Originally posted by GillDog
I am from the Pacific Northwest and I enjoy spear fishing, but I have a problem. I am interested in getting a halibut but they are quite larger than me. Since I am at a serious disadvantage underwater, I am wondering what I can do after I spear a halibut, since there is a fair to great chance that I won't kill it, I don't really want to be attached to it when it is wounded and towing me off to unknown depths....
We do however dive the Oil rigs off MS and LA. Fish there are similar in size and power to the halibut.
1. NEVER attach either the gun or the shaft cable to YOU! We use a riding rig with SST cable made up to a short length of 3/8 or 1/2" rope to provide a handle for the fish during the Nantucket Sleighride. If done and used correctly the riding rig provides a solid handle that is cleanly and instantly released simply by opening your hand.
2. Study the structure of the fish species you intend to take. Examine skulls and spines to gain a detailed feel for just where to shoot the fish to brain it or cut the spine from any possible shot angle. If you can't expect to kill it stone dead with the shot from the angle you have presented, either move to angle that can be a kill shot or don't shoot.
3. Practice on smaller fish until you can reliably hit a mark the size of that kill spot, then work up to the larger species slowly. Shoot the scale, not the fish!
4. Try to detrmine if there is a "tie off' spot handy before making the shot. If there is no fall back to a missed shot other than "let the fish take the shaft" DO NOT SHOOT! Sequential bungied Floats and line spools work as a backup plan in open water, as do properly rigged drogue chutes for some of the larger open water species. Around places with obstructions both are deadly to YOU!
5. Remember that ANY fish larger than 30 pounds is able to easily kill you in the water if you are tied to him and he ain't hurt bad. I've been pretty well entangled by fish in the 10 pound class too but they don't generally have the strength to strangle you with the shaft line.
6.Stay clear of the line! Remember you can fight the fish in 3 dimensions. Get above or below the plane of the fish movement and watch out for fish that turn back on you. Loops in the line can be deadly if they wrap around and pull up tight on a foot or hand.
FT