Showing posts with label sea fishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sea fishing. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Shark takes kayak man for a ride

A man sea-fishing from a kayak was left wishing he had a bigger boat when he was dragged for half a mile after hooking a 6ft (1.8m) shark.

Rupert Kirkwood, 51, was fishing from the tiny craft a mile off the Devon coast in the Bristol Channel when he hooked a 65lb (29.5kg) tope shark.

The species is harmless but that did not stop the fish turning tail and dragging Mr Kirkwood, a conservationist and vet, along behind it on his small kayak.

He told the Western Morning News he had been sitting on the sea off Ilfracombe in poor weather for four hours without a bite when he felt a "great tug" on the line, which was baited with mackerel.
"These creatures are known to do a run and it is just like Jaws - the line flew off the reel for what seemed like about 10 seconds," he told the paper.

"I tightened up the drag and swung the rod around and it started pulling me along - eventually I reeled it in and carefully lifted it out by its pectoral fin and tail.

"It was thrilling to catch something that big and it knocks spots off anything I have landed before."
Mr Kirkwood, from Holsworthy, Devon, has been fishing using the small kayak for around 10 years. His adventures on the boat have seen him paddle the entire coastline of Cornwall and part of the north Devon coastline. He has also used it to sail from Cornwall across to the Isles of Scilly, a distance of 28 miles (45km).

The tope shark, or school shark, can grow to more than 6ft (1.8m) in length and weigh more than 100lb (45kg). They are found all around the world and generally live further out into the sea but can come in close to the shore. They sometimes live in small schools and are listed as a vulnerable species.
The shark Mr Kirkwood caught was later released unharmed.

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/shark-takes-kayak-man-ride-080751916.html

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Novice angler catches monster halibut worth £25,000


Hansel took more than two hours to reel in the 2.5m (8ft 2in) monster of the deep off Bolungarvik, in Iceland’s Western Fjords, where it took five men to eventually haul the 970-portion fish on board.

‘This is the fish I have been fishing for all my life,’ said the 70-year-old German.

He used a 30lb line and a plastic lure to snare the halibut. Once he got it alongside their boat, a rope was tied around its tail so it could be hoisted on to the deck.

Herbert Loechel, managing director of the fishing tour operator, said: ‘After the bite, we had to worry that Gunther would land the fish. It took him 135 minutes.

‘But the boat’s crew helped hoist the giant fish, with more anglers on board to help, on to the boat.

‘Back at port, the giant fish was celebrated vigorously.’

The mighty fish has broken all records – beating the previous best by 8.2kg (18lb). The earlier record was held by anglers Bosse Carlsson and Hans-Olov Nilsson, weighing 210kg (464lb), caught off Norway in July 2009.

Atlantic halibut are native to the northern Atlantic ocean, from Greenland to the Barents Sea and as far south as the Bay of Biscay.

They can reach up to 5m (15ft) in length, weigh up to 320kg (700lb) and can live for 50 years.


Commercial fishing of the Atlantic variety has largely collapsed since overfishing led to it being registered as endangered in 1996


http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/848168-novice-angler-catches-monster-halibut-worth-25-000



Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/848168-novice-angler-catches-monster-halibut-worth-25-000#ixzz16JOSCa9g

Novice angler catches monster halibut worth £25,000


Hansel took more than two hours to reel in the 2.5m (8ft 2in) monster of the deep off Bolungarvik, in Iceland’s Western Fjords, where it took five men to eventually haul the 970-portion fish on board.

‘This is the fish I have been fishing for all my life,’ said the 70-year-old German.

He used a 30lb line and a plastic lure to snare the halibut. Once he got it alongside their boat, a rope was tied around its tail so it could be hoisted on to the deck.

Herbert Loechel, managing director of the fishing tour operator, said: ‘After the bite, we had to worry that Gunther would land the fish. It took him 135 minutes.

‘But the boat’s crew helped hoist the giant fish, with more anglers on board to help, on to the boat.

‘Back at port, the giant fish was celebrated vigorously.’

The mighty fish has broken all records – beating the previous best by 8.2kg (18lb). The earlier record was held by anglers Bosse Carlsson and Hans-Olov Nilsson, weighing 210kg (464lb), caught off Norway in July 2009.

Atlantic halibut are native to the northern Atlantic ocean, from Greenland to the Barents Sea and as far south as the Bay of Biscay.

They can reach up to 5m (15ft) in length, weigh up to 320kg (700lb) and can live for 50 years.


Commercial fishing of the Atlantic variety has largely collapsed since overfishing led to it being registered as endangered in 1996


http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/848168-novice-angler-catches-monster-halibut-worth-25-000



Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/weird/848168-novice-angler-catches-monster-halibut-worth-25-000#ixzz16JOSCa9g