you don't have to worry about taking the slime off of a snakehead. they're known to live out of the water for quite a long time. they're actually very hearty and difficult to kill. handling them will do them no harm at all. they are naturally built to handle far more adverse conditions than your dry hands.
Later that day I saw like 3 little mcnasties in about 1 foot of water next to a small snakehead! They seem to get along pretty good! Thanks for watchin :)
sadly they are EVERYWHERE in the Delaware and Chesapeake watersheds, totally displacing Bass as the apex predator. I have caught them in every waterway from the river proper in de to both sides of the upper Chesapeake, the sesquahana, north east river, elk river, christina, etc... anywhere you have wetlands, most ponds tat connect to watershed creeks etc.. soon we wont even have any bass left. ( I have yet to catch a bass for the past 3y in the upper chesapeake... please Kill all snakeheads you catch and report to the DNR
@@Orange22Fishing i went earlier today and caught 4 bass at the pond in my neighborhood all on crack baits just let me know we can meet up anywhere and I can drive or whatever
If you catch a snakehead in Delaware, you should kill it. Then you should contact the Division of Fish and Wildlife with information on the date and specific location of the catch and the size of the fish. If you can, take and submit a photo, to help confirm the catch. The information you share will help the Division of Fish and Wildlife document the occurrence of this species and gain a better understanding of the potential impact this species could have on Delaware’s freshwater ecosystems. Once established this hardy fish has proven difficult to eradicate, making preventative measures even more crucial. Information provided by anglers has been an important part of this process.
I'm 50. I was 37 (I think) wen I was the first person to ever catch a snakehead in the U.S. In a very small isolated pond behind a strip mall that i found while looking for a marijuana grow spot. I was contracted to the Bechtel Company in Frederick Md from Grass Valley, Ca.. I can't believe how far these things have migrated. They have damaged the ecosystem in some ways, but haven't ravaged it like some had thought. I need to go back to Maryland and catch some of these monsters again.
Nice fish they seems thinner than the ones we catch in the Potomac River, wonder if that is because of being more creek type water than big water. Check out this one, ua-cam.com/video/xzMpEkZkFPw/v-deo.html
Catching these awesome fish never gets old! What's your favorite fish to catch?
you don't have to worry about taking the slime off of a snakehead. they're known to live out of the water for quite a long time. they're actually very hearty and difficult to kill. handling them will do them no harm at all.
they are naturally built to handle far more adverse conditions than your dry hands.
Where is this spot
Where can I catch a snake from the bank in de around Newcastle/ Wilmington area? Pls let me know boss! ✊🏻keep the vids coming
Banning park, smalleys dam, and brandy wine creek near the zoo. Go get em
@@Orange22Fishing 💯Thanks man!!
I caught one on a rod n reel once accidentally
Those Snakeheads are so cool looking. Tough as hell.
No doubt! Such an all around great fish. Love catching 'em.
Awesome the snake heads are cool! good to see them and the Mc Nasties get along just fine!
Later that day I saw like 3 little mcnasties in about 1 foot of water next to a small snakehead! They seem to get along pretty good! Thanks for watchin :)
Hello my friend...
Whats up man! Thanks for checking out the channel!
Where's this in Delaware? I have been dying to catch a snakehead, never caught one in my life.
sadly they are EVERYWHERE in the Delaware and Chesapeake watersheds, totally displacing Bass as the apex predator. I have caught them in every waterway from the river proper in de to both sides of the upper Chesapeake, the sesquahana, north east river, elk river, christina, etc... anywhere you have wetlands, most ponds tat connect to watershed creeks etc.. soon we wont even have any bass left. ( I have yet to catch a bass for the past 3y in the upper chesapeake... please Kill all snakeheads you catch and report to the DNR
I need to head East, and hook up with y'all. Two videos in a row. Sharks, now snakeheads. Two fish I've never caught. What an awesome video 🤘
Great video brother. I've yet to catch my first snakehead because of the area I fish typically but I'll definitely be getting on some soon!
Dude I need a darn kayak...lol also lets hit the middle town pond next weekend...??
Also masseys ponds got tons of snake heads
I'm down if the weather is better than this weekend lol. I've hit masseys a few times this year but I've only caught bass
@@Orange22Fishing i went earlier today and caught 4 bass at the pond in my neighborhood all on crack baits just let me know we can meet up anywhere and I can drive or whatever
Have you fished Middletown yet??
@@Orange22Fishing whats the best way to get ahold of you email or anything ??
Way to stack up those summer snakes!
WOWIE WOW
Woahhhhhhhhhh
STICKER
L01,mancing mania 👍👍👍
If you catch a snakehead in Delaware, you should kill it. Then you should contact the Division of Fish and Wildlife with information on the date and specific location of the catch and the size of the fish. If you can, take and submit a photo, to help confirm the catch.
The information you share will help the Division of Fish and Wildlife document the occurrence of this species and gain a better understanding of the potential impact this species could have on Delaware’s freshwater ecosystems.
Once established this hardy fish has proven difficult to eradicate, making preventative measures even more crucial. Information provided by anglers has been an important part of this process.
😂😂 you have no idea what you’re talking about 😂
I'm 50. I was 37 (I think) wen I was the first person to ever catch a snakehead in the U.S. In a very small isolated pond behind a strip mall that i found while looking for a marijuana grow spot. I was contracted to the Bechtel Company in Frederick Md from Grass Valley, Ca.. I can't believe how far these things have migrated. They have damaged the ecosystem in some ways, but haven't ravaged it like some had thought. I need to go back to Maryland and catch some of these monsters again.
Nice fish they seems thinner than the ones we catch in the Potomac River, wonder if that is because of being more creek type water than big water. Check out this one, ua-cam.com/video/xzMpEkZkFPw/v-deo.html