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First Great White caught on a USA beach Amazing!!!Oct 2013

william
(@william)
Member Admin

LBSF history has been made.The Holy Grail of our sport has been reached.For all of us who dream of such a catch you will be remembered as the pioneer who actually did it -the first to do it from a US beach.Congratulations.Loved the way the report was written and the poise you kept through all the tough elements,the high surf and the kelp running into your line on that cold dreary looking California beach .That you did this with only your wife and daughter next to you shows your resilience.A HUGE CONGRTATULATIONS FROM EVERYONE IN THE South Florida Shark Club,I wish Rene de Dios was alive to see this -his dream come true.

the Great White YOUTUBE VIDEO

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WgQTe5hz2sI#t=593

the story written by the fishermen who caught it Jeff Fangman courtesy SharksOntheSand.com

Great White, Dream catcher.
by TheFangman on October 29th, 2013, 5:31 pm

As some of you may know my wife and I moved back to California to pursue her career. It wasn't what we had in mind when trying to get out of New Orleans but what can you say. At least it is a beautiful place with alot of things to do. We have both been very busy with work and school. Along with the regular day to day stuff we are new parents and enjoy spending alot of time with our little girl Lillian. With a family to love, new house to take care of, and yard to build stuff in I havent had many opportunities to fish.

Even though I haven't been fishing in a while, Iv been able to do a very good amount of research. Covering locations, water depths, drop offs, currents, habits of different species, sightings, and fishing reports. Below are just a few pictures of me getting out with my little girl to catch some bait. Feels very good to get back out doing what we love.
We more or less were looking for a place to come the fallowing day.

I loaded the trailer up later that night with some basic things, chairs, bait, rods, and kayak. We took it easy all morning, enjoyed some breakfast and coffee. Ended up making it to the beach and our location around 11:00am. It was a little hazy and gloomy outside, but we weren't going to let that ruin our first "family" fishing trip. Once we reached our destination Lilly found us a great parking spot and told us to get out and get to work. I threw on the waders in hopes of not getting wet. I wasn't planning on going all out on this trip so I only brought two yak-able set ups. One for bait and One for sharks.
I spent a few minutes adjusting my leaders to fit the location before running baits. I managed to get my Fin-Nor OFC 30 out past the breakers in hopes of catching some more bait. I rigged it with a 130 lb mono leader with 12/0 Mustad circle ( sliding trace style). Not only fishing for bait it could also serve as a rig for Threshers. With nice swells behind me it was fun being able to surf the yak all the way back to the beach. Next was the 12/0, Rigged up with the new leader and fresh stingray. When I ran this bait I must have timed the wave sets a little wrong before deployment. I ended up being engulfed by the last breaker . As we all know, that monster wave magically appears out of thin air creeps up in front of you and everything goes dark. After getting back to my yak ( swimming in waders ), flipping it back over, and making it back to land with leader and bait, I needed a breather. At this time my Fin-Nor started to bend and bow due to a build up of kelp on the line. I started thinking about not running the 12/0. As I was laying on my back with feet up in the air to get all the water out of my waders I decide, I had came here for a reason. Hooked up the bait, hopped back in the kayak and got the job done.
After drying off, we just hung out, snacked and played in the sand with our little girl Lilly. She absolutely loves the beach and water. An hour goes by and my wife and I are having to start picking kelp off of the lines. I end up having to reel in my Fin-Nor and just packed it back in the truck. The 12/0 sat steady for a little longer. Then I decided it wasn't worth walking repeatedly out to waist deep water and pulling kelp off the line. I put on my harness, hook to the reel, and start reeling. Then comes a strange resistance, waves are crashing on the line and kelp (maybe that is why I'm feeling weight), then out of nowhere line starts rolling off the reel slow and steady. I tighten down more and lock it up. I'm really starting to think a large patch of kelp just found my line. So many thoughts are going through my mind, whats going on? Line keeps rolling and I start to notice my line being pulled up current. Its slowing down and speeding up, then I felt it, head shakes and tail slaps. Whatever it is, its running and we immediately get exited. At that point I decide that I have two options, muscle it in and risk something failing and possibly loosing whatever it is, or lighten up and play the fight. I get the shark turned and it runs out and South. My wife grabs the video camera I keep in the truck and starts getting everything on tape.

