May 21, 2007
Boating more than 100 pounds of feisty fish was a challenge for
the lone angler.
Cape Girardeau, Missouri - A lifetime bow-fishing dream came true
for Larry Wolfe of Chaffee, Missouri, May 21, when he stuck an arrow
in a monstrous alligator gar. Then he awoke to the reality of
hoisting more than 100 pounds of thrashing, needle-toothed fish into
his johnboat.
Wolfe, 52, was alone, patrolling the Headwater Diversion Channel in
Cape Girardeau County at 12:45 p.m. when he spied an enormous gar.
"I knew it was really big, and it was an alligator gar," said Wolfe,
" but I didn't realize just how big."
The fish saw Wolfe, too and made for the shelter of a fallen tree.
Wolfe gave chase, using the trolling motor to close the distance
between him and the fish. Then the leviathan began to slowly sink
like a submarine.
"I finally had to just shoot or let him go," said Wolfe. "He was
still a little too far, but I got lucky. It was my day."
The arrow pierced the fish's side just behind its head, and the
fight was on. To land the fish, Wolfe had to haul in several yards
of 120-pound braided fishing line hand-over-hand. He was surprised
that the sinewy, torpedo-shaped fish did not pull harder.
"He never moved fast," said Wolfe. "It was just steady, constant
trying to get away. The first time he ran in towards that tree I
thought he got off, because my line fell limp. I picked up my line
again, and I thought the arrow had pulled out and the arrow had hung
on something. So I started pulling on it. It felt like lifting a
log. Then that log decided to take off."
The fish headed back to open water, still at a leisurely pace. "I
don't think I really hurt him. The arrow just went in far enough for
the head of the arrow to open up under the skin. The first time he
came up, I could see part of the arrow head sticking out, and I knew
I didn't have him hooked very well. So I just let him do what he
wanted to do for 45 minutes until he finally came up tired enough
that I could get my gaff hook up under his jaw."
The 5-foot, stainless steel gaff gave Wolfe a secure grip on the
behemoth, but it took "a lot of grunting and groaning" before the
fish finally came up over the side of the 18-foot johnboat. "It took
me about four or five attempts. I think it was pure adrenalin."
The excitement was far from over, however. The fish, still not
significantly hurt, lay quietly in the bottom of the boat until
Wolfe headed for home.
"He got pretty feisty on the way back to the boat ramp. He got
pretty riled up. He had been pretty calm until I cranked the motor
up. I had a cooler between me and the console to where he couldn't
get at me, so I was relatively safe."
Back on land, Wolfe took his catch to the Missouri Department of
Conservation's office in Cape Girardeau. Fisheries Management
Biologist Mark Boone had some difficulty locating a certified scale
capable of handling the fish's 6-foot, 11.25-inch bulk. Even after
the delay and the drive to the MFA store in Jackson, the fish still
weighed an impressive 127 pounds.
Everywhere he went, the monster fish drew crowds. Wolfe originally
intended to clean and eat the monster gar. However, by the time
people quit coming to his house that night he was afraid the meat
had spoiled, so he donated the fish to the Conservation Department.
The agency has determined that Wolfe's fish was a female. Because it
already has a mount of the previous state alligator gar record - a
115-pound, 2-ounce fish caught from the Headwater Diversion Channel
in 2001 - the Conservation Department plants to have Wolfe's fish
mounted as a skeleton, revealing the fish's bone structure. Both
mounts will be displayed at the Cape Girardeau Conservation Campus
Nature Center.
"I spent my whole life trying to catch an alligator gar," said
Wolfe. "I hope this isn't the last time I do."
The alligator gar (Lepisosteus spatula) is native to the lower
Mississippi River and adjacent waters. Missouri's alligator gar
population is small, due to drastic reduction of habitat. Although
the alligator gar will never be as common in Missouri as it was
before conversion of the Mississippi River flood plain for farming
and other uses, ongoing habitat restoration work in southeastern
Missouri could provide more places for alligator gar and other fish
and wildlife to live.
The Conservation Department and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
are releasing alligator gar at Mingo National Wildlife Refuge in
Stoddard and Wayne counties in hopes of re-establishing the species
there.
-Jim Low-
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