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Lengthy battle with 100-pound tarpon ends well

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So I did, and the line came tight, and then what looked to be a 100-pounder or better leapt about five feet in the air behind the boat, then disappeared with a high-pitched zee of my reel’s drag.

Pierce immediately cranked the outboard and followed the fish in its high-speed dash south.

We caught up to it fairly quickly, as my fishing line was at a taut right angle to the gunwales.

“Short pumps. Not too high. Just a tad more drag,” Pierce coached.

I tightened the drag about an eighth of a turn and braced the rod as the fish continued peeling off line. We chased it for about 15 minutes before we got a glimpse of it, and that’s when it rolled to the surface and took a gulp of air.

My heart sank when I saw that, remembering the advice of tarpon researcher Kathy Guindon, who found that each time the fish takes a surface gulp, it can lengthen the fight by five to 10 minutes.

“You’ll get him,” Pierce said. “Little more drag.”

So I tightened down once more, wondering how much pressure a 100-pound fish could put on 50-pound-leader and 15-pound line before it won the battle.

After about 25 minutes, when the fish rolled once again to the surface, I yanked it backward, which seemed to disorient it momentarily. But it quickly sounded and powered away.

Maybe 10 minutes later, the fish was upside down on the surface, and I managed to bring it close enough for Pierce to grab the leader. So, technically, it was a “caught” fish. But Pierce wanted to get control of it long enough to take a DNA swab from its cheek — a Guindon project at the Florida Fish and Wildlife Research Institute in St. Petersburg. As he gently pulled the leader closer to the boat, the fish seemed to wake up and get really angry, and with a strength I can’t even imagine, it once again dashed away, taking another 100 feet of line with it.

At this point, I had absolutely no faith that line and leader were going to hold up long enough for us to subdue this fish. But I kept pumping and reeling, and the fish rolled upside down again as I slowly brought it closer to the boat.

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