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While diving.

Date is from couple days ago.

Fugg that. I’d chit my myself.

Is this unusual?
I guess not. They had white shark whistle signal. 😂.

Just the surprise of being with a man eater.


I’m not close to the coast. GoM isn’t really known for Great whites.

Though one of the Ocearch studies have shown several tagged great whites making their rounds in the gulf.

Several of the giant ones.
Originally Posted by BigDave39355
I guess not. They had white shark whistle signal. 😂.

Just the surprise of being with a man eater.


I’m not close to the coast. GoM isn’t really known for Great whites.

Though one of the Ocearch studies have shown several tagged great whites making their rounds in the gulf.

Several of the giant ones.


They are off the coast here on a regular basis.
Poor ol’ joe joe, I bet his arse was gettin tight waiting for the others to climb that ladder!
A few years ago there was a video of some killer whales in the GOM
Ronnie
White people are cray cray




Originally Posted by Oldelkhunter
Originally Posted by BigDave39355
I guess not. They had white shark whistle signal. 😂.

Just the surprise of being with a man eater.


I’m not close to the coast. GoM isn’t really known for Great whites.

Though one of the Ocearch studies have shown several tagged great whites making their rounds in the gulf.

Several of the giant ones.


They are off the coast here on a regular basis.

We've had a some spotted up here in eastern Canada in the Bay of Fundy.

https://globalnews.ca/video/5816556/viral-video-shows-shark-attacking-seal-in-bay-of-fundy

https://globalnews.ca/video/2865269...uising-in-bay-of-fundy-near-st-andrews-2



"Jaws" cured me of my habit of swimming a few hundred yards off the beach. I went ankle deep for a very long time after that .
The sand bar was always the goal when I was a kid at the beach.

Creepy part was that deep dark trough just before. 😃😐

And yes this was 75-79 when all the Jaws movies came out and mama let me watch them. 6,7,8 years old. Swim way defauq out, Little Slumlord DGAF
Posted By: ol_mike Re: White shark spotted off AL - 05/26/20
There's a lot of things in the GofM that many don't believe are there .
Some friends -offshore fishermen hung into something and fought it for a long time . Longer than any 6-700lb. marlin [don't remember the time length they told me] , this fish stayed deep finally after wearing out the crew a HUGE Bluefin Tuna came within sight . It broke off at the back of the boat - while the guy in the fighting chair was horsing the hell out of the rod with another guy pushing the rod backwards towards the chair . They knew exactly what it was when looking at it - now the epic fight made sense .

Bobby later found some info. that Tx. Marine/Fisheries had data that Bluefins have been known to be in the northern GofM , where everybody knows there are none .
He said it was a monster of a fish and they couldn't believe they were able to get it boatside with 130lb. Penn International .

I've seen some huge whales way out yonder when fishing around the Semi-Submersible oil rigs in 3000ish fathoms .

Good video BigDave !!!
100 miles out is furthest I’ve been. OCS.

The rig i worked in could do ~300’ water. Times we’d get into blue / green water.

Saw big hammer heads. Schools of big rays.

Once a gator about 15 miles outta fourchon.
Bull sharks.

Never a white though.
It’s one thing to hike in bear and cat country but big sharks in open water give me the willies.
Originally Posted by ol_mike
There's a lot of things in the GofM that many don't believe are there .
Some friends -offshore fishermen hung into something and fought it for a long time . Longer than any 6-700lb. marlin [don't remember the time length they told me] , this fish stayed deep finally after wearing out the crew a HUGE Bluefin Tuna came within sight . It broke off at the back of the boat - while the guy in the fighting chair was horsing the hell out of the rod with another guy pushing the rod backwards towards the chair . They knew exactly what it was when looking at it - now the epic fight made sense .

Bobby later found some info. that Tx. Marine/Fisheries had data that Bluefins have been known to be in the northern GofM , where everybody knows there are none .
He said it was a monster of a fish and they couldn't believe they were able to get it boatside with 130lb. Penn International .

I've seen some huge whales way out yonder when fishing around the Semi-Submersible oil rigs in 3000ish fathoms .

Good video BigDave !!!

