Florida Fisherman Throws Hand Line To Massive Fish, Gets Yanked In The Water & Smacked In The Head

Tarpon fishing by hand, gets pulled into water
@rosariorice

Welp, this one just doesn’t seem smart out of the gate.

The hand line is a fun way to fish sometimes… not for big fish though. It lowers your chances of actually landing the fish, and honestly, it’s just difficult. I mean, I don’t want a massive fish yanking on a line I just wrapped around my wrist. I mean, there’s a good reason people use fishing rods most of the time…

But then again, is it really a Florida story if something wild didn’t happen?

This man is seen with some fishing line in hand a large school of massive fish swim next to the dock he is standing on. He takes a swing of the line and tosses it in. As soon as it touches the water a fish takes it and takes him to as he flails into the ocean.

After he falls in, it only gets worse. The fish is wild as it jumps around and actually takes a leap and lands right on the man as his friends hysterically laugh on higher ground. The poor man took at beat down at the expensive of his friend’s laughter, but can you really put a price on that kind of comedy?

Lesson learned.

Kayak Fisherman Dragged 15 Miles

This is the dream. I mean 15-miles, that’s a long way to get pulled by a fish. But a man would like to think that if the fish is pulling you that far, it’s one helluva fish. A fish far larger than the boat your on, in water that’s plenty deep and rough… this isn’t exactly my idea of a relaxing day of fishing, but an exhilarating one nonetheless.

Going and targeting Marlin on a fishing boat is one thing, going after them in a kayak is pretty badass.

The video starts with a group loading up to do some Marlin fishing in Panama. They head out and one of the kayak fisherman hooks into a good one. The boys are fired up, a proper fishing trip.

The marlin starts to pull the fisherman and there’s not a whole lot he can do about it except enjoy the ride. The best part of the whole video is when the fish finally shows itself. It’s far from the end of the battle but the Marlin comes fully out of the water. Everyone loses their minds and it’s hard to blame them.

When’s the last time you had a 500-pound fish on and have it jump clear into the air? That’s not an everyday occurrence even for someone who targets these fish often. All while in a kayak too? Although the video is 30-minutes long, it captures the 6-hour fight pretty good.

Eventually the fisherman gets onto a power-boat because the fish had pulled him 15-miles out from the shore. He gets it into the boat and the get some awesome shots as they release it back. What a fish.

That’s one of those bucket-list items that is now added to the extremely long list.

Kayaker Fisherman Finds Surprise On The End Of His Line

The most exciting part about fishing is that you never know what you’re reeling in until the defining moment when your catch breaks the water.

Is it a bass? Is it catfish? Maybe a turtle? Could it be an old tire? Or a garbage bag? Perhaps a sunken log?

If you’ve fished some of the places I have, like Washington D.C.’s tidal basin, the possibility of a bloated dead body may even cross your mind.

The mystery of what you may pull up from the depths is what makes fishing so magical. Even when the fish aren’t biting, the possibility of potentially hooking so many possibilities hidden under the water is what makes fishing so magical.

I imagine it’s more terrifying than magical if you’re expecting a fish and instead wind up with your hands just a few feet away from an agitated alligator with a hook in its mouth though. This dad was checking some noodles with a youngster in the back and got the surprise of a lifetime.

“I think we got a garfish dude!”

“Be careful…”

“Oh My God! That is a big-ass gator buddy! That is a big-ass gator!”

That kid on the back of the kayak may never go fishing again after this experience.

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