There are a few breaks in the video. We had to toss Lilly in the truck while all of this was happening (to much stuff going on that needs our attention), along with having to clear a little bit of kelp from the line. I'm not a big fan of chasing fish down the beach unless line capacity is a limitation. I'm able to work the shark back up and out in front of us. At that point it starts to recognize the sandbar. We played give and take for a while before finally bringing it into the shallows.

Words cant explain the emotions we were feeling. Here we were on a simple outing to catch something. I'm telling my wife, this is more than likely a GREAT WHITE. As I'm working it slowly in to shallower water I get to a point where I feel safe putting the rod in the holder and running for the leader. Instinct told me to do what I always do instead, run down to the shark while reeling. It hits me (GREAT WHITE) , I wrap the leader around my right hand while holding the reel in my left. I work with the waves on getting it in to where it cant swim freely. I put the 12/0 in free spool and hurled it about 20 feet up the beach to dry sand. From there it was shock and awe, and the race started to get it back swimming.

My apologies for the quality of the video. I don't know why there are glitches in the video, they aren't in the individual clips. We didn't have our good camera and stand with us on this trip. The video is 4 separate clips put together as half of the fight wasn't recorded. Once everything settles down ill polish up some better footage.

I still haven't broken down the video for specific pictures but here is what we got from switching back and forth from video to picture mode. I know it might look strange with me just holding the dorsal in some of the photos, the shark was just built like a football and wanted to role with the slightest wave, meanwhile me being in disbelief and shock it looks like I'm just standing there.

We finished up with a beautiful afternoon, feeling successful and thrilled. Many phone calls and texts to come. California is a very difficult place to fish, Laws, regulations, locations, currents, kelp, surf, other people, and weather can all work against you. I couldn't tell you how many sleepless nights iv had researching the region and different species. This shark means so much to me on several levels.

First: caught it while fishing with my amazing wife, child, and dog: the whole house.
Second: It is a decent shark no matter the species.
Third: IT IS A GREAT WHITE. I cant think of the endless amount of amazing feelings I have about landing, handling, and being in the presence of this shark.

We were in such a hurry to get it back in the water because it was just me and the wife that we almost forgot to get a measurement. We used the only thing handy and long enough to measure her. The rope my dog Chief was tied up with. with the shark being partly submerged, my wife used one hand to hold the tail and rope together. She held the spot while I released the shark. She tied a knot in the rope and we measure it when we got home. 9 Foot 6 Inch Juvenile Great White. I have 99% confidence of that measurement. The added 1% could only be given if I had had more experienced hands available to hold the shark steady with an actual tape in hand.

Thank you to all of the sharkers I have fished with. Every experience has prepared me for this day.

Best and tight lines to all

HERES ANOTHER ONE ON YOUTUBE

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DCWFge9QzIo


SOUTH FLORIDA SHARK CLUB -President SFSC-Founding Member est 1983 SFSC-Website Administrator BIG HAMMER SHARK TOURNAMENT -Founder Rene Memorial Sharkathon -Founder NMFS Shark Tagger

Quote
Topic starter Posted : 10/30/2013 9:08 am
Batrayz's avatar
(@batrayz)
New Member Registered

I was about to post this story. What am awesome catch.

I hope he doesn't face the court time for catching it though.
They are rules against posing for a photo with a protected species in California I was told by a Warden.

9'8" how awesome, I wanna see an 18' beast caught from shore now


ReplyQuote
Posted : 10/30/2013 1:13 pm
lowprofile's avatar
(@lowprofile)
New Member Registered

I was about to post this story. What am awesome catch.

