Current:Home > ScamsComplaints, objections swept aside as 15-year-old girl claims record for 101-pound catfish -Prime Capital Blueprint
Complaints, objections swept aside as 15-year-old girl claims record for 101-pound catfish
View
Date:2025-04-15 00:14:47
Not everyone seems happy about Jaylynn Parker’s blue catfish record, but when has universal happiness ever been achieved in any doings involving the human race?
Suffice to say that, after displaying a few loose hairs initially judged as made for splitting, the 101.11-pound blue cat taken from the Ohio River on April 17 at New Richmond in Clermont County was attested by the organization that makes such calls as the biggest ever landed in the state.
Replaced last weekend in the all-tackle category of the record book minded by the Outdoor Writers of Ohio was the 96-pound blue cat fished from the Ohio River in 2009 by Chris Rolph of Williamsburg.
How’s this for serendipity? Parker’s fish was weighed on the same scale as Rolph’s.
Outdoors:15-year-old's record catfish could bring change to rules
Here’s more: Rolph’s fish was identified not from personal inspection by a wildlife biologist as stipulated by rule but by photograph, same as the fish landed by the 15-year-old Parker.
That established, a blue catfish doesn’t have many look-alikes, making a photograph fairly compelling evidence.
So was swept away one potential objection, that a fishery biologist didn’t inspect the fish and declare it to be what everyone knew it was. Nor, as the rules specified, did anyone from the five-member Fish Record Committee get a look at the fish before it was released alive.
Someone had raised a doubt about added weights, although three Ohio Division of Wildlife officers sent to examine the legality of the catching probably wouldn’t have missed an attempt at shenanigans.
Two main differences in the catching and handling of the last two record blue catfish figured into the noise about recognition.
Rolph’s fish was taken with a rod and reel, Parker’s on a bank line tied to a float dangling bait. Both methods are legal as long as requirements written into Ohio’s fishing rules are followed, which in both cased they were.
The other departure was that Rolph’s fish ended up dead, while Parker’s is somewhere doing pretty much what it did before it was caught. Parker’s fish’s timeline didn’t include a trip on ice to where it could be checked out.
Good on her.
People demanding a category differentiating fish caught on a bank line from fish caught by rod and reel didn’t get their wish. Still, depending on who’s talking, a few rule tweaks could yet happen.
veryGood! (841)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Los Angeles to pay $8M to man who spent 12 years in prison for armed robberies he didn’t commit
- How to talk to older people in your life about scams
- Poland’s opposition party leaders sign a coalition deal after collectively winning election
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Former New Mexico State basketball players charged with sexual assault
- Historic: NWSL signs largest broadcast deal in women's sports, adds additional TV partners
- Class-action lawsuit alleges unsafe conditions at migrant detention facility in New Mexico
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Driver charged in 2022 crash that killed Los Angeles sheriff’s recruit, injured 24 others
Ranking
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Illinois lawmakers OK new nuclear technology but fail to extend private-school scholarships
- FBI Director Christopher Wray and government's landlord in dustup over new FBI headquarters
- Sasha Skochilenko, Russian artist who protested war in Ukraine, faces possible 8-year prison sentence
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- $242 million upgrade planned at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport
- AP Week in Pictures: North America
- The 2024 Grammy Award nominations are about to arrive. Here’s what to know
Recommendation
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
Burmese python weighing 198 pounds is captured in Florida by snake wranglers: Watch
Maryland woman wins over $200,000 from Racetrax lottery game after husband criticizes her betting strategy
Man arrested in Nebraska in alleged assault of former US Sen. Martha McSally
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
Biggest stars left off USMNT Nations League roster. Latest injury update for Pulisic, Weah
Tuohy family paid Michael Oher $138,000 from proceeds of 'The Blind Side' movie, filing shows
Congress no closer to funding government before next week's shutdown deadline