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StriperTalk! All things Striper |
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06-26-2009, 02:09 PM
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#1
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 2
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Monster Great White > SIGHTING!
My friend and I were on Stellwagen bank recently.... Fishing for Tuna..... When something hit my Butterfly jig and started to run.... Then near the boat a huge boil of white water....My buddy goes is that a whale???? Then the huge thing dives and really starts to scream drag.... Then it BREACHES..... Near the boat..... COMPLETELY out of water...... 25 FEET of BEAST.... We both saw it clear as day.... NOT A WHALE, NOT A BASKING SHARK.......
THis was a Huge Mako or Great White.
We looked on the internet and does not look like Mako's get that big????
And 25 feet is being conservitive!!!!! SSSSHHHAAARK!
HOLY !@%#&
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06-26-2009, 02:12 PM
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#2
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Uncle Remus
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Lakeville Ma.
Posts: 14,773
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what no camera. I just watched Jaws today on cable.
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"A beach is a place where a man can feel he's the only soul in the world that's real"
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06-26-2009, 05:12 PM
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#3
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"Fishbucket"
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Bahston Hahbah
Posts: 6,588
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the world record great white is only 16 feet
And stellwagen is LOADED with basking sharks
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06-26-2009, 07:23 PM
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#4
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Certifiable Intertidal Anguiologist
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Somewhere between OOB & west of Watch Hill
Posts: 35,270
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Basking sharks get confused for JAWS all the time

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~Fix the Bait~ ~Pogies Forever~
Striped Bass Fishing - All Stripers
Kobayashi Maru Election - there is no way to win.
Apocalypse is Coming:
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06-26-2009, 08:49 PM
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#5
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Seal Control
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Caver, Ma.
Posts: 3,875
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"All my friends are Flakes!!"
BOATLESS
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06-26-2009, 09:00 PM
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#6
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: North Shore
Posts: 1,701
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Quote:
Originally Posted by macojoe
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Uhhh ...nice slide show ... enjoyed viewing it, but honestly, what does this have to do with sharks, why did you post this to this thread?
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"It was the blackest night! There was no moon in sight! (You know the stars ain't shinnin cause the sky's too tight) "
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06-26-2009, 09:01 PM
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#7
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: weymouth
Posts: 1,360
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tunamaster_28
My friend and I were on Stellwagen bank recently.... Fishing for Tuna..... When something hit my Butterfly jig and started to run.... Then near the boat a huge boil of white water....My buddy goes is that a whale???? Then the huge thing dives and really starts to scream drag.... Then it BREACHES..... Near the boat..... COMPLETELY out of water...... 25 FEET of BEAST.... We both saw it clear as day.... NOT A WHALE, NOT A BASKING SHARK.......
THis was a Huge Mako or Great White.
We looked on the internet and does not look like Mako's get that big????
And 25 feet is being conservitive!!!!! SSSSHHHAAARK!
HOLY !@%#&
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For this to be your second post I think you need to find some where else to spread your 
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thats why they call it fishing not catching
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06-26-2009, 09:09 PM
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#8
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Hardcore Equipment Tester
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: Abington, MA
Posts: 6,234
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Bent Rods and Screaming Reels!
Spot NAZI
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06-26-2009, 09:24 PM
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#9
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: North Shore
Posts: 1,701
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TheSpecialist
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yeah it is ... but if I were one of those divers ... I think I'd be freaking out with my dive knife stabbing at that shark's gills and eyes as frantically as possible ... after, that is, I left a deposit in the Bank of Fruit of the Loom ... 
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"It was the blackest night! There was no moon in sight! (You know the stars ain't shinnin cause the sky's too tight) "
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06-26-2009, 09:58 PM
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#10
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Mansfield, MA
Posts: 5,238
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Quote:
Originally Posted by quick decision
For this to be your second post I think you need to find some where else to spread your 
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Bingo.
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06-26-2009, 10:10 PM
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#11
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Seal Control
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Caver, Ma.
