Archives
 By  Staff Reports Published 
8:41 pm Saturday, June 1, 2002

The Catfish nobility or mediocrity

By By Otha Barham / outdoors editor
May 31, 2002
Folks have more opinions on catfish than most any other creature we seek out for sport and food. The differences stem from such factors as whether we are concerned with catching them or eating them, how we fish for them and our preferences regarding the best morsel with which to bait a hook to catch them.
And there seems to be more interest in these whiskered creatures today than any period I can recall. For one thing, we flock like gulls to a shrimp boat to "fish camps," a woodsy term for remote restaurants on dirt roads, to eat them by the ton – both whole and filleted – but always deep fried.
Even to these hungry throngs, a catfish can be either kingly table fare or just ordinary Deep South fixings. Some proclaim it to be the finest dish that our waters can provide and others consider it a required but commonplace food, like cornbread for example its wonderful, but so are butterbeans, purple hull peas and fresh tomatoes.
Universal fish
Today catfish exist in most of our waters in catchable numbers and we find them hungry often. Anyone can catch a catfish. Kids catch them regularly with cheap rods and reels and experts bring in impressive numbers of giant catfish some in fishing competitions, some for commercial sale and others by grabbling, using only ones bare hands.
Why go for an ugly bottom-feeder like the catfish? The challenge of the fight for one reason. Consider that nowhere will one find the experienced catfish angler who has not had tackle broken and the catfish escape. You rarely know what size fish is going to bite next, and an iron-mouthed brute will often come along and tear up your equipment and swim away with part of it.
And nearly every common species of catfish is not simply edible, but stomp down delicious. Catfish farming for human consumption is a major industry because the fish can be grown efficiently, and provide fillets that are appetizingly snow-white in color and as tasty as fish get.
How do you catch yourself a catfish? Therein lies another of its pluses. Trotlines, single rods and reels, bank hooks, limb lines, jug fishing, drift fishing, grabbling – just about any way one can seek a catfish will work. And they take bait with gusto. What bait you ask? Ah Ha! Now you are opening a can of worms! (Pun intended.) If catfish could be regularly fooled by artificial casting plugs like bass lures, there would be no fish on earth with as many bait options. Catfish may hold that distinction already.
Catfish bait
I hesitate to mention types of bait for catfish for fear of leaving out the very one that old Rusty Stringer or some other river rat has used exclusively for 68 years to catch more yellow cat than any other two human beings, living or dead. Suffice it to say that writer Keith Sutton devoted 10 pages of his fine book, "Fishing for Catfish," to baits. Besides all the baits that the ordinary iron-stomached citizen can readily imagine that a catfish will bite, they will take even some beyond the imagination.
Chicken guts are preferred in some locations and the anglers would as soon go onto the water at dusk minus his hooks as get caught without a bucket of guts. Bars of soap are cut into chunks and impaled onto catfish hooks by many successful catfishers.
Wieners, cubed dried blood, oatmeal doughballs and sponges soaked in disgusting liquids drained from dead animal parts are some of the more potent and popular baits used by serious catfish fans. They all catch fish, as do shiny bare hooks at times. I'm not kidding. Many a catfisher will recount stories of catches made on bare hooks. These are catfish that want to keep up their reputation for biting anything.
So if you want to do battle with the baddest fish in the land, take your hook and line to catfish waters. Take along the toughest tackle you've got and be prepared to get it broken. Whether you consider the catfish royalty or just another couple of fillets, you will get your money's worth in fight and your rods, reels, lines and hooks will be put to the test.

Also on Franklin County Times
Wife, 65, admits she shot, killed husband
Main, News, Russellville, ...
Kevin Taylor For the FCT 
May 13, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE – A 65-year-old woman is facing a murder charge after she admitted to shooting her husband Sunday evening inside their residence on Dunca...
3 firefighters receive Lifesaver Awards
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
May 13, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — More than two months after city firefighters responded to a cardiac arrest call that left Steven Bledsoe without a pulse for 27 minutes...
FBLA students earn honors at state
News, Phil Campbell, Records
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
May 13, 2026
PHIL CAMPBELL — Members of the Phil Campbell High School Future Business Leaders of America chapter earned honors during the Alabama FBLA State Leader...
Obituaries
Obituaries
May 13, 2026
Ruth E. Spooner May 7, 2026   Ruth E. Spooner, 90, of Beloit, Wis., passed away on Thursday morning, May 7, at Cedar Crest, in Janesville, Wis. She wa...
The protection system you’ve never heard of
Columnists, Opinion
May 13, 2026
When you visit a doctor, you might notice the framed medical license on the wall. For most patients, that document is simply reassurance that their ph...
Retired educators hear state updates
Columnists, News, Opinion, ...
HERE AND NOW
May 13, 2026
Retired educators met at the Russellville First Methodist Church Ministry Center for the last meeting for the Franklin County Retired Educators Associ...
Students get life lessons with hatching classes
News, Phil Campbell
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
May 13, 2026
PHIL CAMPBELL — Students at Phil Campbell Elementary School and Phil Campbell High School recently got some handson lessons about animal life cycles a...
STEAM expo highlights student projects
News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
May 13, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE – Middle school students in sixth, seventh and eighth grade presented the findings of their STEAM Expo projects last week. From testing w...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *