Fisherman nets one heck of a halibut - record-breaker weighs in at 30 stone

by stvalentine | May 29, 2008 at 03:14 am | 222 views | 2 comments

As a fully paid-up monster of the deep, it should have swatted aside any angler with the temerity to try to catch it with a mere rod and line.

But this record-breaking Atlantic halibut bit off more than it could chew when it took on heroic Soren Beck.

As it fought to escape, Mr Beck's small boat had to chase it across the Arctic waters off Norway to prevent either rod or line snapping.

Once the energy-sapping fight was over it took three men to haul the 30-stoner aboard. Back on land, they found it measured 8ft 1in in length, 6ft 4in around the middle and weighed in at 443lb, 24lb more than the previous record for a line-caught halibut.

And if Mr Beck had managed to get it to a British market it would have made around £2,200.

The Dane, who was on holiday, was angling in waters which have given up some giant halibut in recent years.

The biggest, caught by a commercial fisherman, was 63st. Halibut typically reach maturity at ten years and average 3ft 4in in length.

Add a comment Comments (2)

Barry Artiste
good stuff:

stvalentine, I like this story. It's good stuff. Holy Crap and I though BC had some pretty heft Halibut, I would think the flesh would be a tad past it's prime considering the size usually corresponds with the age of the fish

nukemdomis
good stuff:


Halibut that!


 I like this story. It's good stuff.

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May 29, 2008 at 03:14 am by stvalentine, 222 views, 2 comments

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