INVASIVE Bullfrogs! Delicious Catch & Cook w/Outdoor Chef Life

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  • Опубліковано 5 вер 2024
  • Learn to catch, clean and cook invasive American bullfrogs.
    Check out Taku and Jocylin's channels:
    / outdoorcheflife
    / @taklyntheworld

КОМЕНТАРІ • 46

  • @BDCF100
    @BDCF100 9 місяців тому +5

    Many years ago when I was a young man I'd use a 10-12 bamboo pole with 4 ft. of mono and a large white streamer fly. Worked.

  • @elkhunter76
    @elkhunter76 9 місяців тому +5

    Another great video Kevin! Wish I was closer I would love to do a mushroom forage trip!

    • @mingrui1862
      @mingrui1862 9 місяців тому +1

      I need to get off my butt and set time off to jump on one of these trips or more importantly, a spearfishing trip. I'm new to the sport and have much to learn. The man is a wealth of knowledge.

    • @catchncookcalifornia1574
      @catchncookcalifornia1574  9 місяців тому

      Thanks! Maybe our paths will cross one of these days!

  • @julialichtblau7796
    @julialichtblau7796 9 місяців тому +2

    Great video! Loved hearing more about these invasive species and how to distinguish them from our native frogs. Your dish looked delicious!

  • @thehmongoose
    @thehmongoose 5 місяців тому

    Hey Kevin. It’s Tao again. In the early 1990s, we used to go fish for frogs using rod and reel and a jig that looks like a spider. You basically go to a swamp or pond and dangle that jig in front of them like a cricket and we caught a ton. Haven’t done this for 30 years so not sure how the sport is anymore

  • @NecroninSunderland
    @NecroninSunderland Місяць тому

    Went for my first time last night and got three good sized ones. Been through countless videos since last night looking for a recipe... Congratulations brother subscribing and have chosen your recipe. So excited

  • @markopolo945
    @markopolo945 9 місяців тому +1

    Very interesting! I remember in Guam it would rain hard then hours later BullFrogs would be all over the roads getting run over by traffic.

    • @catchncookcalifornia1574
      @catchncookcalifornia1574  9 місяців тому

      Crazy! Were they edible frogs? I have heard that some places have crazy toxic frogs and toads but my knowledge of these amphibians is really limited to CA where they are non-toxic.

    • @markopolo945
      @markopolo945 9 місяців тому

      @@catchncookcalifornia1574 I'm not sure because none of the Chammorros or Guamainians ever harvested the Frogs like they did the Coconut crabs.

  • @ledce464
    @ledce464 9 місяців тому +1

    It's also a lot of fun to use lures to catch them with a fishing rod. Last one I caught was on a bass lure with my spinning rod.

    • @catchncookcalifornia1574
      @catchncookcalifornia1574  9 місяців тому

      I have heard this from a number of folks but have yet to try it. Next season I will make a point of it!

  • @dknf4036
    @dknf4036 9 місяців тому +2

    Love your videos Kevin, always glad to see you've posted

  • @Katarjana
    @Katarjana 9 місяців тому

    I grew up gigging for bullfrogs! this was super cool and a little nostalgic for me!

  • @yuiyuiyyuiy3200
    @yuiyuiyyuiy3200 9 місяців тому +1

    another great one doc👍

  • @mikePNW
    @mikePNW 9 місяців тому +1

    Get em Dr. Kev!

  • @Adventures_Of_Reel_Nauti
    @Adventures_Of_Reel_Nauti 9 місяців тому

    Dude, what a fun upload! I grew up gigging bullfrogs in Oklahoma. I havent done it since I was a teenager but now I'm craving the taste.

  • @KN-xl6lw
    @KN-xl6lw 9 місяців тому +1

    Very cool 😎
    Would a bungee cord on the spear work (like a 3 prong)? 😅

    • @catchncookcalifornia1574
      @catchncookcalifornia1574  9 місяців тому

      We tried it one year and it did work. I think the prongs were too thick that year though. With thinner prongs like we were using on this vid the bungee would likely be a winning combo.

  • @seanruggenberg62
    @seanruggenberg62 5 місяців тому

    If you like them try cooking them like your favorite hot wing

  • @mamaremedy
    @mamaremedy 5 місяців тому

    Kevin I missed you so much

  • @LostCoastLiving
    @LostCoastLiving 9 місяців тому +1

    Awesome , i wonder if i have an area around me i could do this lol

  • @k4x4map46
    @k4x4map46 9 місяців тому

    absolutely deeeelisshush!!!

