Category Archives: Fish Citations

Old men and the sea? Four seniors team to land 987-pound blue marlin

he most remarkable catch on Super Bowl weekend might have been made before the big game: That of a 987-pound blue marlin by four anglers who were at least in their 80s.

Capt. Manuel Dominguez said the youngest angler in his charter group, which embarked from the Mexican resort city of Cabo San Lucas Saturday morning on what it hoped would be a brief and relaxing tuna-fishing excursion, was 82.

The excursion lasted a grueling 16 hours.

While aboard the 32-foot cruiser, Ziggy, Arizona anglers Sergent and Sandy Snagirett, and John and Edie Rayno, had caught several tuna before deciding to reel in the lines and call it quits.

It was 1:20 p.m.

But then something very large struck the line attached to the right outrigger. At the end of the line was a lure resembling a flying fish.

An epic battle was at hand, whether the old-timers liked it or not. All took turns with the rod but neither could make headway. (Neither angler is pictured in this post. They were said to have slept in and missed the weigh-in the next morning.)

The crew members helped with the reeling duties but even they could not turn the head of the valiant billfish.

Capt. Dominguez initially thought the fish was a giant tuna, but after 40 minutes it jumped. “I thought it was around 800 pounds because I’ve caught two around that size before,” he told Tracy Ehrenberg, general manager of Pisces Sportfishing, which was first to blog about the catch.

They were still fighting the fish as the sun began to set over the Pacific.

Left to right: Deckhand Alejandro Suarez, Capt. Manuel “El Chichi” Dominguez and Jaime Dominguez. Photo courtesy Mario Banaga/Pisces Sportfishing

Would they be able to bring the behemoth to the boat before sharks moved in?

Dominguez was more worried about fuel; the marlin had towed the yacht several miles offshore and showed no signs of tiring.

Thank goodness for cellphones. Dominguez phoned Pisces Capt. Julio Castro, who gathered some friends on shore and made a run to the nearest gas station. They then voyaged out aboard Tracy Ann and met up with Ziggy.

The new crew helped battle the marlin for two more hours before realizing they were supposed to play in a soccer match later that night, so they scurried back aboard Tracy Ann and sped toward shore.

Finally, Capt. Dominguez took the rod and fought the marlin until it was alongside the boat. His crew promptly gaffed and secured the billfish with ropes, but determined it was much too large to be brought aboard, or even draped across the stern swim step. (It remains unclear why this group chose to kill, rather than release the fish.)

With no other recourse, they simply tied the head of the marlin to the swim step and left the body dangling in the water during the 16-mile, four-hour ride to port. Everyone was too whipped to weigh the fish that night, so they hired a watchman to keep an eye on it until morning.

At 8:30 a.m. Sunday, the marlin tipped the marina scale at 987 pounds. Many wondered how much weight it lost while lying on the concrete dock overnight. The best estimate was 10 percent of its body weight, meaning it would have easily topped 1,000 pounds if weighed when it had arrived.

Regardless, it remains one of the top five or six heaviest marlin ever caught at Cabo San Lucas, and it’s undoubtedly the heaviest ever fought by four senior citizens from Arizona.

http://www.grindtv.com/outdoor/blog/50899/old+men+and+the+sea+four+seniors+team+to+land+987-pound+blue+marlin/

BIG BIG TUNA DAY at Virginia Beach, Virginia

12TH

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citations:
Bluefin Tuna: 358 lbs caught by Robert J. Wiggins of Virginia Beach, VA
Bluefin Tuna: 227 lbs caught by Damien Roberts of Chesapeake, VA
Bluefin Tuna: 221 lbs caught by Duane E. Johnson of Hinesville, GA
Bluefin Tuna:200 lbs caught by Jack McDaniels III of Man, WV on the Git-R-Done
Bluefin Tuna: 217 lbs caught by Bryant White of Portsmouth, VA
Bluefin Tuna: 169 lbs caught by William Belote of Virginia Beach, VA
Striped Bass: 41 lbs 8 oz caught by Forrest McGee Jr. of Glen Allen, VA
Striped Bass: 50″ caught & released by Melvin E. Lindsley of Laurel, MD
Striped Bass: 49″ caught & released by Brett E. Old of Chesapeake, VA
Striped Bass: 45″ caught & released by Robert E. Old Jr. of Chesapeake, VA


It’s warm and calm this morning in Rudee Inlet but incredibly foggy which isn’t always safe for boaters so we wish everyone good luck and be safe today! We have every boat on the fleet out fishing as well as most of our private boats. If today is anything like yesterday we are in for a real treat this afternoon. Trick Standing of the Git-R-Done has already reported to us that he had a large Bluefin on but broke off close to the boat. Also one of the private boats is on his way in with a big Bluefin! It’s only 9:15a.m. and there’s already some good action going on in the ocean, we can’t wait to see what the boats bring back!

As always we will keep you as updated as possible, but as you can imagine we will be quite busy today so bear with us! You can always call us for the most updated info!

http://virginiafishing.com/FISHING%20REPORTS/January/January%2012.htm

Delaware state record for striped bass now in Pennsylvanian hands

A Pennsylvanian now holds the Delaware state record for striped bass.

smith striper.jpg View full size Ben Smith, of Bryn Mar, set the Delaware state record for striped bass with this 52-pound fish. DNREC Photo

Ben Smith, of Bryn Mar, was fishing Dec. 8 in the surf at Delaware Seashore State Park when he hooked into a 52-pound striped bass measuring 51 inches long and 30 inches in girth.

Smith, who grew up in New Jersey fishing in the Long Beach Island area with his father and younger brother, was enjoying a fishing weekend with friends when he caught the huge stripers.

“I never set out to set a state record. I go fishing for the love of the outdoors, time with friends and the adventure,” he said. “But I’m ecstatic about catching such a great fish.”

Under the rules of the Delaware Sport Fishing Tournament, Smith’s catch was measured and weighed on a certified scale at Old Inlet Bait & Tackle in Rehoboth Beach and then verified by Sr. Cpl. Douglas Messeck of the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control.

According to Nathan Rust, director of the Delaware Sport Fishing Tournament director, the former state record of 51 pounds, 8 ounces had been in place since 1978.

While “the odds were stacked against” Smith, “he did everything right,” according to Clark Evans, a surf fishing instructor with Old Inlet.

“A striper is known for putting on a big first run, and surviving that first run was the first hurdle,” Evans said.

Using the right equipment, including a circle hook and fray-resistant braided line instead of more fragile monofilament, helped Smith’s battle considerably, especially in the final struggle to wrestle the fish out of the surf.

The Delaware Sport Fishing Tournament is an annual program sponsored by the Division of Fish and Wildlife to promote recreational fishing opportunities in the state and recognize anglers for outstanding catches.

The tournament’s origins date back to the late 1930s, when the Board of Game and Fish Commissioners arranged a fishing contest with the goal of increasing interest in fresh and saltwater hook and line fishing in the state.

Today, the popular tournament includes 14 categories in the freshwater division and 29 categories in the saltwater division.

http://blog.pennlive.com/pa-sportsman/2013/01/delaware_state_record_for_striped_bass_now_in_pennsylvanian_hands.html

HOME » SPORTS » OUTDOORS Billfish action is slammin’ in Virginia Beach

By Lee Tolliver
The Virginian-Pilot
© September 6, 2012
VIRGINIA BEACH
Most anglers looking to score an offshore billfishing “grand slam” head to exotic locales such as Venezuela, Panama, Costa Rica or Cabo San Lucas – places that require extensive travel and fat wallets.
They would be better suited to head to Virginia Beach, where the action the past couple of weeks has been nothing shy of world-class.
An offshore billfish “grand slam” consists of catching a white marlin, blue marlin, sailfish, swordfish or spearfish – any three of the five – on the same day. It’s rare, having been done only a couple hundred times worldwide in the past century, according to the International Game Fish Association. And the feat is even more rare along the Atlantic coast of the United States, having been done just a handful of times.
Catching four out of the five species in the same day is known as a “super grand slam.”
But Capt. Steve Richardson has registered five “grand slams” alone in the past few weeks – two of them by Charlottesville’s Tom Wheaton. On a trip last week, Richardson’s boat – Backlash – caught and released 17 billfish, with “grand slams” for Adam Bryant of Roseland and Nelson Jones of Amherst.
“There is some phenomenal fishing going on here now,” Richardson said. “Boats from Ocean City (Md.) and from the Outer Banks are making runs to the Norfolk Canyon to get in on the action.”
In 11 trips, Richardson said that Wheaton has caught eight sailfish, eight blue marlin and 49 white marlin.
Richardson, who once held the world record for the most white marlin caught in one day with 41, said things are only going to get better.
Two years ago, records for white marlin were shattered along the mid-Atlantic. A Maryland boat, Cerveza, scored 67 releases on an overnight trip, while Capt. John Duffie on the Maryland-based Billfisher set the single-day record with 57.
Boats returning to port flying 10, 15, 20, sometimes 30 release flags are no longer uncommon in ports from Ocean City to Oregon Inlet.
“Fishing has been outstanding this time of year for quite a while,” said Richardson, who has fished in all the planet’s billfish hot spots. “It’s attracting boats and anglers from around the country and around the world.
“It’s the best fishing in the world this time of year… bar none.”
It’s likely to get even better as seasonal patterns should benefit from storms staying well off the coast. Tropical storms Leslie and Michael on Wednesday were closing in on Bermuda while on the verge of becoming hurricanes, joining forces to pump huge groundswells into the fishing grounds nearly 70 miles off the Virginia coast.
Those big, slow-rolling conditions concentrate large schools of bait, which in turn attract predators like billfish.
Anglers also currently stand the chance of catching a “super grand slam” because of increasing numbers of swordfish. The state-record sword – a 381-1/2-pounder caught in 1978 on Richardson’s boat – was shattered last week by a 446-pounder caught by Virginia Beach’s Joseph Harris while fishing with Capt. Justin Wilson on the Just Right. Overnight trips provide the best opportunity for swordfish, but slams caught over a two-day period don’t count under IGFA rules.
Capt. Jake Hiles on the Matador doesn’t care, saying that an angler or boat “super grand slam” still is an amazing feat.
He scored a boat “super grand slam” last week with three fish caught by James Chen of Jamaica and a swordfish caught by the captain.
” ‘Grand slams’ and ‘super slams’ just don’t happen very often… not for single anglers and not for boats,” Hiles said. “You can go one place for awesome white marlin fishing and somewhere else for awesome sailfishing.
“But right now, we have it all right here. I’ve been all over the world fishing and I never would have thought that I could have this kind of world-class action 55 miles off my own back yard.”
Lee Tolliver, 757-222-5844, lee.tolliver@pilotonline.com

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Midnight Sun Charters are Bending their Lures on Massive Red Drum!!

Had an unreal trip on the bay today with Kerry, Jerry, Buddy, and Cyndall. Caught some of the biggest mackerel of the season and then hit the drum,

or as the picture shows they hit us. These fish were 36 to 47 inches and didn’t mind busting up a bunch of tackle.

Kerry with a nice 44″ redfish, these fish are beautiful!

Nothing like big fish for your birthday, happy birthday John.

Thank you very much guys; and girls, it was a pleasure fishing with y’all and look forward to seeing you back soon.

 

Edited by Capt Ryan on 23 July 2012 at 8:34am
http://www.fishmidnightsun.com/forum//forum_posts.asp?TID=1154&TPN=1
__________________
Capt. Ryan

New Maryland Tog Record

Fishermen at Ocean City have been catching some large striped bass this week by trolling large Mojos, Stretch and Tomic lures. Large striped bass are moving along the beaches on their journey north and the shoal areas within 3-miles of the beach has been the place to troll; most captains are fishing north of the Ocean City Inlet. January was an exciting month for tautog fishing and a new state record 23lb tautog was caught by Charlie Donahue of Philadelphia while fishing on an Ocean City head boat that specializes in this type of fishing. Fisheries biologists aged Charles’s big tog to be 10-years old. At least one other 20 lb tog was caught last month and weather permitting the good fishing continues this month.

