This gator snapper weighed about 50 pounds.
“Dick, bring your camera!”
Easier said than done.
I had just turned around in the canoe to take a photo of a big cypress tree when a strong wind gust blew me broadside into a barely sunken snag. And I was having a devil of a time trying to get free.
Carl, 100 yards down river had just dived to try and find a huge river cooter that had skedaddled off a fallen tree trunk into 5 feet of water. The cooter had disappeared beneath the undercut riverbank but it was obvious that Carl had seen something else while he was submerged.
Finally my snag decided to release my canoe and I was on the way towards Carl.
Carl directed me to haul out across the narrow river from him, ready my camera, and then he dove again. When he next emerged in a shallower spot it was obvious why he was excited for he brought with him a beautiful 50 pound Apalachicola alligator snapper,
Macrochelys apalachicolae. Not big as the species goes (the record is 318 pounds!) it was still an unexpected find.
Within minutes photos were made, the snapper had returned to its deeper water den, and we, still buffeted by strong headwinds, were again making our slow way downriver, both wondering whether the headwinds or we would win the gusty battle. Eventually we did.
Judge for yourselves. Enough said.
From pingpong ball sized eggs come these 50 to 300 pound giants.
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