I hope he doesn't face the court time for catching it though.
They are rules against posing for a photo with a protected species in California I was told by a Warden.

9'8" how awesome, I wanna see an 18' beast caught from shore now

he's already been cleared with that by the CDFW. I talked to him last night about it.

as for the first.. about every comment from SOS says its the first from shore in the USA. there is video of them hooked from manhatten pier and landed on the beach and i know there's a pic floating around of a surf fisherman who caught one off the sand.

still a great catch and Congrats to Jeff!

vids
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGxjOmVzqKI

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIYzRU0kyq8

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIYzRU0kyq8

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QJjzpMekHU


ReplyQuote
Posted : 10/30/2013 2:17 pm
Batrayz's avatar
(@batrayz)
New Member Registered

So if they are incidentally caught and then released you won't get a ticket?


ReplyQuote
Posted : 10/31/2013 7:11 pm
jonathanbryan's avatar
(@jonathanbryan)
New Member Registered

speechless.......what a great catch. who would paddle out baits with those 15 footers out there??? congrats to him and crew


ReplyQuote
Posted : 11/02/2013 7:04 pm
TheFangman's avatar
(@thefangman)
New Member Registered

I was about to post this story. What am awesome catch.

I hope he doesn't face the court time for catching it though.
They are rules against posing for a photo with a protected species in California I was told by a Warden.

9'8" how awesome, I wanna see an 18' beast caught from shore now

as for the first.. about every comment from SOS says its the first from shore in the USA. there is video of them hooked from manhatten pier and landed on the beach and i know there's a pic floating around of a surf fisherman who caught one off the sand.

I dont doubt that you might be right. Iv spoke with an OLD old man at the same beach I was at, he mentioned knowing someone way back in the day that paddled his bait out and caught great whites. He had never seen the sharks in person or photos of them but remembers talking to the guy. Iv spent countless nights tracking photos of whites on California beaches, old photos, new photos, all of witch brought in from the piers.

To me, If you catch a fish from a pier, that is a pier caught fish. Im sand and salt to the core, the pride in the catch comes from the hard work and punishment you endure from fishing on the beach. If i wanted to stand over the water id buy a boat. (im not taking anything away from the pier or boat fisherman, iv been there, its also has its challenges. But its not my thing. )


ReplyQuote
Posted : 02/05/2014 12:03 am
DanTheMan's avatar
(@dantheman)
New Member Registered

I was about to post this story. What am awesome catch.

I hope he doesn't face the court time for catching it though.
They are rules against posing for a photo with a protected species in California I was told by a Warden.

9'8" how awesome, I wanna see an 18' beast caught from shore now

as for the first.. about every comment from SOS says its the first from shore in the USA. there is video of them hooked from manhatten pier and landed on the beach and i know there's a pic floating around of a surf fisherman who caught one off the sand.

I dont doubt that you might be right. Iv spoke with an OLD old man at the same beach I was at, he mentioned knowing someone way back in the day that paddled his bait out and caught great whites. He had never seen the sharks in person or photos of them but remembers talking to the guy. Iv spent countless nights tracking photos of whites on California beaches, old photos, new photos, all of witch brought in from the piers.

To me, If you catch a fish from a pier, that is a pier caught fish. Im sand and salt to the core, the pride in the catch comes from the hard work and punishment you endure from fishing on the beach. If i wanted to stand over the water id buy a boat. (im not taking anything away from the pier or boat fisherman, iv been there, its also has its challenges. But its not my thing. )

Around my area many people choose to fish the pier simply because it's easier even though it's not the greatest spot for sharks, sand is a game changer! i have seen a video of some dumb asses that catch a juvenile white from a pier and they gaffed it and killed it thinking it was a mako, so i guess that's technically a catch from land, but not the beach.

Anyway nice fish you lucky bastard :lol:


ReplyQuote
Posted : 03/27/2014 12:03 pm