|  |     I did not see the specific article but bluefish and PCBs are not
    a new topic. In general there have been warnings that pregant women 
    should not eat them and the general publis should not consumer them
    more than on the order of once a week. The heavy metals ect tend to
    accumulate in the dark flesh just under the skin. If you stay away
    from that this is supposed to lower the risk considerably. Grilling
    them dark side down is good way to do it, leaves the dark meat on the
    grill. Logic stands to reason smaller/younger fish would have less of
    a build up of these toxics.
    
    Personally, 99% of all blues caught on my boat live to fight again.
    Anyone that thinks a gaff and billy club are necessary to get your
    hooks/lure back from a bluefish let me know and I will help you
    out.                       
    
    Bruce
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|  |     Having just returned from Martha's Vineyard, I can tell you two things:
    
    1) I caught bunches of 1.5-3 pounders and they are MUCH tastier than
    their big brothers/sisters.  Much less dark meat (which I tend not to
    eat anyway.
    
    2) SEVERAL people mentioned to me while I was knee deep in the surf
    that I shouldn't eat these fish due to PCBs.  I probably eat a dozen
    bluefish meals a year.
    
    Tim
    
    p.s.  A good long leader goes a way in lifting a fish into the boat
    without a gaff.  I usually grab them by the tail and use a hook remover
    which resembles a small gaff: Hold the lure with the baby gaff, pull
    down on the leader and jerk.  Plop goes the fish, back into the drink.
    
    p.p.s. Throw out the trebles and just use singles when using poppers. 
    It's as much fun watching 4 or 5 blues trying to get the plug as it is
    catching them!
    
    p.p.p.s. While on the subject of bluefish, I learned last week that
    when they're full, they won't actually bite a lure, but they will smack
    it with their tail in an attempt to kill/stun it.  They don't often
    come back for another strike when they are full, so if you're getting
    one smack, you've got some well-fed bluefish on your hands.
    
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