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"Tinkerntom" wrote in message ups.com... Doug Kanter wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 15:44:35 -0500, "NOYB" wrote: "FishWisher" wrote in message ... I dunno... this is about catching sturgeon, not Bush or sex or commies. Is fishing considered OT on rec.boats? Anyway, I finally caught my first sturgeon of the season on my fifth try. I cruised down to Suisun Bay (on the California Delta) Wednesday afternoon to spend the night near Garnet Point. About 10:30 I had a feisty, tough sturgeon on that seemed a lot bigger than he turned out to be. He weighed in at 43 pounds and measured 58". It took me nearly twenty minutes to get him to the boat. He was a very slender, tough male. I read a story a couple of years ago about flying sturgeon up in the Panhandle Area. A 6 foot sturgeon jumped out of the water, drilled some guy in the chest, broke his sternum and some ribs, and nearly knocked him out of the boat. And some people say that fishing isn't a sport! I was in the vicinity when this happened and heard the aftermath on the radio, but I didn't see it. A friend of mine was within 60 yards of the event. Apparently four guys in a 24 foot Hydra Sports CC latched onto a small mako - about 5/6 feet or so and very athletic. It sounded aft of the boat and all of a sudden came right up out of the water and into the boat. The mako started taking chunks out of everything in site and just beating the hell out of the interior of the boat. The four guys were hanging off the T-top trying to avoid getting whacked or a piece taken out of their hide. In an odd twist of fate, the fish had broken off the line at some point and with one flip/flop went back over the stern and swam away. I gathered from the after action report that the interior of the boat was trashed. When I lived in Long Island, a friend's dad ran a charter boat out of Bay Shore. Mostly he went for flounder, but sometimes, clients would ask to go chasing sharks. For those trips, he brought a shotgun along, and whatever size slugs you'd use for bears. Said he'd seen too many shark hunters come back to the marina with some of their boats' windows gone. I would wonder about fishing with a shotgun? I suppose if they're jumping out of the water, you can shoot them on the wing. Sort of like pheasant hunting, its not very sporting if you shoot them on the ground. Of course if you shoot to low, and blast a hole in your hull, the shark will be having you for dinner. TnT I knew nothing about guns at the time, so I never asked what the plan was. Considering what I know now, I *still* don't know. I suppose if the shark was momentarily still while in the water next to the boat, the captain might've had a shot, but it seems dubious. After all, in a shark, where is the equivalent of what snipers call "the plum" - the base of the brain in a human, where a shot is an absolute end to everything? |
Doug Kanter wrote: "Tinkerntom" wrote in message ups.com... Doug Kanter wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 15:44:35 -0500, "NOYB" wrote: "FishWisher" wrote in message ... I dunno... this is about catching sturgeon, not Bush or sex or commies. Is fishing considered OT on rec.boats? Anyway, I finally caught my first sturgeon of the season on my fifth try. I cruised down to Suisun Bay (on the California Delta) Wednesday afternoon to spend the night near Garnet Point. About 10:30 I had a feisty, tough sturgeon on that seemed a lot bigger than he turned out to be. He weighed in at 43 pounds and measured 58". It took me nearly twenty minutes to get him to the boat. He was a very slender, tough male. I read a story a couple of years ago about flying sturgeon up in the Panhandle Area. A 6 foot sturgeon jumped out of the water, drilled some guy in the chest, broke his sternum and some ribs, and nearly knocked him out of the boat. And some people say that fishing isn't a sport! I was in the vicinity when this happened and heard the aftermath on the radio, but I didn't see it. A friend of mine was within 60 yards of the event. Apparently four guys in a 24 foot Hydra Sports CC latched onto a small mako - about 5/6 feet or so and very athletic. It sounded aft of the boat and all of a sudden came right up out of the water and into the boat. The mako started taking chunks out of everything in site and just beating the hell out of the interior of the boat. The four guys were hanging off the T-top trying to avoid getting whacked or a piece taken out of their hide. In an odd twist of fate, the fish