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(Click on photo for larger image.)

James Mitchell with his state-record, 64 1/2-pound blue
catfish.
(FWC photo by Chris Paxton)
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Caryville man catches record blue
catfish
August 8, 2008
Contact: Chris Paxton, 850-265-3676
Long-time Washington County resident James
Mitchell caught a new state-record blue catfish late Monday
afternoon on the Choctawhatchee River.
The state-record blue catfish weighed 64 pounds,
8 ounces and was 53 1/2 inches long. The fish is 3 pounds
larger than the previous record, a 61-pound, 8-ounce blue cat
that came from Little Escambia Creek north of Pensacola.
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission fisheries biologists Chris Paxton and Claire Mangum
met with Mitchell on Tuesday in Bonifay and weighed his fish on
certified scales.
The 64-year-old Mitchell, who is disabled but
still enjoys fishing, fished a favorite spot on the
Choctawhatchee Monday near Caryville. He caught the record
catfish at sundown but needed the help of his son and grandson
to pull the fish over the side of his boat.
He said the 10-minute fight left him worn out.
Mitchell fishes for catfish often on the river
and uses bream, which is his bait of choice.
He caught the blue cat on a hand-sized bluegill, 6-foot rod and
bait-caster reel loaded with 50-pound-test line.
“The bigger the bream the better,” Mitchell
said. He catches his bream using either a fly rod or cane
pole.
Within the past couple of months, he’s caught
big blues or channel cats, he’s not sure which, out of the same
stretch of the river, weighing 40 1/4 and 41 1/2 pounds.
While blue catfish are found in most of the
rivers and some creeks in the Panhandle over to the Suwannee
River, they are not native to the area. They were
originally found in rivers and tributaries in the Midwest and
the Mississippi River drainage. Exactly how they made it
to Florida waterways is unknown.
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