Big Bluefin winter in the Northern Gulf. Great Whites aren’t common but they’re around.
Originally Posted by Daveinjax
Originally Posted by ol_mike
There's a lot of things in the GofM that many don't believe are there .
Some friends -offshore fishermen hung into something and fought it for a long time . Longer than any 6-700lb. marlin [don't remember the time length they told me] , this fish stayed deep finally after wearing out the crew a HUGE Bluefin Tuna came within sight . It broke off at the back of the boat - while the guy in the fighting chair was horsing the hell out of the rod with another guy pushing the rod backwards towards the chair . They knew exactly what it was when looking at it - now the epic fight made sense .

Bobby later found some info. that Tx. Marine/Fisheries had data that Bluefins have been known to be in the northern GofM , where everybody knows there are none .
He said it was a monster of a fish and they couldn't believe they were able to get it boatside with 130lb. Penn International .

I've seen some huge whales way out yonder when fishing around the Semi-Submersible oil rigs in 3000ish fathoms .

Good video BigDave !!!

Big Bluefin winter in the Northern Gulf. Great Whites aren’t common but they’re around.
they think they spawn in the gulf.
Originally Posted by Oldelkhunter
Is this unusual?


Not really. Wouldn't necessarily call it "common" but I definitely wouldn't call it unusual. There are a few tagged whites that show trails in the GOM every couple years. And there is a video or two of a new one showing up every year or two...and if there is one, there are many more.
Originally Posted by ol_mike
There's a lot of things in the GofM that many don't believe are there .
Some friends -offshore fishermen hung into something and fought it for a long time . Longer than any 6-700lb. marlin [don't remember the time length they told me] , this fish stayed deep finally after wearing out the crew a HUGE Bluefin Tuna came within sight . It broke off at the back of the boat - while the guy in the fighting chair was horsing the hell out of the rod with another guy pushing the rod backwards towards the chair . They knew exactly what it was when looking at it - now the epic fight made sense .

Bobby later found some info. that Tx. Marine/Fisheries had data that Bluefins have been known to be in the northern GofM , where everybody knows there are none .
He said it was a monster of a fish and they couldn't believe they were able to get it boatside with 130lb. Penn International .

I've seen some huge whales way out yonder when fishing around the Semi-Submersible oil rigs in 3000ish fathoms .

Good video BigDave !!!



Yep, bluefins are occasionally sighted and caught in the GOM. Even some big boys. The current LA state record is 1152lbs caught by Ron Roland aboard the Miss Cathy in 2003.

Here is a pretty good write up of the story that could be read on a few different sites and newspapers...this one just happened to be posted by Dallas Morning News.


Originally Posted by Dallas Morning News


Ron Roland of Plano accomplished the unthinkable on May 23. He landed the biggest fish ever documented caught on a rod and reel in the Gulf of Mexico. The fish was a 1,152-pound bluefin tuna, an unusual species for the Gulf and a fish known as a ferocious heavyweight fighter.

Roland is an experienced saltwater angler who was fishing aboard a 50-foot Hatteras owned by Roland's friends, Mike and Paul Ippolito of New Orleans. Also aboard was Patrick Fitzmorris of New Orleans. They were fishing a weedline about 35 miles offshore.

"Mike was on the flying bridge, and he spotted some surface activity in the distance," Roland said. "About that time, another fisherman came on the marine radio and said that he'd spotted some bluefin tuna jumping."

The fishing buddies were ready for a big fish. They'd been trolling for marlin. They reeled in their lines and headed for the distant action. Roland was sitting in the air-conditioned salon when his friends put lures back in the water.

Teamwork is required to catch a big fish, and the anglers had fished together often and had a plan of action. Luckily for Roland, it was his turn on the rod.

"As soon as we put the lures out, we got a strike – bam – just like that," Roland said. "I grabbed the rod and climbed into the fighting chair and got hooked up. We had five other lines out, and Patrick and Paul were reeling them in when we suddenly realized that strategy would not work. Within a few seconds of the strike, the fish had spooled 700 to 800 yards of line."

The huge reel held about 1,000 yards of 100-pound test line. The boat had to start immediately backing up or the fish would take all the line. Roland's fishing partners cut two lines rather than taking the time to reel them in.

Most big bluefins are caught along the eastern seaboard in relatively shallow water 200 to 300 feet deep. Off the mouth of the Mississippi, the continental shelf falls off quickly. Roland's fish bit in water that was 3,000 feet deep, and there was every danger that the fish would head straight for the bottom.

Aided by slick, calm seas, the crew spent the next hour steadily backing up on the powerful tuna.

"The fish was hooked up for an hour before we felt like we were even in the fight," Roland said. "It was that long before we had some semblance of control. By control, I mean we had regained enough line that one run probably wouldn't empty the reel."

The big-game rigging featured 18 feet of double line and a 15-foot leader. After 90 minutes on the rod, Roland had regained all the lost line and his crew was preparing to land the fish.

Roland had not seen the fish and was beginning to wonder if it was as big as his friends thought. From his perch on the flying bridge, Mike Ippolito was yelling to be careful with the green (undefeated) tuna. Roland was strapped into the chair, but one of the crew would have to grab the line, and Ippolito was concerned he could be jerked overboard.

He was also worried about putting the big green fish in the boat where it could destroy gear and people alike. He need not have worried. The tuna was just coming up for a look. It apparently didn't like what it saw. The fish turned and made a steady run that lasted five to eight minutes and peeled off 500 yards of line.

Three hours into the fight, the fish made a third impressive run. Roland's hands were blistered and his arms and legs alternately cramped. He focused on the rhythm of pumping the massive big-game rod and reeling as much line as possible as the rod tip was lowered.

About 8 p.m., the tuna made a final run – straight down. If the giant fish had started its fight by sounding, it would have won within minutes. Four hours of fighting against the drag had taken its toll.

Roland wasn't in such great shape, himself. The seemingly endless sea was pitch dark, and Roland considered giving up. Mike Ippolito came down from the bridge, relieved by his brother. Though all the anglers were seasoned, Mike had the most experience with big fish. Sensing a once-in-a-lifetime catch, he and his New Orleans mates yelled everything from insults and death threats to encouragement to keep their tired comrade in the game.

"It was getting ugly," Roland said. "I was caught between the 50-foot boat and the 1,000-pound fish. I was in pain, but I decided to deal with it. The rod was completely doubled over and the line was stretched so tight that it made a sound like a banjo as it creeped off the reel."

Ippolito decided it was time to go for broke. He instructed Roland to lock down the drag. Either the fish would break off or it would give up. For the next 45 minutes, Paul Ippolito would gun the boat's powerful engines forward for 10 seconds, then back up as fast as possible. Each maneuver allowed Roland to gain three or four cranks of line.

Roland could feel that the fish was about done. It shook its head occasionally, but that's about all the fight it had left. Roland was able to gain line at a reasonable rate. When he finally reeled the huge fish to the surface, his crew got a flying gaff in its head and a rope on the tail.

That's when they discovered a new problem. There was no way to get the fish aboard. Four men could not slide it through the transom door on the big Hatteras. In an effort to lift the tuna, they almost burned up the anchor winch. They finally gave up hopes of boating the fish and headed for Port Eades, near the mouth of the Mississippi, towing the tuna like a dingy behind the Hatteras. The fight took 5 hours and 15 minutes. Chugging along at five knots, the boat ride to port required six hours.

At 1,152 pounds, Roland's fish unseats the Texas record tiger shark (1,129 pounds) as the biggest fish reported caught on rod and reel from the Gulf of Mexico. It easily beats the old Louisiana record bluefin tuna, a 1981 catch that weighed 891 pounds. Roland's fish measured 10 feet, 10.5 inches long by 8 feet, 2 inches in girth.
Posted By: auk1124 Re: White shark spotted off AL - 05/26/20
That is an amazing read on that bluefin tuna.
Posted By: deflave Re: White shark spotted off AL - 05/26/20
Just wait 14 days.

The shark curve will get flat and then we can swim again.
Posted By: ol_mike Re: White shark spotted off AL - 05/26/20
Originally Posted by stxhunter
Originally Posted by Daveinjax
Originally Posted by ol_mike
There's a lot of things in the GofM that many don't believe are there .
Some friends -offshore fishermen hung into something and fought it for a long time . Longer than any 6-700lb. marlin [don't remember the time length they told me] , this fish stayed deep finally after wearing out the crew a HUGE Bluefin Tuna came within sight . It broke off at the back of the boat - while the guy in the fighting chair was horsing the hell out of the rod with another guy pushing the rod backwards towards the chair . They knew exactly what it was when looking at it - now the epic fight made sense .

Bobby later found some info. that Tx. Marine/Fisheries had data that Bluefins have been known to be in the northern GofM , where everybody knows there are none .
He said it was a monster of a fish and they couldn't believe they were able to get it boatside with 130lb. Penn International .

I've seen some huge whales way out yonder when fishing around the Semi-Submersible oil rigs in 3000ish fathoms .

Good video BigDave !!!

Big Bluefin winter in the Northern Gulf. Great Whites aren’t common but they’re around.
they think they spawn in the gulf.


Roger ,

Howdy .

Yes that's what was stated by the State Marine folks - that they spawn in the N. Gulf of Mexico .

Dave ,

Howdy .

My info. and reply is from way back 20+ years ago - i'm sure a lot more is known today .
Posted By: ol_mike Re: White shark spotted off AL - 05/26/20
War Eagle ,

Howdoo .
I moved away from Biloxi in Sept. 2002 - never heard of that catch - WOW !!!!!
Hey Mike, just living the dream bud...tried our hand at the snapper opener Friday...seas kicked our butts and we turned back in like sissies. The wife and daughter weren't enjoying the ride so we spent the day inshore. Hoping the winds lay a little this coming weekend.
Last year a 10’ Great White was caught off the Navarre Beach pier. Navarre is just to the east of Pensacola Beach.

https://www.newsherald.com/news/201...t-off-navarre-beach-pier?template=ampart
Posted By: Valsdad Re: White shark spotted off AL - 05/26/20
Originally Posted by MadMooner
It’s one thing to hike in bear and cat country but big sharks in open water give me the willies.





Try diving the Southern OR, Humboldt, and Mendocino coast.............where I learned to dive. You know, where their food lives?
Posted By: deflave Re: White shark spotted off AL - 05/26/20
Dave,

I just watched that whole video.

I pee-peed in my pants a little bit.
two bluefin brought into port A this yr one over 600 and the other over 700 both caught at perdido.
Posted By: johnw Re: White shark spotted off AL - 05/26/20
Originally Posted by deflave
Dave,

I just watched that whole video.

I pee-peed in my pants a little bit.



Wonder how long they were down and how long it took them to come back up?
Can't cheat the curve...
[Linked Image from gannett-cdn.com]
Unama'ki is a 2,076 pound, 15-foot, 5-inch white shark tagged Sept. 20 by OCEARCH. (Photo: R. SNOW/OCEARCH)

clic pic for story

2,076-pound great white shark Unama'ki 'pings' off Pensacola over the weekend

Jake Newby, Pensacola News JournalPublished 2:24 p.m. CT Feb. 17, 2020

She's back!

Unama'ki, the 2,076-pound great white shark that "pinged" against the Northwest Florida shores on Feb. 1 has pinged once again, this time even closer to Pensacola on Saturday morning.

Unama'ki was tagged in Scaterie Island, Nova Scotia, in the fall of 2019 by the research nonprofit group OCEARCH. She has since traveled close to 3,000 miles in 103 days.

At 11:09 a.m. Saturday, she pinged directly south of Pensacola and Pensacola Beach in the Gulf of Mexico.

Hilton: Hilton, the 1,326-pound great white shark, visits the Gulf Coast

Unama'ki: Unama'ki, a 15-foot great white shark, pings off Florida Gulf coast

Miss Costa: Miss Costa, a 12-foot great white shark 'pings' again in Gulf of Mexico

“As a big mature female, Unama’ki has the potential to lead us to the site where she gives birth and exposes a new white shark nursery,” OCEARCH says on its website, referring to the 15-foot, 5-inch great white.
I'll be out over the weekend fishing for tuna, marlin, and swordfish overnight.
Posted By: JSTUART Re: White shark spotted off AL - 05/27/20
Originally Posted by Oldelkhunter
"Jaws" cured me of my habit of swimming a few hundred yards off the beach. I went ankle deep for a very long time after that .



A whole generation of Australian kids developed a real suspicion of bathtubs after that flick.
Posted By: dan_oz Re: White shark spotted off AL - 05/27/20
Originally Posted by JSTUART
Originally Posted by Oldelkhunter
"Jaws" cured me of my habit of swimming a few hundred yards off the beach. I went ankle deep for a very long time after that .



A whole generation of Australian kids developed a real suspicion of bathtubs after that flick.


They showed that movie at my high school one rainy afternoon, not long after it came out. I remember the bloke sitting next to me suddenly ran outside to hurl in sheer terror at one stage. It did turn a few off the idea of ocean swimming, but not for long - too entrenched in us already. Swimming and getting your lifesaving accreditation was compulsory anyway. Bushwalking (which often meant going down some bush track to a beach somewhere) and sailing were also offered.

I remember when I used to do a bit of spearfishing seeing the odd shark. We left each other alone, and I was always careful to have the killed fish attached to a float asap, and to have that float well away from me. One of the blokes I used to go out with was more afraid of them. Not only did he have a powerhead (as we all did), but loops on his weight belt to carry a few extra rounds of .303 for it. I don't quite know what he thought he was preparing for - fighting off a whole mob of them no doubt.
Originally Posted by JSTUART
Originally Posted by Oldelkhunter
"Jaws" cured me of my habit of swimming a few hundred yards off the beach. I went ankle deep for a very long time after that .



A whole generation of Australian kids developed a real suspicion of bathtubs after that flick.


Everything in Oz will kill you either by biting, eating, or looking at you. I'm surprised any kid that lives outside the city limits of Sydney ever lives to adulthood. You guys certainly have your share of Great Whites down there.

Here along the Gulf Coast that Great White is interesting just because we don't see that many of them in the Gulf. It doesn't particularly worry me though, we have more than our share of Bull Sharks and they're arguably more aggressive than Great Whites. The Bulls come into shallower water also so they're a lot more dangerous in my opinion. The GW's might be bigger, but I don't think it really matters if you're getting eaten by a 10' Bull Shark instead of a 15' Great White, the outcome is the same most likely.
We’ve had great whites up here off the coast of Westport. We have a terrible problem with sea lions and seals so while I’d like to see their numbers drastically decline I don’t think I wanna trade a bunch of great whites for our sea lions. It’s best if we just encourage our Orcas to get their buffet on...

Several years ago I was fishing up at Neah Bay and the sea lions were thick and annoying as usual. They hung around the fish cleaning dock waiting for the meatless fish carcasses and barking to beat hell. I went back 2 weeks later and noticed that the sea lions were gone, not a single one to be found. I asked the girl that was doing the creel counts about the sudden absence of the sea lions. She said that a pod of Orcas came into the bay corralled and trapped the sea lions at the head of the bay while they slowly and methodically picked the sea lions apart. She said the bay was red with the blood of dozens of those giant tubs of lard. There was only a single female sea lion that wasn’t killed, likely left alive intentionally so that she could tell the tale of the slaughter. 😁
Posted By: dan_oz Re: White shark spotted off AL - 05/28/20
Originally Posted by Crow hunter
Originally Posted by JSTUART
Originally Posted by Oldelkhunter
"Jaws" cured me of my habit of swimming a few hundred yards off the beach. I went ankle deep for a very long time after that .



A whole generation of Australian kids developed a real suspicion of bathtubs after that flick.


Everything in Oz will kill you either by biting, eating, or looking at you. I'm surprised any kid that lives outside the city limits of Sydney ever lives to adulthood. You guys certainly have your share of Great Whites down there.

Here along the Gulf Coast that Great White is interesting just because we don't see that many of them in the Gulf. It doesn't particularly worry me though, we have more than our share of Bull Sharks and they're arguably more aggressive than Great Whites. The Bulls come into shallower water also so they're a lot more dangerous in my opinion. The GW's might be bigger, but I don't think it really matters if you're getting eaten by a 10' Bull Shark instead of a 15' Great White, the outcome is the same most likely.



Even in Sydney there are critters that will kill you. You'll get funnelweb spiders (redbacks and house spiders too, which will generally only make you wish you were dead), various venomous snakes and so on. Down on the seashore you'll get blue-ringed octopus, and there are bull sharks that get a fair way up into the various estuaries and rivers. Tiger sharks too, and the occasional great white in Sydney waters.

It is pretty rare that anyone actually gets killed, but as kids we are taught to be wary of such critters.
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