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has anyone seen the clip in the new saltwater sportsman, or it might of been Sportfishing.. anyways there is a clip about a guide who caught a 5ft swordfish in 5 foot of water somewhere in the keys. It has a picture of the fish in the water.... kind of weird, he must of got lost big time....
 

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There is a pass in the keys area that is about 15ft deep that tuna migrate through once a year coming into the gulf, I assume he might have been following the wrong fish? I will find out the name of it.
 

· aka Salty Nacho
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I haven't seen what you are talking about, but here's a link of a few pictures that were taken from the Texas Kayak Fishermen (TKF) website and posted on the TTMB board. Be sure to look at the entire thread to see all of the pictures. It doesn't say where the pictures were taken. The first one looks like it was photoshopped, but the other two have to be real.

http://2coolfishing.net/ttmbforum/showthread.php?t=5720
 

· Freelance Gynocolgist
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Don't know about a 5' swordfish, but I know of 2 cases both photo'd in Unplugged magazine of baby swords about 2-3' long caught right up on the beach forgot where it was though. One was "caught" via no fishing tackle, some dude swam up to it and grabbed a hold of it. It would be my thinking that these fish were sick.

Then theres the story in an old TPWD magazine of a large sword caught in port aransas right at the jetties. Nobody believed the guy as he was solo and the fish broke off, a few days later somebody came across the carcass of a large sword.
 

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Ok I was a little off, the place is a pass in the Dry Tortugas where the bluefin migrate through to the gulf in the early part of the year. The shallowest area they pass through is 15' and apparently it is not uncommon to see 600-700 lbers around the area passing through.
 

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65# Sword in Florida Bay

***This was posted of the Allcoast Shark and Swordfish board a few months ago. The page on the Sun Sentinel has expired but the text of the article is in the AC thread and reposted here.***

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/outdoors/sfl-swordfish30may30,0,3208207.story?coll=sfla-sports-outdoors

ISLAMORADA · About five years ago, when veteran Florida Keys fishing guide Skip Nielsen decided to give up the bluewater for the backcountry, he probably contemplated he would never pursue a billfish for a client again.

But Tuesday, Nielsen found himself in the unusual position of presenting a live mullet to a 7-foot-long swordfish.

However, it wasn't 30 miles off the Florida Keys, at a depth of more than 1,000 feet in the Gulf Stream, the swordfish's usual habitat.

And it was not from a 40-foot or larger sportfishing boat, the usual platform for such an endeavor.

The extraordinary catch by Dallas resident Michael Carter came in five feet of water in Florida Bay, just a few hundred yards from Lower Matecumbe Key in Islamorada, using 20-pound-test line and spinning tackle on Nielsen's 18-foot flats skiff.

"It was about noon and we had just finished a successful morning tarpon trip, with two fish caught," said Nielsen, who is based at Bud N' Mary's Fishing Marina. "As we headed back, I saw this purple thing swimming about 300 yards away.

"I knew exactly what it was," he said. "I put on a live mullet, and we trolled it very slowly in front of the fish."

Nielsen said the swordfish tried to whack the live mullet with its long bill but missed it.

"The fish was completely lit up like a Christmas tree," he said. "But it just couldn't catch the bait."

So Nielsen had Carter reel in the bait. Nielsen then stunned the mullet, and Carter put it back out hoping it would not escape the swordfish's mouth.

As the swordfish attempted to attack the bait again, Nielsen said, the leader and hook accidentally became entangled in the fish's tail.

It took more than two hours for Carter to bring the swordfish to the boat. It weighed 65 pounds.

"That fish was definitely lost," Nielsen said. "I'm sure it was trying to get from the Gulf of Mexico to the Atlantic Ocean, but it took a wrong turn before the Dry Tortugas."

From stories he has heard, Nielsen said he believes his swordfish was only the fourth seen in the same part of Florida Bay in the past 50 years.

"Folks say that in the 1950s someone harpooned a 650-pound bluefin tuna in the same spot," he said.

Nielsen originally wanted to release the swordfish, but another captain who stopped to watch the battle suggested he keep the fish for food, since it was unlikely to survive in the bay.

For personal use, Nielsen has a NOAA Fisheries permit that allows a recreational angler to keep one swordfish per day.

"The funny thing is that a few days ago I was thinking I would probably never see a real swordfish, let alone catch one," said Carter, a consulting actuary. "The whole thing was like a dream.

"Who would have ever thought that could happen," he mused.
 

· (Not even captain of my own destiny)
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Here it is....

Don't know if I buy either story...
 

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