Ok...good questiondead_weight wrote:I couldn't agree more with the comments on how they handled this fish ... one quick pic (or two) and then back in the water. But I'm curious why most of you think it died ?? It appears like it's staying upright on its own and it starts to swim on it's own power near the end of the clip ... why would it die?
I admit I have never caught a musky so I know nothing about releasing them .. however I've released pike that swam swam away in a similar manner and they were fine.
just curious ... and a little bored right now ...
Imagine running around your house full out for 5 minutes and when you stop you dunk your head in a pail of water...what would happen and how long could you hold it there. Big Muskies need to be given a chance to revive before being hoisted out for a picture.
Now think of a Muskie fighting itself to exhaustion and then being removed from the water for 4 minutes. Irreversible damage can occur due to lack of oxygen
Muskies that big will also generate acids in their bodies that make recovery harder and are due to stress, the more stress the harder to recover.
Also the handeling of the fish in the manner they did likely removed a lot of slime from the fish which is important for protection against bacterias such as lymphosarcoma(sp?).
Just because the fish appeared to be upright has no bearing on the damage done and likely would have sunk and died...but that is just my opinion.
I have seen muskies that even with proper handeling were touch and go on the revival....I spent 45 min holding one once until it swam away under it's own power...the fish in the video clearly did not swim away under it's own power.
Too bad.....fish that big are rare on the Ottawa and could be 20-30 yrs old.
Shame to mishandle a big one like that...hopefully they will learn and do better next time.