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Yup! One would think... So.. Lol.... Not even a cop ?! They can spot those itty bitty tax and year stickers on the license plate but no one saw a thing about that ^^^ haha! I feel for the owner... But that's hilarious ..... I'm reminded of any which way you can... (I think that's  it ?) or maybe any which way but loose ..... That poor beetle bug.... Nothing left but the rear tires.... 

Edited by _Wilson_™

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22 hours ago, Fishfiles said:

He must have been throwing sparks for 25 miles to something like that.   How could no one have went along side and honked him.  

Too busy videoing it for likes 

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Now that is a Fatty 

 

Colorado Man Catches Likely World Record 73.29-Pound Lake Troutimage.png

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25 minutes ago, Fishfiles said:

Now that is a Fatty 

 

Colorado Man Catches Likely World Record 73.29-Pound Lake Troutimage.png

Wonder what lake don't look like Blue Mesa maybe Granby Lake?

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1 hour ago, riverc said:

Wonder what lake don't look like Blue Mesa maybe Granby Lake?

Scott Enloe of Gunnison, Colorado had a remarkable day on the water on Friday, May 5, when he boated a potential world-record lake trout.

Enloe was fishing at Blue Mesa Reservoir, Colorado’s largest body of water and a known hotspot for big trout. It was the first day this year that boaters could access the lake. “The boat ramp opened on Friday morning at 5:30 a.m. for the first time this year,” Enloe tells Field & Stream. “Our ice had just melted off on Wednesday. We were third in line to put in.

Enloe was fishing with his son Hunter, a guide for Sport Fish Colorado. Hunter was the first one on the board that morning, catching a 31-pounder at around 6:45 a.m. “We jig fish,” explains Enloe. “We don’t ever troll. We’ve fished the lake for several years now and have learned the places to go where big fish hang out. We catch a lot of 30-plus-pound fish. We’ve broken the 40-pound mark. We were always looking to break the 50-pound mark.”

About an hour later, the father-son duo saw something strange on their sonar.  “We were fishing in about 40 feet of water. We saw two big fish on the fish finder. We can normally tell the size of them, but this mark was distinctively different,” says Enloe. “Usually, the marks are yellow and orange, but this one was purple and teal outlined in black. My son was like, ‘That must be two fish!’”

“Then my line popped. I knew it ate the jig,” says Enloe. “Big lake trout are notorious for coming straight to the surface, and this one did that, then went on an extreme dive. I thought it looked like a 50-pounder. I didn’t know I was 23 pounds off…I’ve killed a lot of deer and elk, but once they get a certain size, like a whitetail over 200 inches, I can’t judge them, because it’s not common to see. This was like that.”

The fish took out a bunch of drag and spent a while sticking close to the bottom. Enloe was using an Okuma rod with an Abu Garcia baitcasting reel spooled with 10-pound Segar fluorocarbon—which made it hard to move such a heavy fish. The fish had bit a locally-made GSO Fishing Jig made with premium Trokar hooks.

After a 13-minute back-and-forth fight, Enloe managed to bring the fish to the surface. Then, it took several tries to bring the whopper fish onto the boat because it didn’t fit easily into their net—despite using the biggest one Frabill makes. But eventually, Enloe and his son managed to heave it aboard their boat.

ter, giant.’ And it was,” says Enloe. “We had stayed calm until it came into the boat, and then we came unglued. We were going in circles, hugging and high-fiving each other. We were like, ‘What just happened?’ My son was like, ‘What is it?’ I was like, ‘It’s a record! It’s a record!’ It was just too large.”

Enloe immediately knew he wanted to release the fish, as he does with all big lakers. The fish was too big to fit into the live well, but he was able to fit its head and gills in it while they got ready to measure and weigh it. The fish taped out at 47 inches long and had a girth of 37 inches. The fish broke one scale, but the other put it at  73.29 pounds. The fish stands to set multiple IGFA world records, besting both the all-tackle weight record, a 72-pounder caught in the Northwest Territories in 1995, and the all-tackle length record, which is shared between two 43-inchers also caught in Canada.

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1 hour ago, Fishfiles said:

Scott Enloe of Gunnison, Colorado had a remarkable day on the water on Friday, May 5, when he boated a potential world-record lake trout.

