The Virginian-Pilot
©
VIRGINIA BEACH
This was supposed to be a striped-bass tournament, but you wouldn't know it by all of the attention being paid Thursday to the big-fish scales at the Virginia Beach Fishing Center.
As striped-bass anglers shuffled their catches in wheelbarrows to the weigh-ins for the ninth annual Mid-Atlantic Rockfish Shootout, most of the crowd descended on a boom straining to lift a huge bluefin tuna onto another set of scales about a hundred yards down the dock.
J.T. Holt of Virginia Beach was on Team Pimp Fish Pirates when the tuna hit a parachute rig designed for the event's targeted species.
After a 35-minute fight and a short ride down the beach to Rudee Inlet, Holt's fish tipped the scales at 265 pounds. It could be worth several thousands of dollars - partly in tournament winnings and more from a tuna buyer on scene to purchase the fish.
A trio of anglers on the Just Add H2O - not fishing in the tournament - brought a 208-pounder to the docks an hour before Holt's fish.
The possibility that a team in a rockfish tournament had a shot at a big tuna might come as a surprise to many. Tuna usually are caught dozens of miles out to sea, while rockfishing is confined to an area between the beach and 3 miles out.
But anglers who have been working the coast for striper the past couple of weeks have run into large schools of bluefin that have followed migrating striper into coastal waters, feeding on the same menhaden their smaller brethren are eating.
Most often, the big tuna overpower rigs set up for striped bass - stripping off hundreds of yards of line, mangling lures and burning up reel drags. But anglers have gotten smarter, dispatching heavier tackle to troll their lures. When they get lucky, the tuna hit the bigger rods and reels, giving them at least a fighting chance against fish known for long, tackle-busting runs.
"We had five tuna bites (Thursday)," said Capt. Pat Foster, who runs the Wave Runner III on which Holt and his teammates were fishing. "I've brought three to the docks in the last few weeks.
"It's absolutely amazing what's going on out there right now. We see it every now and then, but not for this long."
The fish caught on Foster's boat pales in comparison with a tuna caught a couple of days ago off the northeastern coast of Japan. The 593-pound fish brought a Japanese-record $736,000 at auction Wednesday.
Rhode Island tuna buyer Dennis Gore said the purchase, which eclipsed a 10-year-old record of $369,000, was a publicity stunt.
News organizations in Japan agree, writing that the buyer bid high to help raise money for the victims of last year's earthquake and tsunami.
That fish filets out to about $1,238 per pound.
Gore said Holt's tuna should bring anywhere from $10 to $25 a pound, depending on the meat color from a core sample and the fat content taken from a slice of the tail.
If it wins the tuna division of the rockfish tournament - the first in the event's history - it could be worth $3,500 in a $100-a-team, winner-take-all competition.
"It's hard to say right now," said Gore, who put the fish on a George's Seafood truck for transportation to Boston, where it will be flown today to Tokyo. "It's going to depend on the market and what the fish looks like when it gets there on Monday.
"They're very particular."
The Rockfish Shootout continues through Saturday, and weather forecasts are favorable for lots of big striper and a few more tuna to be brought to the scales.
When the smoke clears and the attention returns to rockfish, $156,074 will be paid out to the winners.
But it's doubtful anybody will forget this incredible run of bluefin tuna taking place a lure's throw off the Virginia Beach Oceanfront.
Lee Tolliver, (757) 222-5844, lee.tolliver@pilotonline.com

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PETA
How long before PETA makes an announcement?
curious
Does Mr. Holt need a commercial license to sell his catch to a tuna dealer? The article does not mention if he has that license or not, I was just curious.
I have my 320's locked and
I have my 320's locked and loaded!!!
Blue Fin
Don't know why but see my first attempt here was removed. Would like to know what violations I racked up?
Second try, here goes: This fish is pretty much worthless. I can tell by looking at the pic that it was not handled properly. Yes, the markets in Japan are paying big money for them but ignorance can be costly, especially here should he try and sell it. So much depends on once the fish is hooked up, even the gear it's hooked up on, how quick to the boat, how it is handled in the cockpit.. Captains that know are getting big bucks from the rep out of RI but this fish probably won't even get a look. These are eating machines, they feed on whatever they want, butter fish, rocks.. if it swims, they eat it.
The fact that it is being
The fact that it is being hanged for a photo op gives creedence to your observation. Not how I treat my catch being ready for the table.
Maybe Lee removed it, he can
Maybe Lee removed it, he can be a little sensitive.
Clarification
Self....not being sensitive here, but want to clear up a few things. The fish was hanging from the scales used to weigh larger fish. Great for photos, but a necessary tool to weigh the fish, not a staged photo Op. And I think I've explained this before, but I don't have the power to remove comments. That has to be done by one of the online editors. Just so you guys know. Call it being sensitive if you want.
just
a tad....
Read tomorrow's story
The Rhode Island rep was on site, did core and tail samples, and shipped it off to Japan....it's not going to make anybody rich, but it's going to bring in pretty decent money. It's not Pat's first rodeo, he knows how to handle the fish to make it as valuable as possible. And so much depends on the fish itself - color of meat and fat content. This fish was deemed mid-grade and definitely good enough to buy and ship off.
Feeding On?
Does anyone know what these Large Blue Fin are feeding on? Stripers? I read tht in the famous Japan market one went for a pretty penny on the opening day.