Keep Your Daily Catch Fresh: Build a Live Fish Holding Box

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The finished fish box, a floating
The finished fish box, a floating "home" where finny critters will stay fresh and tender until it's time for the fry pan!
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Fit the crate with a lid by first nailing one-inch-thick scrap lumber over about half the container.
Fit the crate with a lid by first nailing one-inch-thick scrap lumber over about half the container.
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After you've scrounged a wooden fruit crate for your live-fish box (these can usually be obtained from grocery stores or roadside markets), discard the container's bottom, brace its edges with scrap lumber, and attach chicken wire or hardware cloth to the carton's underside. Metal staples—hammered in—make secure fasteners.
After you've scrounged a wooden fruit crate for your live-fish box (these can usually be obtained from grocery stores or roadside markets), discard the container's bottom, brace its edges with scrap lumber, and attach chicken wire or hardware cloth to the carton's underside. Metal staples—hammered in—make secure fasteners.

An easy way to keep your catch super-fresh, and put extra flavor in the frying pan is to build a live fish holding box. (See the fish holding box photos in the image gallery.)

How to Build a Live Fish Holding Box

Now that summer’s here, a lot of folks may be thinking about spending relaxing (and productive) vacations at the lake or seashore. And this is a good time—while you’re unsnarling line and oiling reels—to take an hour or so and build yourself a floating livefish box . . . because one of these “keep ’em alive” containers is a valuable addition to anybody’s angling equipment.

Even if you’re fumble-fingered, this do-it-yourself project will prove to be as easy to make as it is inexpensive. And it’s just the thing to keep hungry snapping turtles and the like from enjoying your catch while you fish, or to prove to your dinner guests that you know not only how and where to land a mess of fillets-in-the-rough . . . but how to get them to the table fresh and delicious, too!

To begin, just scrounge up a used wooden apple crate (try grocery stores or even roadside markets to locate one of these items), discard the box’s bottom, and then reinforce the lower edges with scrap pieces of 1 inch by 4 inch lumber. This extra thickness of wood around the base of the container will allow you to attach (with hammered-in staples) either chicken wire or hardware cloth to the crate’s underside.

  • Published on Apr 8, 2020
Tagged with: fishing
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