Posts: 3,875
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I did not see any video?? This is what I see:
Sizes
The average length of a full grown great white is 4 to 4.8 metres (13.3 to 15.8 ft), with a weight of 680 to 1,100 kilograms (1,500 to 2,450 lbs), females generally being larger than males. But the question of the maximum size of a great white shark has been subject to much debate, conjecture, and misinformation. Richard Ellis and John E. McCosker, both academic shark experts, devote a full chapter in their book The Great White Shark (1991) to analysis of various accounts of extreme size.
Today, most experts contend that the great white's "normal" maximum size is about 6 metres (20 ft), with a maximum weight of about 1,900 kilograms (4,200 lb). Any claims much beyond these limits are generally regarded as doubtful, and are closely scrutinized.
For some decades many ichthyological works, as well as the Guinness Book of World Records, listed three great whites as the largest individuals caught : an 11 metre (36 ft) great white captured in south Australian waters near Port Fairy in the 1870s, an 11.3 metre (37.6 ft) shark trapped in a herring wier in New Brunswick, Canada in the 1930s and the record holder a 41.2 ft monster caught west coast of the Azores Islands by a Portugese fishing trawler. While this was the commonly accepted maximum size, reports of 7.5 to 10 metre (25 to 33.3 ft) great whites were common and often deemed credible.
Some researchers questioned the reliability of those measurements in the Guiness Book, noting they were much larger than any other accurately-reported great white. The New Brunswick shark may have been a wrongly-identified basking shark, as both sharks have similar body shapes. The question of the Port Fairy shark was settled in the 1970s, when J.E. Reynolds examined the shark's jaws and "found that the Port Fairy shark was of the order of 5 m (17 feet) in length and suggested that a mistake had been made in the original record, in 1870, of the shark's length. As for the Azores record holder, that listing has quietly been removed from the book since it's appearance in Guiness volumes in the late 1970's and early 1980's.
Richard Ellis and John E. McCosker, both academic shark experts, write that "the largest White Sharks accurately measured range between 19 and 21 ft [about 5.8 to 6.4 m], and there are some questionable 23-footers [about 7 m] in the popular — but not the scientific — literature". Furthermore, they add that "these giants seem to disappear when a responsible observer approaches with a tape measure." (For more about legendary exaggerated shark measurements, see the submarine).
The largest specimen Ellis and McCosker endorse as reliably measured was 6.4 metres (21.3 ft) long, caught in Cuban waters in 1945 (though confident in their opinion, Ellis and McCosker note, however, that other experts have argued this individual might have been a few feet shorter). See the photo of this Cuban shark below.
There have since been claims of larger great whites, but, as Ellis and McCosker note, verification is often lacking and these extraordinarily large great whites have, upon examination, all proved of average size. For example, a female said to be 7.13 metres (over 23 ft) was fished in Malta in 1987 by Alfredo Cutajar. In their book, Ellis and McCosker agree this shark seemed to be larger than average, but they did not endorse the measurement. In the years since, experts eventually found reason to doubt the claim, due in no small part to conflicting accounts offered by Cutajar and others. A BBC photo analyst concluded that even "allowing for error ... the shark is concluded to be in the 18.3 ft [5.5 m] range and NO WAY approaches the 23 ft [7 m] reported by Abela." (as in original)
Editor's Note: I received this email Sun Dec. 21 2008 .....
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"All my friends are Flakes!!"
BOATLESS
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06-27-2009, 05:19 AM
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#12
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Certifiable Intertidal Anguiologist
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Somewhere between OOB & west of Watch Hill
Posts: 35,270
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Quote:
Originally Posted by quick decision
For this to be your second post I think you need to find some where else to spread your 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnnyD
Bingo.
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You gents take the foot off the gas a little please. Not that we never had a case of mistaken identity ourselves, right?
TM28 - Need Pictures

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~Fix the Bait~ ~Pogies Forever~
Striped Bass Fishing - All Stripers
Kobayashi Maru Election - there is no way to win.
