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Posted

That's a fairly common occurrence in both bill fishing and Tarpon fishing. Usually there's no photographer in the water to immortalize it though. It would be a momentary rush for the angler resuscitating the the Marlin and several minutes of panic for the photog that found himself in the water with a feeding Mako of that size. They are definitly "biters"

Posted (edited)

just wow ... but it almost seems as if they did it on purpose. If the photographer had enough time to take all those pics from various elevations (depths rather) am sure there was enough time to release the (Tarpon) fish :) so he could escape or fend for himself.

Edited by letsgofishing
Posted

just wow ... but it almost seems as if they did it on purpose. If the photographer had enough time to take all those pics from various elevations (depths rather) am sure there was enough time to release the Tarpon so he could escape or fend for himself.

 

That's a swordfish...

Posted

Yes Paul, the attacking fish is a card carrying member of the actors guild. Do you know how long it took to train that shark? Not to mention the pay scale.

Posted

It happens more often than you might think. That's the main reason you don't fool around when releasing a marlin (which this fish is, by the way). Same with tarpon - big hammerheads absolutely love them.

Posted
Yes Paul, the attacking fish is a card carrying member of the actors guild. Do you know how long it took to train that shark? Not to mention the pay scale.

 

OMGGGGGGGG...... :rofl2:

 

Actually looks like a marlin to me

 

I agree, def looks like a Marlin

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