Enloe was fishing at Blue Mesa Reservoir, Colorado’s largest body of water and a known hotspot for big trout. It was the first day this year that boaters could access the lake. “The boat ramp opened on Friday morning at 5:30 a.m. for the first time this year,” Enloe tells Field & Stream. “Our ice had just melted off on Wednesday. We were third in line to put in.

Enloe was fishing with his son Hunter, a guide for Sport Fish Colorado. Hunter was the first one on the board that morning, catching a 31-pounder at around 6:45 a.m. “We jig fish,” explains Enloe. “We don’t ever troll. We’ve fished the lake for several years now and have learned the places to go where big fish hang out. We catch a lot of 30-plus-pound fish. We’ve broken the 40-pound mark. We were always looking to break the 50-pound mark.”

About an hour later, the father-son duo saw something strange on their sonar.  “We were fishing in about 40 feet of water. We saw two big fish on the fish finder. We can normally tell the size of them, but this mark was distinctively different,” says Enloe. “Usually, the marks are yellow and orange, but this one was purple and teal outlined in black. My son was like, ‘That must be two fish!’”

“Then my line popped. I knew it ate the jig,” says Enloe. “Big lake trout are notorious for coming straight to the surface, and this one did that, then went on an extreme dive. I thought it looked like a 50-pounder. I didn’t know I was 23 pounds off…I’ve killed a lot of deer and elk, but once they get a certain size, like a whitetail over 200 inches, I can’t judge them, because it’s not common to see. This was like that.”

The fish took out a bunch of drag and spent a while sticking close to the bottom. Enloe was using an Okuma rod with an Abu Garcia baitcasting reel spooled with 10-pound Segar fluorocarbon—which made it hard to move such a heavy fish. The fish had bit a locally-made GSO Fishing Jig made with premium Trokar hooks.

After a 13-minute back-and-forth fight, Enloe managed to bring the fish to the surface. Then, it took several tries to bring the whopper fish onto the boat because it didn’t fit easily into their net—despite using the biggest one Frabill makes. But eventually, Enloe and his son managed to heave it aboard their boat.

ter, giant.’ And it was,” says Enloe. “We had stayed calm until it came into the boat, and then we came unglued. We were going in circles, hugging and high-fiving each other. We were like, ‘What just happened?’ My son was like, ‘What is it?’ I was like, ‘It’s a record! It’s a record!’ It was just too large.”

Enloe immediately knew he wanted to release the fish, as he does with all big lakers. The fish was too big to fit into the live well, but he was able to fit its head and gills in it while they got ready to measure and weigh it. The fish taped out at 47 inches long and had a girth of 37 inches. The fish broke one scale, but the other put it at  73.29 pounds. The fish stands to set multiple IGFA world records, besting both the all-tackle weight record, a 72-pounder caught in the Northwest Territories in 1995, and the all-tackle length record, which is shared between two 43-inchers also caught in Canada.

Sport Fish Colorado is the best guide service in Gunnison Robbie Richardson is the owner he knows  where the Kokanee & Lake Trout hang out.Spring is the best time to catch the big lakers shallow. I miss fishing Blue Mesa it's over 1100 miles one way from my place. We worked at Gunnison Lakeside Rv park for 4 summers nice town.

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Just now, riverc said:

Sport Fish Colorado is the best guide service in Gunnison Robbie Richardson is the owner he knows  where the Kokanee & Lake Trout hang out.Spring is the best time to catch the big lakers shallow. I miss fishing Blue Mesa it's over 1100 miles one way from my place. We worked at Gunnison Lakeside Rv park for 4 summers nice town.

Well you very well maybe have passed a bait right close to the mouth of  that " Big One " ^^^^ when he or she  was just a fry

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1 hour ago, Fishfiles said:

Well you very well maybe have passed a bait right close to the mouth of  that " Big One " ^^^^ when he or she  was just a fry

Maybe., we trolled Sapinero Basin and the Narrows for the lakers. I heard most of the big ones are caught jigging but not worth eating. best eating ones imo are 20" and under. It's a big reservoir with 3 basins and 300' deep at the dam. 

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See there is another truck stuck to the side ---- from reading the story , I think this is in NC at Cape Hatteras and the tide came up on them 

 

 

 

image.png

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10 hours ago, Fishfiles said:

image.png

 

  

Either West Marine or J&M Tackle in Orange Beach had a setup like that on display.  It was "busy" to say the least.

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