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WR Halibut
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maybe he used wuhrms
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Awesome. Alaska is on my list!
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Mine too, but it was caught in Norway.
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thats a lot of fish sandwiches :biglaugh:
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So after seeing the fish and the boat, assuming that's the boat he fished on, they must have towed the fish in.
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he only went fishing for the hellabit
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That's one heluva Halibut!
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thats one big flounder
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"smashing the previous record of 58lbs"
really? |
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What a freakin monster! That must have been a helluva workout getting that thing up!
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Do you know bigger ones have been caught within sight of PTown around the turn of the century? The gully between Ptown and Stellwagen was a hot spot before they were fished out according to Bigelow's "Fishes of the Gulf of Maine" . Dragger pressure has kept them from ever coming back. Sad. It would be nice to float around within sight of land on a nice March day and catch 200-300 lb fish. Then again, the best swordfish grounds in the Atlantic were within sight of Nomans, and that is all gone as well. People don't realize what we could have if things were managed better......much, much better.
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when are we going to norway?
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http://ia700404.us.archive.org/15/it...ma1953bige.pdf One of the last reports of a big one--a 410-pound halibut that was brought in to the Boston fish pier by the Dawn, March 27, 1941, was spoken of as the largest that had been landed there in a "score of years," Gulf of Maine—The history of the halibut in the Gulf of Maine, like that of the salmon, must be written largely in the past tense, for their numbers have been sadly depleted there by over-fishing. In Colonial days the halibut was a familiar fish and seemingly a very abundant one on the coast of northern New England, but was considered hardly fit for food. Wood for instance, writes "the plenty of better fish makes these of little esteem, except the head and finnes, which stewed or baked is very good; these hallibuts be little set by while basse is in season." They seem to have maintained their numbers there down to the first quarter of the nineteenth century, when contemporary writers described them as extremely numerous in Massachusetts Bay and along Cape Cod, in fact around the whole coast line of the Gulf of Maine. And they were discovered in abundance on Nantucket Shoals, on Georges Bank, on Browns Bank, and on the Seal Island ground as soon as fishing was regularly undertaken offshore. The cod fishermen of those days looked upon them as a nuisance, seldom worth bringing to market. And "It was the practice of the fishermen when halibut were troublesome to string them on a line and hang them over the stem of the vessel." But a demand for halibut developed in the Boston market sometime between 1820 and 1825, and they have been pursued relentlessly ever since then, first inshore and then farther and farther afield. The Massachusetts Bay—Cape Cod region yielded large numbers of these great fish during the early years of the fishery. Four men, for instance, are reported as having caught 400 in two days off Marblehead in 1837, while a party of equal size is said to have landed 13,000 pounds off Cape Cod in three weeks. And it was discovered some time prior to 1840 that halibut congregated in winter in the 25-30 fathom gully between the tip of Cape Cod and Stellwagen Bank. However, a shrinkage in the supply had been noticed along shore even before 1839, for we find halibut described in that year (in the Gloucester Telegraph) as "formerly" caught along Cape Cod and in Barnstable Bay. And they had been so nearly fished out in the Massachusetts Bay region by about 1850 that it no longer paid small boats to go there especially for them. The history, in short, of the halibut fishery leaves no doubt that this species shows the effect of hard fishing sooner than most sea fish, it being possible to catch the majority of the stock on any limited area in a few years. Long liners and otter trawlers search all the good ground-fish bottoms of the Gulf of Maine and its banks so thoroughly and constantly that the halibut never have a chance to reestablish themselves in any abundance on the shoaler grounds. They maintain their numbers better on the deeper slopes chiefly because they are subject to less intensive fishing there. |
I swear I hooked one of them in vineyard sound back in the late eighties. I was in a 9' zodiac fishing live tinkers and couldn't get it off the bottom far before it would pulsate right back down. I finally cut the line after about 30-40 minutes because there was no bringing whatever it was up from the bottom fishing from a zodiac.
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I've seen a bunch up on Devil's Bridge. Never managed to hook one, just spook them. |
boat fish don't count :)
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Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Ted knows all, AND can see underwater..... |
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is there a toll ??:buds:
ok.. back to grinding glass :smash: |
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