 

http://www.dnr.state.md.us/fisheries/fishingreport/index.asp

 

920-Pound Bluefin Landed in Bermuda

Even after the sharks took their share, Bermuda angler Andrew Card still brought 920 pounds of bluefin back to the dock February 1. Card hooked into the behemoth on Argus Bank Thursday on 80-pound test, according to a report in Bernews. Unable to bring the catch back on his own, Card was assisted in boating the fish by Capt. David Soares on the Kerry D.

You can check out video of the tuna being offloaded below, or read a full account of the catch here (with pictures). Congrats, Andrew!

 

 

http://www.sportfishingmag.com/news/video-920-pound-bluefin-landed-bermuda?cpmid=enews020612

Manassas angler reels in huge rockfish, state record

image
During a winter that has witnessed huge inshore bluefin tuna catches and some of the best striped bass fishing in several years, nobody was surprised Friday when word spread that a potential state-record rockfish had been caught.

Fishing off Cape Henry with Capt. Tim Cannon on the Bada Bing, Prince William County angler Cary Wolfe caught a 74-pounder after a fight of about 15 minutes.

The fish eclipses the current mark of 73 pounds caught almost to the day four years ago by Chesapeake’s Fred Barnes. To become the state record, it first must be certified by the Virginia Saltwater Fishing Tournament.

Weighed in at Long Bay Pointe Marina, certification is almost assured.

http://hamptonroads.com/2012/01/manassas-angler-reels-huge-rockfish-and-state-record

Rockfish tourney makes a big catch – a 265-pound tuna

As striped-bass anglers shuffled their catches in wheelbarrows to the weigh-ins for the ninth annual Mid-Atlantic Rockfish Shootout, most of the crowd descended on a boom straining to lift a huge bluefin tuna onto another set of scales about a hundred yards down the dock.

J.T. Holt of Virginia Beach was on Team Pimp Fish Pirates when the tuna hit a parachute rig designed for the event’s targeted species.

After a 35-minute fight and a short ride down the beach to Rudee Inlet, Holt’s fish tipped the scales at 265 pounds. It could be worth several thousands of dollars — partly in tournament winnings and more from a tuna buyer on scene to purchase the fish.

http://www.menafn.com/qn_news_story.asp?storyid=%7B201b7a3e-174e-4c0d-a56d-6aa0660fb118%7D&type=new

They’re here-rock fish over 60lbs

Yes, the super-sized fish are here. The first one of the season was hooked this week and weighed in at Chris’ Bait and Tackle on the Eastern Shore at 63.5-pounds. Just is time for the Holidays? You bet! The weather forecast looks like it will hold into the Holidays towards the end of the month, keeping water temperature right in the striper zone.

 

http://hamptonroads.com/2011/12/they%E2%80%99re-hererock-fish-over-60lbs

 

 

Preparation key to Virginia Beach angler’s success

For Beth Synowiec, catching trophy fish doesn’t include dumb luck.

Beth Synowiec with a trophy speckled trout from the Elizabeth River. Her 2010 success brought her first Expert Angler award from the Va. Saltwater Fishing Tournament. The Norfolk Anglers Club named her Angler of the Year. <span class='credit'>(Photo Courtesy of Beth Synowiec)</span>

Beth Synowiec with a trophy speckled trout from the Elizabeth River. Her 2010 success brought her first Expert Angler award from the Va. Saltwater Fishing Tournament. The Norfolk Anglers Club named her Angler of the Year. (Photo Courtesy of Beth Synowiec)

 

Beth Synowiec with a trophy speckled trout from the Elizabeth River. Her 2010 success brought her first Expert Angler award from the Va. Saltwater Fishing Tournament. The Norfolk Anglers Club named her Angler of the Year. (Photo Courtesy of Beth Synowiec)

Synowiec had a banner year in 2010, earning her first Expert Angler award from the Virginia Saltwater Fishing Tournament. The Norfolk Anglers Club also named her Angler of the Year.

“I don’t feel like I’m blind-lucking any of this,” said Synowiec, 39, of Virginia Beach. “It’s all a matter of being prepared.”

In that case, Synowiec probably should teach angling preparedness courses.

In 2010 she registered 12 citations for eight species – her best year. She and husband Kevin shot two television shows with Kevin Baugh that will air this summer on the Outdoors Channel. While she works in her husband’s construction business, she landed a side job as an advertising representative for the Chesapeake Angler magazine.

