Walleye Express Posted April 10, 2008 Posted April 10, 2008 Took this off another board and thought it worth posting. Is this how most of you guys fillet your bluegills? I usually cut right through the rib cage, quickly dulling my knife I'm going to have to give this a try, good video... Steve. Steve. Thats the same way I fillet my walleyes. And heres another cleaning suggestion for you guys. I first fillet all the fish like he did and skin them after, and in my case on my charters it can be an impressive pile of fish. But I use a set of channel locks when I get to the skinning part, to both grab and hold the skin near the tip of the tail section. This prevents the skin from sliding on any slime on my board and/or out of your grasp when using just your finger tips to hold the skin. Slide the knife under the skin and in a couple of forwards swiping/cutting motions from top to bottom the skin is off. Flip the skin in the bucket with the head, guts and spine, the flesh back in the cooler of ice I have nearby and start the next one. I average about 1 walleye filleted and skined per minute. I use two different knives, one for each job. My fillet knife is about 7 inches long with a stiff temper. Better for strong straight cuts next to the dorsal fin and down to the rib cage. The skinnning knife is about 12 inches long with a medium temper. You need a little bend in a knife for clean skin removal. Both were custom made by a friend and are kept surgery sharp. He also made me a bluegill/crappie knife 5 inches long that negates having to risk choking up on a very sharp knife. Capt. Dan.
DIRTY DOG Posted April 12, 2008 Posted April 12, 2008 nice vidio, but this is how ive done it since my dad tought me how nearly 30 years agoand in my apinion this is the ONLY WAY thanks
Priority1 Posted April 12, 2008 Posted April 12, 2008 It is a good video. It's not the way I do it, but I will sure give it a whirl.
Phishy Posted April 13, 2008 Posted April 13, 2008 same way for the most part, but two differences, I don't cut all the way down the tail, after all the meat is seperated from the spine, i leave a tiny bit of skin attached to the tail so i have a good anchor for skinning, also I don't take out the pin bones. This works really great on crappies,similar for walleyes, but after i cut down towards the tail i cut bck up the spine torwards the ribs, stopping at the ribs the cut around them like the gills, walleyes are a longer fish and i miss some of the meat otherwisegreat vid!!
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