Ambassadorhawg
11-29-2010, 06:18 PM
For the second year in a row, my wife, daughter and I shot out to Havasu immediately after an early Turkey Day meal with our family. We stayed the entire weekend.
The weather was not so good with lots of wind and bone chilling temps most days.
But on the one day with the warmest temps and least amount of wind, we headed down to Sand Point Marina for some Carpin'...
This year, there was some hawgs swimming around inside the marina! The fish are usually around 5-8 pounds. This year, they were 12-20 pounds!!!
We only landed one and got dusted by another one. I always use my ultra-light rig with 6 pound test to make it as fun as possible.
Talk about SCREAMIN' runs!!! Geeez, these fish were scary to fight. Drag burning runs for up to several seconds at a time made for some great fun. My daughter was pinned to the edge of a dock as her fish ran down and under. I got the whole thing on video, too.
She fought her first hook up for a good 2-3 minutes before my wife scooped it up in the net. It was sooo exciting! That fish went about 13 pounds, easily doubling her personal best.
She then hooked another one, a BIG one. This was a 20 pounder, I am sure. It burned drag hard and I was not feeling real good about the end result. But she hung in there and gained most of the line back until the thing was doing deep "death circles" like a tuna. It was quite a sight.
Sadly, the line finally broke and that fish went bye-bye.
The one she landed was the smallest fish of the pack....
'hawg
The weather was not so good with lots of wind and bone chilling temps most days.
But on the one day with the warmest temps and least amount of wind, we headed down to Sand Point Marina for some Carpin'...
This year, there was some hawgs swimming around inside the marina! The fish are usually around 5-8 pounds. This year, they were 12-20 pounds!!!
We only landed one and got dusted by another one. I always use my ultra-light rig with 6 pound test to make it as fun as possible.
Talk about SCREAMIN' runs!!! Geeez, these fish were scary to fight. Drag burning runs for up to several seconds at a time made for some great fun. My daughter was pinned to the edge of a dock as her fish ran down and under. I got the whole thing on video, too.
She fought her first hook up for a good 2-3 minutes before my wife scooped it up in the net. It was sooo exciting! That fish went about 13 pounds, easily doubling her personal best.
She then hooked another one, a BIG one. This was a 20 pounder, I am sure. It burned drag hard and I was not feeling real good about the end result. But she hung in there and gained most of the line back until the thing was doing deep "death circles" like a tuna. It was quite a sight.
Sadly, the line finally broke and that fish went bye-bye.
The one she landed was the smallest fish of the pack....
'hawg