Preparation key to Virginia Beach angler’s success

Possible New VA Record Catfish

 

Virginia game officials say the state may have a new record blue catfish: a monster weighing in at 109 pounds and 53 inches in length.

The big cat was caught by Tony Milam in Buggs Island Lake near the confluence of the Dan and Roanoke rivers. The previous record blue cat weighed in at 102 pounds, four ounces, and was caught in the tidal James River in 2009.

Before Milam’s catch enters the record books, the State Record Fish Committee of the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fishery is reviewing the entry. The certification should be completed next week.

Possible New VA Record Catfish

IGFA Record Catches January 2011

 

 

Japanese angler Hideyuki Nemoto and guide Seiichiro Tashiro were jigging off Iki Island, when Nemoto hooked into this fish. After a grueling 40-minute fight, the angler and guide had successfully boated this new potential all-tackle and men’s 30-pound line class record greater amberjack. Nemoto’s AJ weighed in at a massive 156 pounds 13 ounces and was caught on a MC Works jig. The current IGFA record is 155 pounds 10 ounces.

Bluefin tuna
On July 11 of this past summer young small fry angler Jazmine Olivia Evans, of Melfa, Virginia, landed a 53-pound 6-ounce bluefin tuna. They were fishing out of Sams Hill, Virginia, trolling a Seawitch skirted ballyhoo when the bluefin hit her line. About 30 minutes later, Jazmine had the fish in the boat and a new potential female IGFA Smallfry record.

An enormous yellowfin tuna crashed the bait of young angler Keith Brandner of Tenafly, New Jersey, as he was fishing off Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, August 7. Guided by Hercules Marsella, Brander was free lining a live goggle eye when the 241-pound 4-ounce yellowfin hit. The youngster had a brutal 1 hour and 45 minute fight to boat the potential IGFA male Junior record fish.

Roundscale spearfish
Andres Fanjul of Palm Beach, Florida, landed a potential all-tackle roundscale spearfish on August 20, fishing the Baltimore Canyon, off Maryland. Captain Heaton II was trolling naked ballyhoo when the 70-pound spear came into the spread. Fanjul battled the fish to the boat 30 minutes later for a potential new IGFA all-tackle billfish record.

Junior angler Ted Carroll of Chatham, New Jersey, guided by Rick Carroll, landed a 60-pound 0 ounce striped bass on July 26, while fishing Fishers Island, Connecticut, USA. Carroll’s fish hit a live eel and it took him 10 minutes to land, qualifying Ted for the male junior record. The current IGFA record is 57 pounds 14 ounces made in 2008 from East Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada.

IGFA Representative Dr. Julie H. Ball of Virginia Beach, VA, has 11 world records to her credit and after a 100 minute fight on June 11, may have a 12th record after catching a 74-lb cobia. She made the local newspapers for her Chesapeake Bay, Virginia catch that qualifies her for the IGFA’s women’s 20-pound line class record. Guided by Rudy Levasseur, the cobia took a live eel that Julie was using for bait. The current IGFA record is 70 pounds 6 ounces from the Gulf of Mexico off Destin, Fla., in 1996.

IGFA Record Catches January 2011 | Outdoor Life

N.C. striper record lasts only 48 hours

 

On Wednesday 12-year-old Stephen Furlough boated a N.C. record striped bass weighing 63 pounds while fishing outside Oregon Inlet.

Stephen Furlough, 12, and skipper/guide Charles Haywood with the 63-pound striper that Furlough boated Wednesday off Oregon Inlet on the Outer Banks. OREGON INLET FISHING CENTER

This fine, fun, feel-good story of a boy and a big fish lasted only 48 hours.

On Friday, Keith Angel pulled a 64-pounder from the same waters.

Keith Angel of Sandy Ridge with the 64-pound N.C. record striped bass he caught Friday off Oregon Inlet on the Outer Banks. OREGON INLET FISHING CENTER

Furlough, from Roper near the coast in Washington County, was fishing with skipper/guide Charles Haywood aboard his boat, Rigged Up.

Angel, of Sandy Ridge in Stokes County, was in a party trolling with skipper Devin Cage on his sportfisherman, The Poacher.