Apocalypse is Coming:
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06-27-2009, 05:42 AM
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#13
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Oblivious // Grunt, Grunt Master
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: over the hill
Posts: 6,682
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It might have been someone's ex-wife, too.
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06-27-2009, 12:07 PM
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#14
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2000
Location: Cumberland,RI
Posts: 8,555
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17 feet , 21 feet whatever. I don't ever want to meet one face to face.
Good video of the shark and the cage. Theres a few moments of terror for you!!
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Saltheart
Custom Crafted Rods by Saltheart
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06-27-2009, 01:14 PM
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#15
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"Fishbucket"
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Bahston Hahbah
Posts: 6,588
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"You go in the cage, cage goes in the water. Shark's in the water; our shark!"

Last edited by thefishingfreak; 06-27-2009 at 01:26 PM..
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06-27-2009, 08:26 PM
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#16
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"Fishbucket"
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Bahston Hahbah
Posts: 6,588
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Well, if it wasn't a basker it could very well have been a mako. Anyone {who knows}knows the biggest makos in the world are seen/ caught on stellwagen.
There was a 1,500 pounder fought on a 130 bent butt a while back, This one here on the forklift from nova scotia is a beast. and this est. 1,700 pounder was also caught on stellwagen.
SOoooo. If indeed the fish spoted here wasn't a basker, I personally have never seen a mako anywhere near this size. I did see Damon Saco's tiger up close and could see how you {or I} could give or take a few feet.
Tuna/ bluefish grabs the jig, Shark grabs the fish and off we go...  Huge Mako would be believable.
They jump.
They are big.
They would hit a jig.
They are on stellwagen.

Last edited by thefishingfreak; 06-27-2009 at 08:34 PM..
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06-28-2009, 09:08 AM
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#17
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Mansfield, MA
Posts: 5,238
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnR
You gents take the foot off the gas a little please. Not that we never had a case of mistaken identity ourselves, right?
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Even the most basic research tells you that Great Whites don't get that big, and just about never clear the water anywhere but off the S. African coast.
It is too easy to spread mis-information on the internet if people won't be critical of the source. I wasn't trying to be a prick, but his story was already debunked the first time he made that exact post. Then to start this one, which is a copy/paste of his other post, is just asking to be run through the wringers.
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06-28-2009, 01:15 PM
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#18
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 450
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Was the shark crossed eyed when he hit the little jig....Lmfao....
Are you smokin that stuff dude... comon Now
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06-28-2009, 02:38 PM
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#19
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Also known as OAK
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Westlery, RI
Posts: 10,408
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Oh jeez.. kettle calling pot black alert...
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Bryan
Originally Posted by #^^^^^^^^^^^&
"For once I agree with Spence. UGH. I just hope I don't get the urge to go start buying armani suits to wear in my shop"
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06-28-2009, 02:47 PM
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#20
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2008
Location: near water
Posts: 208
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its a big ocean, anything is possible. More possible when backed up with pics. 
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06-28-2009, 03:23 PM
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#21
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: To close to water for my insanity
Posts: 884
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The great white that I filmed off Chatham back in 2001 which circled our boat was estamated at 23 feet and over 3000lbs by Greg Skomal our leading shark biologist, so anything is possible. The video made all kinds of headlines and played on almost every news station from Maine to Fl. The reason we estimated it to be around 23' was the fact that the video shows the white along the side of our 23' mako. Makos rearly get over 14' and grow to a max of 16 and either shark in the 12' range can be mistaken for bigger to someone not use to seing these beautiful beast. The other shark that it could have been which are known to jump when hooked at times is a Porbeagle and do hit jigs at times. Porbeagles are a cold water shark and look like makos alot. Still they do not grow to 25'.
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offthehookfishing.com
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06-28-2009, 03:26 PM
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#22
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Eels
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Cape Cod,MA.
Posts: 3,333
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Live bait sharp hooks and timing is all you need
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