Free classified ads | Online Auctions | Our Weeklies | Long distance call | Weblocal
Transcontinental
novanewsnow.com
cottreau
Send this text to a friend Print this article Comment on this article

Anchor Point, N.L. fishermen land 400-pound halibut

Article online since July 7th 2008, 8:30
Be the first to comment on this article
Anchor Point, N.L. fishermen land 400-pound halibut
Garfield Caines (left) and Lawrence Genge of Anchor Point, N.L. recently hauled in a 400-pound halibut. The valuable flatfish has been making a comeback according to small boat fishermen along the west coast. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Anchor Point, N.L. fishermen land 400-pound halibut




Lawrence Genge and Garfield Caines recently hauled a monster from the briny ocean depths.

They were pulling up their trawl off Anchor Point on June 26 when a 400-pound Atlantic halibut breached the surface on the pointy end of a baited hook. The two fishermen hooked it with their gaff, tied a rope around its tail and spent the next 45 minutes hauling the fish aboard.

“The two of us were pretty excited,” said Genge. “He was still alive, but he wasn’t either bit wild, just the same.”

It was the biggest halibut Genge had seen in 25 years. The cleaned fish weighed 316 pounds. Not bad for 45 minutes’ work considering the average price this year for halibut is $3 a pound. “The halibut are coming back,” said Genge. “From Sandy Cove to Port au Choix everyone is having a good year, getting 1,500 to 2,000 pounds.”

This year turbot gillnets had to be moved to deeper water to avoid a large halibut bycatch. Genge attributes the resurgence in halibut stocks to the shrimp fleet adding Nordmore grates to their trawls during the mid 1990s. The Swedish designed plastic grates keep groundfish out of shrimp trawls, reducing bycatch.

His theory is supported by Don Ball, west coast director of resource management for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

“It’s throughout 4R (west coast), it’s not just isolated to one particular area,” said Ball. “Over the past three years fishermen have been seeing an explosion in young small halibut.”

(From the Northern Pen)

These articles could also interest you

Your comments

Full name:
(required)


Email address:


Your comments :
(required)


Please retype the word displayed below Can't read the word?

Please retype the word displayed below:


Reader Poll

  • Does the recent meat recall cause you to worry about what you eat?
  • Yes
  • No

Links

  • Useful Links: Askmen.com
    AskMen.com is a free online destination for men, a men's portal, designed to provide men with daily ...