TEXAS FRESHWATER
FISHERIES CENTER
5550 F.M. 2495, Athens, TX 75752 & Fax (903)
676-3474 www.worldbirdingcenter.org

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - March
10, 2009
Media Contact: Larry Hodge, (903) 670-2255
This Big One Didn't Get Away
Latest ShareLunker is one of a kind, and a heart-warming story, too.
ATHENS, Texas-ShareLunker program
manager David Campbell often says anglers who donate big bass to the
program are the best conservationists in Texas, and that statement
is backed up by what happened at Lake Fork Saturday.
Guide James Caldemeyer was
fishing with clients Brian Ketterer and Shannon Spear of Conroe, and
they were looking forward to catching some big fish.
Lake
Fork guide James Caldemeyer (center) and clients Shannon Spear
(left) and Brian Ketterer (right) saved this 14.68-pound largemouth
while fishing on Lake Fork March 7. The fish was 27 inches long
and 21.5 inches in girth. It became ShareLunker No. 465. TPWD Photo © 2009,
David Campbell |
They had no idea what they were about
to get into when they pulled into a small cove with nearly a dozen
other boats. "With my polarized
sunglasses I could see a fish swimming slowly near the surface, and
it looked like she was struggling," said Caldemeyer. "I
caught her with my net. I could see she was a gigantic fish and that
she was in trouble. My concern was for the welfare of the fish, so
I netted her and put her into the livewell and told my clients that
we needed to take her in so her air bladder could be punctured-I
didn't have a needle with me."
Asking paying clients to give up hours
of fishing time on Lake Fork during the peak lunker season in March
might seem like a risky thing to do, but Ketterer and Spear shared
Caldemeyer's concern for
the fish. "They couldn't have been happier if they had
caught her," Caldemeyer said. "They were just thrilled
to be part of the experience of helping this big fish."
Caldemeyer
immediately called Cameron Burnett at Lake Fork Marina, an official
ShareLunker holding station, and told him they were on their way in
with a fish that tipped his scale at 14.5 pounds. Burnett contacted
David Campbell, and when the fish arrived, Burnett met Caldemeyer at
the ramp with a bag to transport the fish to a holding tank. Burnett
is experienced at "fizzing" bass, or puncturing the air
bladder to release air so the fish is able to submerge and swim upright.
"He
let a lot of air out of her," Caldemeyer said. "She
started to get upright and floated to the top a couple of times but swam back
down. We monitored her until David Campbell got there." The certified
scale at the marina weighed the fish in at 14.68 pounds.
Campbell, of course, assumed that
the fish had been caught by hook and line and asked, "Who's
the lucky angler?"
"We all are," Caldemeyer
replied. "There was a big crowd
around, so I took David aside and told him what had happened. I could
have said I had caught it, but my ethics would not let me say that.
My concern was for the fish and its welfare, not for being able to
say I'd caught it.
I was just trying to do the right thing."
After contacting Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department game wardens, who had no objections, Campbell accepted the
fish into the ShareLunker program. "James Caldemeyer saved the
life of this fish," Campbell
said. "It looks very healthy."
"If genetic testing shows the
fish to be a pure Florida largemouth bass, it will be used in our selective
breeding program," said Allen
Forshage, director of the Texas Freshwater Fisheries Center. This on-going
program stocks ShareLunker offspring into public waters in an attempt
to increase the size and number of trophy bass caught in Texas. "We've
all heard stories about the big one that got away. This is the big
one that didn't."
As for Caldemeyer and his clients,
after the big fish-now ShareLunker
No. 465--was safely on its way to Athens, they resumed their fishing
trip. The biggest fish of the day weighed about four pounds, but no
one complained. We were on Cloud Nine all day because of the
way the morning started, Caldemeyer said.