Both catches were weighed at Oregon Inlet Fishing Center, where certification forms were filled out by the state’s Marine Fisheries Division and Wildlife Resources Commission.

Understandably, Furlough and Angel were filled with excitement. Furlough was hoping his catch might be mounted. Angel, however, was anxious to get the record registration process completed so his fish could be dressed into filets.

“I’m taking it home to eat!” said Angel.

Skipper Cage said Angel’s record-setter hit a blue-headed lure being trolled on a white parachute rig.

“There was another lure on that rig, and Keith also had a fish hooked on it,” said Cage. “The second fish weighed about 15 pounds, so he was fighting 79 pounds of striper all at the same time.

“He had a pretty stout pull.

“When the big fish showed itself near the surface, my deckhand, Russell Long, yelled to me. Russell said, ‘This may be the biggest one we’ve ever caught!’

“Russell, like me, has been fishing a long time. I knew that he wouldn’t exaggerate and that it had to be a special fish. And sure enough…”

Angel’s super striper measured 531/4 inches in length and 333/4 inches in girth.

“I thought the fish (Furlough) caught a couple days before might remain the state record for 20 years,” Cage said. “Now, after Angel’s fish, and seeing how many monster stripers are out there, the 64-pounder might not hold up for a week.”

Cage said members of Angel’s party kept the limit of two stripers each. “We caught and released probably 50 more, most of them ranging from 30 to 40 pounds,” he said.

Limits of very large stripers were reported boated again Saturday off Oregon Inlet before the weather deteriorated, prompting skippers to return to port.

Before Furlough and Angel struck, the N.C. striped bass record was a 62-pounder caught out of Oregon Inlet during 2005 by Dave Hiebert.

The S.C. record is a freshwater striper, a 63-pound fish caught during 2009 at Lake Russell by Terry McConnell.

The world striper mark listed by the International Game Fish Association is 781/2 pounds. Albert McReynolds hit this jackpot at Atlantic City, N.J., during 1982.

N.C. striper record lasts only 48 hours – CharlotteObserver.com

Poacher Sportfishing Pending North Carolina Striped Bass State Record

**PENDING NC STATE RECORD** 1/7: Poacher lands a 64lb striped bass which is now a pending state record!!! The bass was 53-3/4″ long and had a girth of 33-1/2″!!!

Poacher Sportfishing – Inshore Sportfishing from North Carolina’s Outer Banks

Virginia Beach angler qualifies for new record

 

Imagine Kevin Wong’s excitement when told he had caught a potential world record fish.

Imagine his dismay when told what he had caught was a different fish altogether.

Now imagine his feelings when told last week the fish he had caught still would become an International Game Fish Association record, but now it would be the inaugural world record for a species just recognized by the organization.

It’s been a whirlwind for the Virginia Beach angler, who caught his fish in October.

At first, Wong’s catch was identified as a Darwin’s Slimehead, a giant goggle-eyed, goldfish-looking critter found in the depths of the ocean along the Norfolk Canyon.

At 8 pounds, 5 ounces, it easily topped the slimehead record – a 7-8 fish caught in 2008 by

Virginia Beach angler qualifies for new record | HamptonRoads.com | PilotOnline.com

New Pending North Carolina State Record Caught January 5th

 

According to the report on Oregon Inlet Fishing Centers site.  A Stephen Furlough of Roper, NC caught a 63 pound Striper on the Rigged Up.  The old record was 62 pounds.  They are currently filling out the paperwork.  Captain Charles Haywood was the Captain and he took this picture

New Pending North Carolina State Record Caught Today Out of Oregon Inlet – EPIC BLITZ

405-pound tuna shatters 33-year-old world record

 

Pending approval by the International Game Fish Association, Mike Livingston’s 405.2-pound yellowfin tuna caught Nov. 30 on Capt. Mike Lackey’s 80-foot sport boat, the Vagabond, will be the IGFA’s new all-tackle, world record. The previous record was the 388-pound, 12-ounce yellowfin caught April 1, 1977 by Curt Wiesenhutter aboard the Royal Polaris, owned then by Capt. Bill Poole.

405-pound tuna shatters 33-year-old world record – SignOnSanDiego.com