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THE
WORLD'S BIGGEST CARP EVER CAUGHT ON ROD & LINE
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IN THE
HISTORY OF SPORT FISHING!
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Jean-Francois Helias

Jean-Francois Helias'
Fishing Adventures Thailand team is known internationally
to be the most professional pro guides for freshwater
sport fishing in Southeast Asia. That team of pro guides
has accomplished numerous angling achievements, including
up to today racking up an amazing total of 129 IGFA world
records (114 homologated + 15 currently pending an
homologation), or setting several non-official records
such as the record of the Southeast Asian biggest fish
ever caught on rod and line they still hold up to this day
for the catch on August 26, 2001 of a gigantic 185 Kg
Arapaima .
Very recently, on July 2,
2007, Jean-Francois Helias' Fishing Adventures Thailand
team did it again in a very impressive way!
This time with the catch by Fishing Adventures Thailand
pro guide "Kik" of the world's biggest carp ever caught on
rod and line in the history of sport fishing. Kik who has
been guiding in Jean-Francois' team since its inception is
known locally as the most complete local angler of the
country. He is also Thailand's top rod builder and top
handmaker of top water lures. Though he does not fish much
as he used to do in his younger days, prefering guiding
visiting anglers nowadays and making them catching our
Thai fish species, he still has it under his skin.
On
July 2, 2007, while guiding an American client at Bung Sam
Lan Lake, Kik had brought with him a brand new fishing rod
he had just finished to custom build. His intention was
only to hook up and to play one or two Mekong giant
catfish so he could test his rod. His karma on that day
was gonna turn in a way he would have never expected.
Instead of a hardfighting Mekong catfish, Kik hooked up
instead the kind of catch of a lifetime some anglers would
sell their soul to the devil for. A Siamese Giant Carp or
Catlocarpio siamensis we estimated weighing just over 120
kg (265 pounders). She may be a tiny bit bigger but 120
kilos is already very fine with us. On the opposite of
lots of anglers we have always prefered estimating the
weight of our fish catches at the minimum rather than
exagerating or hyping it.
Even with a bunch of kilos missing from her real weight,
Kik's catch is anyway the biggest Siamese carp ever caught
here in Thailand on rod and line, and on top of it, the
world's biggest carp ever caught on rod and line!
Isnt' that catch twice
bigger the size of the current IGFA All Tackle world
record for that species? Yes it is! Has the fish been
caught according to the IGFA rules? Yes! Does it qualify
then for a new record? No!
The only scales we had that day at the lake were our usual
certified 100 kg scales. No way we would have thought we
were gonna catch that gigantic carp.
Knowing she was weighing well over the 100 kg mark there
was no need for us to bother with the weighing procedure.
We had no other option than accepting losing the
opportunity to submit that exceptional catch with the IGFA
for a record. By the way I have bought last month from the
USA a set of 500lb digital scales specially because I
thought we may have to weight fish catches over the 100 kg
mark some of these days. The 500lb digital scales are
still at my home.... waiting for me to find free time so I
can bring them to the calibration institute to have them
certified. Too busy guiding and fishing, as usual not
enough time to do everything I would or I should!
Kik's gigantic carp catch is the second carp ever taken at
Bung Sam Lan Lake from the 5 "super biggies" stocked at
the lake 23 years ago. These 5 carp coming from the wild,
exactly from the Chaopraya River in the Ratchburi province
where they got netted, were already all weighing above the
90 kilos (almost 200 pounds) mark when sold to the lake
owners.

In over two decades, only
one of them has ever been landed by an angler. It is the
estimated 110 kilos Siamese giant carp caught by our local
friend Lung Dam. Any dedicated European carp angler knows
about that famous photo showing Lung Dam with a straw hat
posing behind his capture. A picture which has been
published in almost every European fishing magazine.
For the anecdote, that very giant carp caught by Lung Dam
was so close to be caught a second time last year. We were
guiding a return client from England, Nicholas Dean, a
lovable guy and a very experienced angler as well. Nick
hooked up Lung Dam's over 200 lb carp - no mistake about
it - it was her 200 % with her very unique pattern of dark
brown scales nuances on her body. Nick played her the
right way all along the fight. He did not let the powerful
carp entangling his line around the close neighboring
structures. He was doing very fine. The carp got finally
tamed, almost ready to be netted.
Apparently, the gigantic size of the carp appearing at the
surface in front of him had Nick losing his focus for a
few seconds....enough for the carp to play the usual
Siamese giant carp trick which is to play tamed, and all
of a sudden doing a last and unexpected rush towards the
angler, passing just under his rod and his feet, and
escaping under the bungalow by running through its wooden
stilts. Next the line is entangled around the stilts. The
carp got free by either getting unhooked or breaking the
line....
Nick had lost in a split second a catch of a lifetime, his
rights to be proud of his achievement, to deserve fame and
exposure in the angling press media. Sad, very sad
situation. We were all sad about it. Having someone you
like losing an exceptional fish is not only mentally
painful for the angler but for his guide too. It was the
kind of day you wish everything you had just experienced
did not happen....
Though Kik had no problem to land successfully the grandma
carp, we had to cope next with a bunch of difficulties to
manage a proper photo session. For such a catch of a
lifetime no need to say how much one wants to immortalize
both the fish and the moment of life at its best. We are
in the monsoon season. It was raining and a heavy storm
was coming. So we had to be fast and to hurry everything.
Also when like us you are totally into conservation and
into catch and release you do not want to keep that kind
of exceptional fish too long. You want a few good pics and
release next the fish in the very best conditions to
assure its survival.
Let me tell you the task did not go easy. Kik had called
an employee of Bung Sam Lan to help him handling the
mammoth carp for the photo session. But the duo were not
enough strong to lift and keep the carp out of the water
while my wife Lek & Kik's wife Pim were taking the photos.
The boys were struggling in the water to handle the
powerful grandma carp, getting slapped a few times by her
powerful tail. Almost all the pics taken by Lek & Pim
sadly turned out bad. A pity for such a catch of a
lifetime! I had to delete almost all of them except for
about a dozen of almost decent ones I saved.
Our Fishing Adventures Thailand team has now three
non-official but first class records: a 185 Kg Arapaima
catch which is still today the Southeast Asian biggest
fish ever caught on rod and line; that 120 kg Siamese
Giant Carp, the world's biggest carp caught also on rod
and line; and a 100 kg freshwater giant stingray we fought
for 6 hours which is from my knowledge the biggest of its
kind ever caught in Thailand on rod and line.
You know what? The Fishing Adventures Thailand rocks & is
here to stay! So don't be surprised if in a near future
you receive an email informing you we have finally
succeeded to land a Mekong giant catfish over the 100 kg
mark.....
www.anglingthailand.com
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