Current:Home > InvestComplaints, objections swept aside as 15-year-old girl claims record for 101-pound catfish -AlphaFinance Experts
Complaints, objections swept aside as 15-year-old girl claims record for 101-pound catfish
PredictIQ View
Date:2025-04-09 09:23:54
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! (75)
Related
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- California Disney characters are unionizing decades after Florida peers. Hollywood plays a role
- Eagles draft Jeremiah Trotter Jr., son of Philadelphia's Pro Bowl linebacker
- College protesters vow to keep demonstrations as schools shut down encampments amid reports of antisemitism
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Texas Companies Eye Pecos River Watershed for Oilfield Wastewater
- LeBron scores 30, and the Lakers avoid 1st-round elimination with a 119-108 win over champion Denver
- Harvey Weinstein hospitalized after his return to New York from upstate prison
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Now that's cool: Buy a new book, get a used one for free at Ferguson Books in North Dakota
Ranking
- $1 Frostys: Wendy's celebrates end of summer with sweet deal
- Gaza baby girl saved from dying mother's womb after Israeli airstrike dies just days later
- Virginia EMT is latest U.S. tourist arrested in Turks and Caicos after ammo allegedly found in luggage
- Horoscopes Today, April 26, 2024
- Jamaica's Kishane Thompson more motivated after thrilling 100m finish against Noah Lyles
- Former NFL lineman Korey Cunningham found dead in New Jersey at age 28
- Jury finds Wisconsin man guilty in killing, sexual assault of 20-month-old girl
- Brenden Rice, son of Jerry Rice, picked by Chargers in seventh round of NFL draft
Recommendation
Messi injury update: Ankle 'better every day' but Inter Miami star yet to play Leagues Cup
Tom Holland Proves Again He's Zendaya's No. 1 Fan Amid Release of Her New Film Challengers
24 years ago, an officer was dispatched to an abandoned baby. Decades later, he finally learned that baby's surprising identity.
Jelly Roll has 'never felt better' amid months-long break from social media 'toxicity'
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
Are you losing your hair? A dermatologist breaks down some FAQs.
Fire still burning after freight train derails on Arizona-New Mexico state line
Class of 2024 reflects on college years marked by COVID-19, protests and life’s lost milestones