The title of The Elder Statesman came from the fact that I am the oldest out of my group of friends. Often, when enjoying fun times and adult beverages with friends, people would comment on my relaxed and sometimes patriarchal demeanor. So I joked that I was the "elder statesman" of the group. I was born and raised in Garland, TX, a suburb of Dallas. I am a graduate of Southern Methodist University with a degree in Economics and the University of Texas at Dallas with an MBA. I love my family and my friends and do everything I can to show them that. I have a beautiful woman by my side putting up with all my nonsense. I enjoy the finer things in life like scandal, intrigue, beer and baseball.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

And you thought the Florida Marlins were bad

If you have read my blog before, then you know I enjoy getting outdoors for a few hours, putting my line in, and zoning out for a while i.e. fishing. But, though I am a terrible fisherman with marginal skills, I aspire for some of the greater opportunities in sport fishing. Well, if I ever get there then I can experience something awe inspiring and probably terrifying. The story comes from the week-long Hawaiian International Billfish Tournament (yeah, there is one of those) is the enormous marlin that got away, but not before a wild struggle that included an attack on the press boat, providing the event photographer with the photo opportunity of a lifetime. Jon Schwartz was aboard the Chiripa off Kailua-Kona, waiting for one of the teams to hookup, when the marlin struck one of two lures his crew was trolling behind the boat. Now, yes, this does have to do with a photographer more than a fisherman, but it is still an interesting and bizarre story.

It was late afternoon and tournament action had slowed. Schwartz, according to his blog, "was sacked out on the couch, my four cameras strewn across the floor of the salon," when he awoke to the sound of line screaming from the reel. "We'd been pulling those things for the past two days with no hits, and I basically forgot they were there," he wrote, in reference to the lures. What he thought might be a tuna turned out to be a Pacific blue marlin estimated to weigh more than 550 pounds (it was this [----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------] big). It leaped and started "careening through the air in every conceivable direction, throwing massive walls of water with every move of its huge tail, and leaving car-size holes in the water when it came crashing down," Schwartz recalled. Crewman K.J. Robinson had taken the rod and was fighting the billfish. Schwartz clutched his cameras and ran out and began to shoot.

Not long afterward, the marlin charged the boat. "Now mind you, I am watching all of this through my 300-millimeter telephoto lens. I was so focused on getting the shot that I probably lost sense of what was really happening in terms of how the fish was behaving," Schwartz wrote. The marlin slammed with a thud into the side of the boat, but sped off and continued to fight for its freedom. Robinson, however, seemed close to winning the battle 20 minutes later. He had reeled the magnificent fish close enough to yell for the tagging stick, so the marlin could be tagged and released. But just then the line went slack. Robinson reeled in the lure and found that the hook had broken under the weight of the struggle.

The fight was over, but Schwartz had chronicled an episode that astonished even longtime HIBT (yeah, there’s an abbreviation for it) veterans who were nearby in other boats. "Many of them have been fishing for giant marlin their whole lives and said that they had never seen anything like it, and they'd never seen a fish act like that or move that fast," Schwartz wrote. "They also said they were worried about the guys in the boat!"

Now deep sea sport fishing is not without its “Old Man and the Sea” moments, but hardly do you ever hear about the fish getting so pissed off that it charges the boat before making a hasty break for open water. That’s what astonishes me about this story. It is an interesting look into the behavior of animals when confronted with a threat they are not familiar with. So I did some research about the Pacific blue marlin…magnificent specimen. Anyway, if you read your way all the way through this then you’ve probably realized that this is fluff and I am phoning it in on this one. Hope you enjoyed.

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