Are We Eating This?!

Iridescence

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If we aren't then why would they do such a thing?!

Monster blue marlin caught after 28-hour battle off Cabo San Lucas
Monster blue marlin caught after 28-hour battle off Cabo San Lucas

By: Pete Thomas, GrindTV.com

Some reports listed the weight of a blue marlin landed Sunday off Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, at an eye-popping 1,213 pounds, a record for the resort destination. Others claimed the behemoth fell short of "grander" status, weighing only 972 pounds on a marina scale.

Whatever the weight of the billfish, it was an extraordinary catch, especially considering that the battle played out for nearly 28 hours, giving this yarn a Hemingway quality that seems more like fiction than fact.

The angler credited with the catch is Richard Biehl of Traverse City, Michigan, but he had help from the crew aboard the 31-foot yacht, Go Deep, which was plying the Pacific Ocean north of Cabo San Lucas at Baja California's tip.

After an offshore marathon that began Saturday morning at 8:20 and ended close to noon Sunday, those aboard the yacht either resembled or felt like very old men of the sea.

"That was the hardest thing I ever did in my life by far," Biehl told Pisces Sportfishing general manager Tracy Ehrenberg, who on Monday evening published the first detailed account of the remarkable episode. "I've shot bull moose and trekked out with 200 pounds on my back and it doesn't even compare."

Nobody knew what was in store when the marlin attacked a trolled lure at what is known as the 95 Spot, and dashed toward the horizon. The fishermen were targeting much smaller striped marlin and using only 60-pound-test line -- far too light for giant blue marlin.

When the great billfish first jumped, about 400 feet from the boat, the crew guessed its weight to be about 700 pounds.

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Word of the catch didn't spread until Monday, when many in town and in the billfishing community considered the catch to be a rumor. Then photos and sparse details began to appear on Facebook. One photo showed the weight at 972 pounds, but that did not tell the story.

Ehrenberg on Monday afternoon interviewed Capt. Luis Abaroa and his crew, and briefly spoke with Biehl. (Efforts to reach Biehl for this story, via cellphone, were unsuccessful.)

Abaroa told Ehrenberg that the marlin registered only 972 pounds because the hook of the electronic scale used to weigh the fish was not high enough for all of the fish to clear the ground, so a time-tested measurement formula -- using length and girth -- was used to determine the 1,213 pounds. The marlin measured 137 inches long, or 11.4 feet, not counting its bill or tail. It was 75 inches, or 6.25 feet around.

Weight records for marlin caught off Cabo San Lucas are not kept officially, but an 1,111-pounder caught in the 1980s is believed to be the heaviest.

More recently, in this era of high-speed reels and other technological advancements, overnight struggles with giant billfish have become increasingly rare.

Biehl, bemoaning the use of light line, fought the giant blue marlin by himself until about sunset, then relinquished the rod to a deckhand. By then food and water had been exhausted and another vessel captained by Abaroa's brother, Frankie, was summoned via radio to deliver supplies.

The marlin leaped again, closer to the boat, as darkness fell. The weight estimate was revised upward to between 800-1,000 pounds.

A long night was fitful because to keep the line from breaking the captain and crew had to keep just enough pressure on the marlin, and constant maneuvering of the boat was necessary.

At sunrise a rejuvenated Biehl reclaimed the rod and resumed the fight. With the line and leader weakening, the crew aboard the other boat had devised a snag rig and managed to setting more hooks into the cheek of the wearying marlin.

Finally, the billfish tired and was brought alonside the boat, and according to Ehrenberg, Biehl chose to have it gaffed and brought to port. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime fish. I want to take him," he said.

Surprisingly, Biehl went fishing again Monday and caught and released a striped marlin, before himself succumbing to all he had been through by coming down with a bout of seasickness.


Ohhhh, it says specifically for the sport of it... :evil:
 
Here we mainly do catch and immediate release ( after photo) but them Meskins probably sell them to some Kalifornia Jew with a seafood distributorship.
 
All the charter boats in North Carolina catch and release White Marlin, Blue Marlin and all other bill fish.
 
You can eat them, but they aren't very good. For the life of me, I can't see why they kill them. We photograph, tag and release all we catch here in NC and I don't think that charter boats will allow you to keep one even if you want to. I can't swear to that but it is what I understand.
 
lets see to do this...you would have to be strapped in....mostly likely to the seat with shoulder harnesses...it would be a marathon battle...i dont get that type of fishing at all....when we are on the coast we prefer to drink and just eat at calabash....i do like to do a little pier fishing....and drink...but that is mostly pompanos ...i have to stay on the short end of the pier
 
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Well... if those sport minded men ever get hungry in life and have no considerable resources I hope they can atleast admire the beautiful blue marlin they've mounted on their wall.
 
Well... if those sport minded men ever get hungry in life and have no considerable resources I hope they can atleast admire the beautiful blue marlin they've mounted on their wall.

Yeah, but I hear it takes a hell of a lot of cooking to soften up that fiberglass. They don't even mount the actual fish any more. You simply take measurements of length and girth and they make a resin fish for your wall.
 
lets see to do this...you would have to be strapped in....mostly likely to the seat with shoulder harnesses...it would be a marathon battle...i dont get that type of fishing at all....when we are on the coast we prefer to drink and just eat at calabash....i do like to do a little pier fishing....and drink...but that is mostly pompanos ...i have to stay on the short end of the pier

Yeah, I don't really get the whole "goin for marlin" thing. We catch them occasionally but it is always purely accident. We fish for mahi, wahoo, and tuna. We see white marlin fairly regularly during the heat of the summer and maybe once during a summer we get a blue on but going out specifically for them, I don't really get it.

When we get one to the leader, we feel like we have done something since we aren't really equipped on my boat to land that sort of fish. The biggest reel on my boat is a Penn International 50 and we have fishing belts to keep the rod but from bruising you all up, but no fighting chair or harness.

Catching them on a charter boat with really big tackle and fighting chairs and harnesses is akin to bull fighting. The fish really never has a chance. I don't care for bull fighting either but would pay $100 to see a guy in pink sequined tights and a fancy waiter's jacket fight a fresh bull with a swiss army knife.
 
If you kill it you had better eat it.

This isn't just any fish... It is already an endangered species and it seems completely illogical to be so boastfully proud of having caught one and NOT release it. BUT then again... I am obviously not sport-minded about such.
 
If you kill it you had better eat it.

This isn't just any fish... It is already an endangered species and it seems completely illogical to be so boastfully proud of having caught one and NOT release it. BUT then again... I am obviously not sport-minded about such.

Actually, they aren't endangered. They are threatened, but not endagered. I still don't see the point in killing one though.

Blue Marlin: Adventure Fishing: Animal Planet
 
They are beautiful *hearts* and though I'm not sure about making such things illegal (as that only seems to invite a different kind of mind...) if they don't stuff the actual fish then it should work against their minds to catch and kill it for no logical reason. Leaving it to rot is illogical. Are there medicinal purposes? There are always new-founded sciences within the wonders of the sea...
 
They are beautiful *hearts* and though I'm not sure about making such things illegal (as that only seems to invite a different kind of mind...) if they don't stuff the actual fish then it should work against their minds to catch and kill it for no logical reason. Leaving it to rot is illogical. Are there medicinal purposes? There are always new-founded sciences within the wonders of the sea...

No medical purposes that I am aware of. It is like the guy who shoots a tiger just so he can say that he did it. I don't get the mind set.
 

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