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Pending World Record Dogtooth Tuna

Thread Status: Hello , There was no answer in this thread for more than 60 days.
It can take a long time to get an up-to-date response or contact with relevant users.

Mark Laboccetta

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Aug 16, 2003
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This one deserves a standing ovation...
Just received this from Cameron Kirconnell whose somewhere in Indonesia.
Here's his story plus a picture of the 200lb mule.
_________________________________________________________________
I am the luckiest man alive.
Yesterday I was moved to tears by the most incredible fish i have ever seen in my life.
Diving in Indonesia is one of the most frustrating and difficult projects I have ever embarked on and without an amazing amount of patience, stamina and skill there is no way that you can be successful in a diving environment such as this.
Starting the day we jumped in to a mere 4 knots of current and drifted for 4 hours landed two Dogtooth tuna 40 and 100 lbs which are both excellent fish in any locale.
Taking a break during the day we went and visited a deserted beach on a faraway shore and as we explored teh little spit of sand and the surrounding countryside Craig and I gave thanks for such a beautiful and unspoiled place on earth that we were able to enjoy.
With the two fish in the boat and our time expired we decided to head back to the mainland 2 hours away. Something in me felt wrong though and I persuaded the boat driver to stay another hour ($15 more) so that we could dive in the ever increasing current for one last shot.
With a rain squall coming hard on us and the visibility darkening we decided on one last drift. Craig had just broken one blade on his fin and told me, "This is the last drift, make it count, I'll ride shotgun and bring the second gun so you can shoot your fish twice..."
5 minutes later i was relaxed and diving down through the warm surface layer to the cooler water below relishing the change in temperature that these type of Tuna love so much. At 50 feet i stopped kicking and glided down to find a school of dogtooth tuna surrounding me from 15 to 120 lbs. Patiently i glided deeper and caught sight of the black back of a slightly bigger one on the bottom at 90 feet. Passing the other smaller tuna the big fish turned slightly just as i reached the end of my float line and i squeezed the trigger.
Thunk!
The fish immediately shook his gills and then made two circles on the bottom banging the shaft against the coral in an attempt to break free of the object now lodged in his after half.
As the great fish strained for deep water i pushed hard for sunlight and grabbed my passing floats on the surface just in time to tell Craig, " I shot a TOAD!!!!"
Nervous the the fish would pull out i fought him as gingerly as possible and within a few minutes we had him in sight. As he neared the surface I could see he was hurt bad but there was no way i was going to lose this fish and I grabbed my 115 Omer America with a reel from Craig, cocked it, dove and approached him. At 12 feet my lungs were screaming for air at the exertion of the last few minutes and I prayed that my shaking hands would aim true.. whoosh! The fish went stiff and i surfaced pulling the ever growing fish to me.
Oh my god. Oh my god.
I can't wrap my arms around him! I have never screamed so loud in my life. The rocky cliffs a mile distant reverberated with the sound of my voice and then mingled with that of Craigs and the boat driver.
With a raging 10 kt current approaching I handed the tail of the fish to the boat driver and jumped in the boat to relieve him but even with Craig and I pulling we could not budge the fish from the water. Trailing the fish to calm waters the three of us pulled the beast into the boat and then there was complete silence.
Looking at the 6 ft long fish at my feet my mind shut down and I was flooded with emotion at what I had before me. Never in my life could i have imagined this possible. Craig and I stared in utter silent disbelief.
Dogtooth Tuna. What I have always preached as the most challenging and difficult fish in the world to land. Diving 30 miles from civilization in 6-10 kts of current. The whitewater rafting we had done the week before doesn't even compare to the whirlpools and down currents and 5 ft standing waves we encounter every drift here.
I can't descibe to you how incredible this day is and how meaningful it is to me. Of all the fish in the world this is the one record i have coveted the most.
200.6 lbs. 6 feet long and 4.5 feet in girth.
I am the luckiest man alive.
Cameron
 

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Fantastic! Splendid fish!
But how much is 200 lbs in kilograms?
 
The right conversion rate is 1kg= 2.2 lbs or 1lb=0.4535 kg, so the weight of the fish in would be 90.99 Kg.

Nice catch and fantastic fishing story by Cameron, congratulations!

Roberto
 
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that is unbelievable! Pity we couldnt pull that spearo contest together, cameron would have won for sure!
 
Truly Awesome result, fantastic work, super congratulations.

you are the :king
 
Congratulations on such an awesome achievement.

No mention of the primary gun.:confused:

Can we have a little peek behind the white box ????
 
Cliffsharker said:
No mention of the primary gun.:confused:

Cam is sponsored by Rabitech, so I assume he was using one... :confused:

Mind you, I know of several instances in the past where sponsored divers shot their fish with multi-rubber wood gun, then posed with the sponsors euro gun for pics.. rofl
 
Shadowkiller said:
Cam is sponsored by Rabitech, so I assume he was using one... :confused:

Mind you, I know of several instances in the past where sponsored divers shot their fish with multi-rubber wood gun, then posed with the sponsors euro gun for pics.. rofl

Nahh.......say it aint so ?!? Dont tell me that our sport is going that way.

Ahhhh...... found what was behind the little white box.

Found this pic on another board.. Is that a Rabi Apex ??? Merely a coincidence :confused:

Probaby belongs to a fellow diver.
 

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does the gun really matter? Cam does alot with Omer too, so what. Bottom line is none of us could have pulled of those dives in those conditions. Cam puts in the time and effort needed to be as successful as he is in this sport, regardless of the gun. Any gun you put in his hands will probably put that fish on the boat:)
 
rigdvr said:
does the gun really matter? Cam does alot with Omer too, so what. Bottom line is none of us could have pulled of those dives in those conditions. Cam puts in the time and effort needed to be as successful as he is in this sport, regardless of the gun. Any gun you put in his hands will probably put that fish on the boat:)

No it doesnt matter to me RIGDVR but it seems to matter to someone if the posting of the photo on SB has a big white caption covering what appears to be a Rabi Apex and the photo on DB seems to be an edited photo.

I mean the second gun didnt need mentioning either if its not important but often the question comes up of what set up was used to sleigh the fish and especially so on a pending world record . Seemed odd that there was no mention of the primary gun in the report:confused: but only mention of the secondary gun.

I am sure that Cam could have taken that fish with any gun and that it is an amazing accomplishment.

You usually call it as you see it RIGDVR and integrity seems to be one of your strong points. I am calling it the way I see it.

After my initial query, I noticed that the same story was posted on Adrenaline that the fish was shot with a custom 5 band tuna gun so that takes care of that . I know I am not the only one wondering about the Rabitech Apex right in the center of the scene knowing that Cam was or is sponsored by Rabitech.
 
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