Blue_Runner
08-10-2006, 11:45 AM
So, does this mean if I catch a 10 lb channel cat it will be 50% ?
Channel Catfish State Record Is Up for Grabs
Pete Paine's 1971 state record channel catfish was vacated by the Wildlife Commission recently. The fish Paine is holding is a flathead catfish.
Ellerbe angler, Chris Darnell, 12, shows off a nice-sized channel catfish caught from a pond at McKinney Lake State Fish Hatchery during a fish for fun event last summer.
Media: Hi-res versions of these images may be downloaded here. Please credit the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission.
RALEIGH, N.C. (May 20, 2005) — If you’ve ever dreamed of reeling in a state record fish, it’s time to quit dreaming and start fishing. Now that the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission has vacated the long-held channel catfish state record, the new state record is up for grabs — with a catch: this fish must weigh at least 20 pounds.
The old state record, held by Maryville, TN., angler Pete Paine since 1971, was decertified when a photograph in the May issue of Wildlife in North Carolina revealed that the fish Paine caught from Fontana Lake was actually a flathead catfish, a species which grows much larger than the channel cat.
http://www.statefishingrecords.com/northcarolina.htm
Channel Catfish State Record Is Up for Grabs
Pete Paine's 1971 state record channel catfish was vacated by the Wildlife Commission recently. The fish Paine is holding is a flathead catfish.
Ellerbe angler, Chris Darnell, 12, shows off a nice-sized channel catfish caught from a pond at McKinney Lake State Fish Hatchery during a fish for fun event last summer.
Media: Hi-res versions of these images may be downloaded here. Please credit the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission.
RALEIGH, N.C. (May 20, 2005) — If you’ve ever dreamed of reeling in a state record fish, it’s time to quit dreaming and start fishing. Now that the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission has vacated the long-held channel catfish state record, the new state record is up for grabs — with a catch: this fish must weigh at least 20 pounds.
The old state record, held by Maryville, TN., angler Pete Paine since 1971, was decertified when a photograph in the May issue of Wildlife in North Carolina revealed that the fish Paine caught from Fontana Lake was actually a flathead catfish, a species which grows much larger than the channel cat.
http://www.statefishingrecords.com/northcarolina.htm