ALASKA'S NEWSPAPER

| Updated: 12:24 AM

Kent Carmichael of Kansas poses with a monster halibut he caught Tuesday, June 28, 2011, in the Gulf of Alaska, about 90 minutes offshore from Pelican in Southeast Alaska. The fish wasn't weighed but it measured 94 inches, said Highliner Lodge owner Steve Daniels. According to the Alaska Tide Book, Daniels said, that converts to 466.2 pounds. The state record for a sport-caught halibut is 459 pounds.

Photo Courtesey of Highliner Lodge

Kent Carmichael of Kansas poses with a monster halibut he caught Tuesday, June 28, 2011, in the Gulf of Alaska, about 90 minutes offshore from Pelican in Southeast Alaska. The fish wasn't weighed but it measured 94 inches, said Highliner Lodge owner Steve Daniels. According to the Alaska Tide Book, Daniels said, that converts to 466.2 pounds. The state record for a sport-caught halibut is 459 pounds.

Cheney Lake rainbow trout fishing

Patrick Lee tends to the 13-14 inch rainbow trout that his wife Michelle Lee caught in the recently stocked Cheney Lake in East Anchorage on Monday, 21, 2012.  According the Alaska Dept. of Fish and Game website over 600, large rainbow trout were released earlier this month.

Anglers try their luck catching rainbow trout at the recently stocked Cheney Lake in East Anchorage on Monday, 21, 2012. According the Alaska Dept. of Fish and Game website, Cheney Lake has been stocked twice this month, with over 600 large rainbow trout.

PHOTO GALLERY

First fish

Billy Green, Vice President of Production for Copper River Seafoods, delivered the first Copper River salmon of the season to chef/owners Patrick Hoogerhyde an Al Levinson of Bridge Restaurant on Friday morning May 18, 2012. A 30 pound king salmon, in photo, caught by Copper River Seafoods partner Pip Fillingham and a 7 pound sockeye were the first fish delivered and will be served at dinner service in the evening.

The first Copper River salmon were flown to Anchorage and Seattle Friday, May 18, 2012.

Fishing Fun

A hooked fish is headed into the net at the Great Alaska Sportsman Show Friday March 30, 2012 at Ben Boeke Ice Arena. Students from the Anchorage School District life skills programs were treated to fishing and exhibits on animals and fish Friday morning prior to public opening courtesy of the show, Safari Club International - Alaska Chapter, the Alaska Dept. of Fish and Game and the school district.

Life skills students test the trout pond waters at the Great Alaska Sportsman Show Friday March 30, 2012 at Ben Boeke Ice Arena.

One that didn't get a weigh estimated at 466 pounds

Lodge didn't have a certified scale for leviathan catch

Kent Carmichael of Kansas has made fishing trips to Alaska with his dad and his brother for more than a decade before this summer but had yet to catch the big one.

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"The big joke has always been: I'm the one that never caught the 100-pound halibut," Carmichael said.

The joking will have to stop from now on, because the 62-year-old hardware store owner from Ulysses, Kan., blew past the century mark -- and then some -- Tuesday, when he caught a 466-pound halibut in the Gulf of Alaska.

The catch won't top the official state sport-fishing record of 459 pounds, because a certified scale was not available to weigh the fish in Pelican. Instead, a conversion table in the Alaska Tide Book was used to determine the weight of the 94-inch fish. Carmichael said he was a little disappointed about not making the record book, but he's thrilled to have a story to tell his grandkids about.

"It took four guys to get the fish on the floor," he said. "It covered the back end of the boat."

Since 2006, the Carmichaels have made their annual fishing trip to the Highliner Lodge in Pelican, a small commercial fishing town west of Juneau.

"This is basically the only time we go fishing, when we go to Alaska," Carmichael said.

The buzz when they arrived at the lodge was about an angler who caught a 375-pound halibut on June 24, breaking the lodge record by more than 100 pounds. Lodge owner Steve Daniels said he thought it was the biggest fish he would ever see.

Then Carmichael's monster showed up.

When Carmichael hooked the fish, he thought he may have caught his line on the ocean floor.

"I hooked this thing that I could not move," he said.

After a few minutes of testing the line, the boat captain told Carmichael it was probably a 200-pounder. Forty-five minutes later, Carmichael managed to get the fish in sight for the first time.

"It didn't even look like a halibut, it was so huge," he said.

The fish dove and worked its way under the boat, where it tangled itself in the line of Elmo Carmichael, Kent's 89-year-old father, who has been coming to Alaska to fish for almost 30 years.

"As luck would have it, it tangled up right at the weights," said Carmichael. "There was a lot of luck in this deal."

The halibut started diving for the bottom, causing each fisherman's reel to smoke, and the father and son teamed to slow the fish down and prevent it from diving.

After wrestling with the fish for another 30 minutes, it appeared again and the boat captain was ready with a harpoon that turned out to be too puny for the monstrous fish.

When he struck the halibut in the head, the harpoon shaft was too short to go through to the other side. When the fish started thrashing, it bent the shaft of the harpoon about 45 degrees. To avoid losing the fish, the captain pushed a shark hook through the fish's lower jaw.

Halibut charters in Southeast Alaska face new regulations this year that restrict the size and number of flatfish clients can keep. Carmichael got to keep his big fish because the Highliner Lodge owns permits to fish both sides of a boundary line near Cape Spencer where the regulations change. On one side, people on guided trips can keep one halibut a day if it is no longer than 37 inches. On the other side, they can keep two a day of any size. Daniels said GPS tracking shows which side of the line the boat is on.

The fish was processed and packaged at the Highliner Lodge, Carmichael said it cost around $110 to ship six 50-pound boxes of halibut back to Kansas, two boxes for himself, two for his dad, who lives in Hays, Kan., and two for brother Craig, who lives in Kansas City.

All expect friends to start inviting themselves over for dinner.

"They called us the Fish House at one time, because people loved to come by our house," said Elmo's wife, Lee Carmichael. "You can't find good halibut in Kansas. We'll be the Fish House again."

Kent Carmichael said Kansas is known for good fishing, but it doesn't compare with what he experienced in Alaska.

"It was the catch of a lifetime," he said. "There aren't even fish in my county that would be bait for this fish."


Reach Jeremy Peters at jpeters@adn.com or 257-4335.

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