by KaiserJeep » Thu 05 Jan 2017, 14:31:30
I've been a fisherman for decades, and whenever I'm gutting a fish and find disease or parasites, I dispose of the fish and the guts in a landfill.
Tumorous fishes were all too common in the East Coast and New England rivers and lakes until they stopped using mercury as a pulp bleach in the paper mills, and for some decades after the practice ended.
Those fish I have caught in Western streams from Santa Cruz to North Alaska have always been exceptionally healthy and tasty compared to anything I ever caught in the Atlantic or the fresh waterways of the overcrowded East Coast.
One exception is the area I now live in. The hill above me where the homeless are occupying a county park is a former open pit cinnabar (i.e. mercury ore) mine. The fish caught in this Santa Teresa County Park and in the neighboring Almaden Quicksilver Park are contaminated with mercury and should not be consumed. Of course, that does not stop the homeless from catching and consuming them, and perhaps explains some of the bizarre behavior these people display. About 20 years back, before the homeless encampment was there, we had an outbreak of dementia associated with marijuana grown in the mining pits, with a network of drip irrigation lines from the nearby springs.
So I have to drive about 45 minutes to find a clean stream or lake with fish suitable for eating. I have been buying fish at the supermarket for about a decade.
KaiserJeep 2.0, Neural Subnode 0010 0000 0001 0110 - 1001 0011 0011, Tertiary Adjunct to Unimatrix 0000 0000 0001
Resistance is Futile, YOU will be Assimilated.
Warning: Messages timestamped before April 1, 2016, 06:00 PST were posted by the unmodified human KaiserJeep 1.0