North Carolina State Record Flathead Catfish
On July 20 Tyler Barnes caught a record 78-pound 14-ounce flathead catfish on the Neuse River.
North carolina state record flathead catfish. Lake Gaston is home to some massive blue catfish as Bairds fish is the fourth state record for blue catfish to be caught from the lake. The North Carolina state record flathead catfish and the NC. Just 15 days later Pikeville angler Tyler Barnes caught a 78-pound 14-ounce flathead catfish from the Neuse River.
This time its the new NC record flathead catfish. Lake Gaston is home to some massive blue catfish as Bairds fish is the fourth state record for blue catfish to be caught from the lake. Fifteen days later Pikeville angler Tyler Barnes broke the 15-year-old freshwater fish state record for a flathead catfish after landing a 78-pound 14-ounce whopper from the Neuse River on July 20.
Mar 04 2006 STATE CATFISH TALK. North Carolina State Record Flathead Catfish. Two state record catfish within a month is rare ironically its happened twice in North Carolina.
17 Newbergers prediction became a reality when the Fayetteville angler hauled in a 78-pound 52-inch flathead from the Cape Fear River above Lock and Dam 3 in Cumberland County. If the catch is officially confirmed by the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission not only does this secure the new record but it does so by a comfortable four pound margin. Jump to Latest Follow 1 - 11 of 11 Posts.
58 rows channel catfish. Jul 07 2020 In the weigh-in video above the enthusiastic party gets what appears to be an official weight on the massive blue catfish 1219 pounds. LOCAL NORTH CAROLINA TALK.
Jul 24 2020 Almost 15 years ago Fayetteville angler Brian Newberger pulled a 78-pound 52-inch flathead catfish out of the Cape Fear River above Lock and Dam No3 to set a state record. 51 rows May 31 2020 North Carolina. Turns out the fish that broke Bowdens state record from 1970 wasnt a channel catfish but a flathead catfish a discovery made 34 years later after an article in the May 2005 issue of Wildlife in North Carolina printed an old photograph of Pete Paine holding up his record-breaking channel cat that was actually a flathead.