Well, I don't know all the rules, but Indiana still has these on it's books.
Here's a couple good ones:
- In Muncie, Indiana it’s a crime to carry fishing tackle into a cemetery.
- In Indiana and Kansas, no one may catch fish with their bare hands.
I remember one year during the construction of Lake Monroe in IN. there was severe flooding in farmers fields along contributory streams. Dad, my BIL and I used dip-nets to catch carp trying to get back in the streams when flood waters were receding. We filled the bed of dad's pickup with carp we planned to use for fertilizer.
A man stopped in a black Cadillac and asked if he could have some because his family like to eat them.
Dad said yes and the man filled the trunk of his Calillac, thanked dad and happily drove away. None of us thought to ask how he cooked them so they were good to eat, but he did mention having to remove the mud vein first while cleaning them.
Today on the Walbash river, the state DNR uses electricity to make some kind of foreign invasive fish surface, dip them up into vats, then destroy them.
When driving a boat on the river, the sound/vibration of the motor causes these invasive fish to jump out of the water into boats, with some occupants being hurt by a flying fish.