had broken off the line at some point and with one flip/flop went back over the stern and swam away. I gathered from the after action report that the interior of the boat was trashed. When I lived in Long Island, a friend's dad ran a charter boat out of Bay Shore. Mostly he went for flounder, but sometimes, clients would ask to go chasing sharks. For those trips, he brought a shotgun along, and whatever size slugs you'd use for bears. Said he'd seen too many shark hunters come back to the marina with some of their boats' windows gone. I would wonder about fishing with a shotgun? I suppose if they're jumping out of the water, you can shoot them on the wing. Sort of like pheasant hunting, its not very sporting if you shoot them on the ground. Of course if you shoot to low, and blast a hole in your hull, the shark will be having you for dinner. TnT I knew nothing about guns at the time, so I never asked what the plan was. Considering what I know now, I *still* don't know. I suppose if the shark was momentarily still while in the water next to the boat, the captain might've had a shot, but it seems dubious. After all, in a shark, where is the equivalent of what snipers call "the plum" - the base of the brain in a human, where a shot is an absolute end to everything? As a kayaker, The shark is usually larger than the boat, and I have no desire to mess with one. Recently read an article about a fisherman in a kayak being hasseled by a large shark. Brought it on himself by cutting bait, and himself accidentally, but introduced blood into the water. He was lucky to get back to shore. Anyway I have wondered about carrying a bang stick like divers carry. I don't know whether they would actually work, but like the last great act of defiance, they may make you feel better! TnT |
On 15 Feb 2005 06:27:24 -0800, "Tinkerntom" wrote:
~~ snippage ~~ As a kayaker, The shark is usually larger than the boat, and I have no desire to mess with one. Recently read an article about a fisherman in a kayak being hasseled by a large shark. Brought it on himself by cutting bait, and himself accidentally, but introduced blood into the water. He was lucky to get back to shore. Anyway I have wondered about carrying a bang stick like divers carry. I don't know whether they would actually work, but like the last great act of defiance, they may make you feel better! I'm surprised that doesn't happen more than it does. Later, Tom |
Also Sprach RG :
"The thing about a shark, it's got lifeless eyes, black eyes, like a doll's eyes. When it comes at you it doesn't seem to be livin'... until he bites you, and those black eyes roll over white." Looks like we're gonna need a bigger boat. Dan -- Heisenberg may have been here. |
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On 15 Feb 2005 06:27:24 -0800, "Tinkerntom" wrote: ~~ snippage ~~ As a kayaker, The shark is usually larger than the boat, and I have no desire to mess with one. Recently read an article about a fisherman in a kayak being hasseled by a large shark. Brought it on himself by cutting bait, and himself accidentally, but introduced blood into the water. He was lucky to get back to shore. Anyway I have wondered about carrying a bang stick like divers carry. I don't know whether they would actually work, but like the last great act of defiance, they may make you feel better! I'm surprised that doesn't happen more than it does. Later, Tom Maybe it does, but the sharks were raised to clean their plates, so you never find any leftovers. :-) |
On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 16:57:32 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message .. . On 15 Feb 2005 06:27:24 -0800, "Tinkerntom" wrote: ~~ snippage ~~ As a kayaker, The shark is usually larger than the boat, and I have no desire to mess with one. Recently read an article about a fisherman in a kayak being hasseled by a large shark. Brought it on himself by cutting bait, and himself accidentally, but introduced blood into the water. He was lucky to get back to shore. Anyway I have wondered about carrying a bang stick like divers carry. I don't know whether they would actually work, but like the last great act of defiance, they may make you feel better! I'm surprised that doesn't happen more than it does. Maybe it does, but the sharks were raised to clean their plates, so you never find any leftovers. :-) Good point. Later, Tom "Beware the one legged man in a butt kicking contest - he is there for a reason." Wun Hung Lo - date unknown |
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