I hear you. Theoretically it would be fun and a little dangerous still. I'd liken it to hunting bobwhite quail as those little buggers flush out and fly away so fast and unexpectedly that it's scary to hunt them without the help of a dog to give you warning that they are there. I don't have a pointer and have hunted them by just walking around in the fields and trying to flush them myself. Normally by the time I pick up my gun again they are long gun. They usually scare the dickens out of me when they take off unexpectedly. Every time they did that my heart would skip a few beats.
If Bluegrass was not connected hydro logically to the Ohio River they could kill all the fish in Bluegrass and then restock it with natural fish like sunfish, catfish, bass and crappie and try to get rid of the exotic species. But the public would never let them try to do that. And anyway as soon as they did the river would back up into Otter Pit, Loon Pit and Bluegrass Pits again and the **** exotic carp would swim back in there again. Or maybe somehow birds or other things (Man maybe) would carry some eggs back into those pits by accident.
Right now the only thing I can think to do is to hunt them with bow and arrows and kill as many as possible.
Maybe some day someone will invent a type of boat with nets that can filter them out of the surface waters where they hang out a lot.




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