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Fisherman describes battle with monster mako shark
NW Forida Daily News ^ | Patrick Rice

Posted on 10/15/2007 2:25:19 AM PDT by jsh3180

DESTIN – Adlee Bruner’s fishing story is about the big one that didn’t get away.

Bruner and five friends headed out Saturday morning on a charter boat, hoping to catch some grouper to enter in the annual Destin Fishing Rodeo.

Instead, Bruner landed a gargantuan 844.4-pound mako shark, setting a new record for the decades-old tournament.

“It was tense,” Bruner, 47, said about the fight to land the 11-foot shark with a mouthful of huge teeth. “I’ve fished for 40 years. I’ve never see one that big.”

Bruner and his fishing buddies were on the 52-foot charter boat “Twilight” with Capt. Robert Hill of Destin and deckhand Eric Hayles.

"We were precisely 70 miles southwest of Destin,” Hill said. “In beautiful blue water. It was about 280 feet deep.”

The fishermen first noticed the big mako because it kept eating grouper and scamp they had hooked.

“I told them to bring up their rigs,” Hill said.

When the rigs came up, the big shark surfaced just behind the boat.

“A huge shark,” Bruner said.

“That was an incredible sight,” Hill said. “You sort of run around not knowing what to do, it was so big.

“It was like ‘Jaws.’ ”

Hill hooked a two-foot amberine on as bait and tossed it out. The rig included a stout fiberglass rod and a Shimano PLD 50 reel custom built at Destin’s Half-Hitch Tackle, with 100-lb. test line and a steel leader.

About 10 minutes after the bait was in the water, at 12:20 p.m., the shark hit about 200 feet from the boat, and the fight was on.

“He went to the bottom for about 30 minutes,” Hill said of the shark. “(Then) it just decided to come up to the surface.”

Bruner was not strapped in to a chair as he battled the huge fish.

“I was standing up the whole time,” he said.

When the shark surfaced, Hill backed the boat up to it. That is when things got tense, Bruner and Hill said.

“My deckhand (Hayles) was the most courageous of all,” Hill said. “He reached out there and gaffed him. He’s the one who knew the fish wasn’t worn down. He’s tough.”

“He went crazy,” Bruner said of the shark. “It was a fight.”

At one point the rope attached to the gaffe wrapped around the boat’s rudder and began to fray. But after 10 minutes they were able to get another rope around the shark’s tail.

“Once we had the tail roped, we had him,” Hill said. Still, it took about an hour for the fish to succumb.

But then a challenge arose.

“We couldn’t get him in the boat,” Bruner said. “We tried for about an hour, but we couldn’t pick him up.”

Eventually, they tied the shark to the stern with three ropes and began the trip back to land.

Hill, who’s been a charter captain since 1985, said his boat ran full out the entire way back, but the journey still took more than four hours to reach Destin Harbor.

The shark was hoisted up at the rodeo before a big crowd. It tipped the scale at 844.4 pounds. After it was gutted, the mako still weighed 638 pounds – breaking the tournament’s previous shark division record by 338 pounds.

Bruner said the shark eclipsed the size of any fish he’s ever caught before.

“I’ve caught an 85-pound Warsaw (grouper) before,” he said. “This is a totally different fish here.”

Bruner, who is self-employed from Bruce, Fla., and has fished many other times with Hill, said it’s also likely the only time he’ll ever land and keep a big shark.

“Ninety-nine percent of the time we catch sharks and let them go. (But) it’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”

Hill concurred.

“This is the biggest thing I’ve ever seen or caught myself.

“Basically, when you have good customers who’ve been fishing for something like this for years, you can’t pass it up.

“We normally catch and release all sharks. This was a special occasion just because of the size. And it was a rodeo record.

“There’s people that fish all their lives and never see anything like that.”


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To: bleachboy
Resource management, thats the conservative principle, not just "don't shoot does." You do shoot does where the population needs to be reduced.

In northern Missouri you can take all the does you want, just buy tag for each one. They even have a program setup to donate the meat to charity without having it processed first.

Shooting does or not is used to achieve the desired population density. Not shooting does was successfully used by hunters and conservationists to bring deer populations back over the last 100 years. Too many deer is the case in many areas now.

It used to be it was almost sacrilegious take a doe and now they may have to institute a policy to take a doe before you can take a buck. This is already policy in some managed hunts.

41 posted on 10/15/2007 8:36:48 AM PDT by HundredDollars
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To: bleachboy
You don’t shoot does or pregnant deer when you go hunting, do you?

shooting does are population control, my $10 tag saves someone's $50,000 suv from the giant white tailed rat. and its impossible to tell if they're preggers, as hunting season comes during and right after the rutting season.
42 posted on 10/15/2007 8:47:12 AM PDT by absolootezer0 (stop repeat offenders- don't re-elect them!)
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To: bleachboy
Lack of coffee sucks.

"Fawns and pregnant does" are rather rare during Deer Season. (That's sort of the idea.) Still, if we were serious about reducing overpopulation ...

43 posted on 10/15/2007 9:31:46 AM PDT by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilisation is aborting, buggering, and contracepting itself out of existence.)
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To: jsh3180
Are you a shark expert? Have you ever seen any other sharks caught and strung up like that? Quite often, they look just as bloated. Here's another Mako ....

Makos have a distinct shape about them ... large at the belly area, narrowing toward the tail.

44 posted on 10/15/2007 1:00:02 PM PDT by al_c
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To: al_c

I got flamed rather vigourously in this thread. No, I’m not a member of PETA. I’ve been fishing the Florida Keys for 35 years now, I’ve caught and killed many a fish for food or for sale, when I fished commercially years ago. Your typical 800 pound Mako does not have 200 pounds of guts in it unless it’s pregnant. I happen to think it’s a shame to kill a fish that is ready to give birth or spawn. That’s my opinion. We don’t fish snapper and grouper during their 1 month spawning seasons to protect the resource.
You want to kill all the adults before they have a chance to reproduce, have at it.

I prefer not to.


45 posted on 10/15/2007 4:53:13 PM PDT by jsh3180
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To: bleachboy

First off, “bleachboy”, welcome to Freerepublic. Did you just sign up today? Conservation is a concervative principle, however, do not ad a greasy-haired Seattle taint to the actualy definition of conservation. First off, I bowhunt deer, bear,and elk, and when our bowseason is happening, there is no such thing as a pregnant doe or cow. Second off, there are plenty of states that need pregnant does shot all the time. It is called thinning the herd to CONSERVE the herd, so they don’t eat themselves out of good nutrition and starve themselves to death. So, that blows your “feel good” stab at science.

Second off, I would want to save the whales also. There are just a tad more Whitetail deer in America alone than all the whales in all the oceans. FYI, true conservatives’ solutions to problems are not based on feelings. I can go fishing in the Atlantic, the Gulf, and the Pacific and chum up a shark. That might be an indicator that they are not extinct or endangered, so keeping an exceptional trop[hy and eating it makes pretty good sense to me. Thanks for playing

Sec


46 posted on 10/15/2007 9:11:36 PM PDT by freeplancer
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To: jsh3180
I’ve been fishing the Florida Keys for 35 years now

Then I would say you are an expert.

47 posted on 10/16/2007 6:20:47 AM PDT by al_c
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