the case for me.

Once she is subdued, you need to be firm in your grip so she cannot flop around and hurt herself.

I managed to untangle my braid, separated her from it, and gently released the rag. She stepped back, squawked some more, and took off...mission accomplished...

bababooey
12-14-2011, 08:15 PM
Shame you let it go, you could have roasted it over an open fire and had dinner, isn't that what you nomad surf types do?:ROFLMAO :HappyWave:

fishinmission78
12-15-2011, 10:00 AM
Im with bababoey, roast the seagulls, and the plovers, better than cornish game hens.:lookhappy: