All-Tackle Records
All-Tackle Records
It's only my opinion, but when you are talking about all-tackle or heavy-tackle records, only three fish need to be considered - Atlantic blue marlin, Pacific blue marlin and black marlin. In better times, broadbill swordfish and bluefin tuna would belong there too. Today, though, the only consistent bluefin fishery remaining is Hatteras, North Carolina, which offers a very rare fish over 600 pounds and is (thankfully) oriented heavily toward release only. And if you find a place where you can reliably catch swordfish over 50 pounds, call me.
Charter Cable Broadband Blue marlin prove to be a bit more complex. These big girls can show up seemingly anywhere at any time, from southern Spain to Tahiti. Just as soon as you go to the West African coast on the August moon in search of the all-tackle record, some tourist will catch a 1,600-pound fish out of Daytona Beach on a 26-foot center-console. Still, to maximize your potential for an all-tackle or heavy-line (50- to 130-pound-class) record blue marlin, you have to go where they traditionally catch big fish, when they catch them. To that end, consider three factors: location, season and moon phase, in that order.
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Internet Phone Service I would put Vitsria, Brazil, and the West African fishery of Bom Bom at the top of my list for the most likely birthplace of the next all-tackle Atlantic blue marlin. Two years ago Madeira was the obvious front-runner and, while its productivity paled somewhat last year, the potential for a three-quarter-ton blue marlin there is still real enough to make it a good choice.
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Internet Web Hosting Obviously the list of potential Atlantic blue marlin record locations could go on and on. Other places where a 700-pound fish is just a footnote and some extra black smoke in the atmosphere include the Azores, Bermuda, St. Thomas, Oregon Inlet, and several West African ports like Grand Bereby and Dakar.
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Comcast Cable Broadband For Pacific blue marlin there really is only one consistent choice at the moment: Kona, Hawaii. Some remote outposts - the Galapagos Islands, Solomon Islands, Midway and Frazier Island, Australia - offer mouth-watering potential and should revitalize this record hunt with future explorations.
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