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New state record tiger muskie
#1
I copied this from the DWR web site:

Angler Marc Anderson of Pleasant Grove caught a new Utah record tiger muskie at Pineview Reservoir over the Memorial Day weekend.
Marc Anderson holds the record tiger muskie that he caught at Pineview.
[inline record.jpg]

The fish weighed in at 31 pounds, 11 ounces. The huge muskie was 49 inches long and had a girth of 23 inches.
Marc caught the fish on May 27 with a jig near Cemetery Point.
Utah fishing rules require that witnesses be listed on the Record Fish Certification. The rule also requires that fish be weighed on certified scales. In the case of Marc's record catch, the witnesses were two very surprised and shocked employees of FEDEX/Kinkos in Ogden who were the only ones that Marc could find with a scale big enough to weigh the fish!
The previous record was a 31-pound, 4-ounce muskie caught by Roger S. Klug at Pineview in 2001.
DWR fisheries biologist Ben Nadolski measured the fish and was impressed that Marc was more interested in releasing the fish than getting the record. "He said that he tried for a half hour to revive the fish to release it, but was not able to," Nadolski said.
Nadolski noted that stunted yellow perch populations had a small effect on the growth and condition of the muskies. However, he said that population surveys of the reservoir last fall indicated that perch were on the rebound.
"With the perch coming back, you can count on great muskie fishing to continue," Nadolski said with an enthusiastic grin.
Marc is in the process of submitting his record fish paperwork to the Division of Wildlife Resources' Salt Lake City office. After his paperwork has been reviewed, he will receive a certificate certifying that he caught a new state record tiger muskie.
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#2
That is a nice fish and caught on a jig .
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#3
Man what a fish! It sure is a hawg!
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#4
Now thats a Big Fish!!! Hey Old Coot, I'll take one of those please.
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#5
that is one big gator.
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#6
Damn! I will have to remember kinko's I have lost the state record twice personally, and once with a guy I took out.Every time it was due to the inability to find a scale that goes over 30lbs. Plus both times have been on sundays which makes it harder! Both times it took a good half day to get an acurate weight. I missed the record by ounces bth times due to a dried out fish, and loss of eggs. Although i will be up there in july to try and make it a short lived new record.lol. Thought I should just warn all of you not to get to happy about that record Tongue
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#7
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DWR fisheries biologist Ben Nadolski measured the fish and was impressed that Marc was more interested in releasing the fish than getting the record. "He said that he tried for a half hour to revive the fish to release it, but was not able to," Nadolski said.
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[font "Comic Sans MS"][size 2][#002850]I find that the bigger they are ... the more fagile they are. To quote one of my mentor's, "what a shame".

I am glad he tried to resusatate that big boy.[/#002850][/font][/size]
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#8
That is one big boy! If anyone ever needs a large scale in the Ogden area, shoot me a PM.
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#9
You are right old coot the largest I caught at 53" i had no intentions of keeping. I was about a 3/4 of a mile on foot from my truck. It was a long haul back with a 30+ pound fish slung over my back. I tried to revive that fish for a half hour. it just wouldnt come to. The fish ended up on a wall. Anybody who fishes for the big guys need to be aware they are fragile, and need special care. Hope to catch up with you while I am there.
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#10
[font "Comic Sans MS"][size 2][#002850] For those of you who, like me, can't see the picture in the post, here is a link to the picture:

http://www.wildlife.utah.gov/news/06-06/record.php[/#002850][/font][/size]
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#11
there you go ralph, i think i fixed it so you can see it in the post.


wow what a mo-gator[Wink]
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#12
[font "Times New Roman"][#ff4040][size 3]That thing is a PIG! [/size][/#ff4040][/font]
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#13
Which one is the real state record ?

Take a look at this link:

[url "http://utahoutdoors.com/pages/pineviewtigers.htm"]http://utahoutdoors.com/pages/pineviewtigers.htm[/url]

It says "The state catch-and-release record is a 53 1/4-inch fish caught in 1998."
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#14
"The state catch-and-release record is a 53 1/4-inch fish caught in 1998."

The state maintains two records: an Angling Record (fish was kept) and a Catch-and-Release record. The above fish was kept so it became the new Angling Record. The previous record was 31 lb 4oz. The Catch-and-Release record is solely based on length; whereas, the Angling Record is based upon weight.
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#15
[font "Times New Roman"][size 3]Thanks for the clarification.[/size][/font]
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#16
DOES ANYONE KNOW WHAT KIND OF JIG? AND HOW BIG THE JIG WAS? AND AYA THATS A HOG.
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#17
I have heard it was a 2 1/2" curly tail but the sources are not exactly solid.
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