  • @demapples6580
    @demapples6580 9 місяців тому

    Awesome

  • @rellikassassin1
    @rellikassassin1 4 місяці тому +1

    My dad used a shotgun to frog gig one shot only legs left

  • @cloudapostolicassembly5742
    @cloudapostolicassembly5742 9 місяців тому +1

    🐸🐸🐸🐸🐸🐸❤

  • @IfearGod.
    @IfearGod. 9 місяців тому

    👍🏾

  • @travismcclellan3413
    @travismcclellan3413 6 місяців тому

    Don't throw the front legs out that is 1/3 of the meat.

  • @peteranderson742
    @peteranderson742 9 місяців тому

    Where can someone find the California regulations on methods to take this species and limits. I've seen other UA-cam content creator @FLAIR take bullfrogs by many methods. In the Duck Dynasty TV Series they caught them by hand.

    • @catchncookcalifornia1574
      @catchncookcalifornia1574  9 місяців тому +1

      If you look at the PDF of the Cal DFW inland sport fishing regulations you will find all of the details. Here in CA you are allowed to take them by gig/spear, hand, hook and line and paddle (no joke). wildlife.ca.gov/Fishing/Inland

    • @Greenliight
      @Greenliight 9 місяців тому

      @@catchncookcalifornia1574so basically you can wack them with a paddle😂 I know it’s not funny but it kinda is

  • @hollyhutson7265
    @hollyhutson7265 9 місяців тому

    So because something is an invasive species, it's ok to be cruel? That is terrible!!!!!

    • @catchncookcalifornia1574
      @catchncookcalifornia1574  9 місяців тому +2

      Holly, thanks for commenting. It took me a moment to respond as I have been traveling and visiting family in Asia for the past week. As a PhD on the archaeology and anthropology of forager societies with a sub-emphasis in human evolution, my thoughts on traditional food procurement strategies may differ from that of your own upbringing. For me, as was the traditional way of our ancestors for hundreds of thousands of years, I would far prefer to bring my fish, game or (in this case) frogs to the table by actively hunting or foraging. To me it is far less cruel to outsmart and take an animal that has lived its whole life free and outdoors eating healthy and wild than it would be to eat chickens raised their short force-fed lives in solitary confinement in cages stacked on cages under artificial lights, or to eat steak from cows raised shoulder-to-shoulder on a feedlot, with antibiotic-rich grains intended to prevent disease from spreading in these crowded unnatural settings while fattening up these animals at unnatural rates and on unnatural foods only to then be loaded onto a conveyer belt to have a mechanized steel spike driven through their heads. The idea of what is cruel is really in the eye of the beholder and is a direct product of our own cultural backgrounds and the systems of shared and learned behaviors and norms of our own cultures. When it comes to my subsistence, I try to take a path more consistent with my own ancestors and the Old Ways. While I respect that your opinion differs from mine, I do ask that you try to understand that I was raised in a foraging culture that may differ in some ways from the culture of your own upbringing. In anthropology we try to step away from the ethnocentric view of cultures (viewing them through our own cultural lens) and adopt a view of cultural relativism. When it comes to hunting, fishing and foraging, I strongly encourage you to adopt a more cultural relativistic view as calling someone cruel for engaging in foraging is very much a part of an old colonial narrative rooted in erroneous progressive social evolutionary theory where agrarian peoples passed (and continue to pass) judgment on foraging societies citing some sort of self-affirming moral high ground. I sincerely doubt that you consider yourself as morally superior to Indigenous foragers (for instance) and am sure your comment was more of a knee-jerk reaction, but I do encourage you to evaluate such comments before posting on other channels in the future. Lastly, this video was clearly titled Frog Catch and Cook so you knew what it would be about when you decided to watch. If that type of content is not to your liking, please try some of our other videos on foraging of fungi (for instance) or, if you are still opposed to the foraging way of life, please look elsewhere for content to view in the future. Thank you for your time.

    • @hollyhutson7265
      @hollyhutson7265 9 місяців тому

      @catchncookcalifornia1574 My comment was in reference to the comment you made about it being brutal but that it was ok because they are an invasive species. First, I enjoy your videos!! I was born and raised in Louisiana, hunting is a way of life, deer, rabbit, squirrels, duck, hogs, fishing, and yes frogs!!!!!!! However, they way we go frogging is with our bare hands and flashlights. Once caught, we put them on ice that puts them to sleep so they do not jump around and then we humanely put them down at the end of the hunt. As we do enjoy a good hunt, I have been taught to respect my prey and always be humane as possible. I am on the fence about your lecture as to whether I should be offended or tickled that you made such a judgment about me lol. Please continue to make awesome videos. I just have a little respect for what you hunt invasive or not.

    • @Greenliight
      @Greenliight 9 місяців тому

      @@hollyhutson7265how was he not respectful with the hunt? Please elaborate

    • @Greenliight
      @Greenliight 9 місяців тому

      @@hollyhutson7265how was he not respectful with the hunt? Please elaborate

    • @dookcurruff9047
      @dookcurruff9047 8 місяців тому

      who cares its just a dumb frog cmon now karen