Monday, March 2, 2015

02/03/2015: One big fish is making news, but there are many more out there

Fisherman wowing listeners with tall tales of behemoth catches is a story as old as time. Now, with the help of the Internet, some storytellers can prove it, National Geographic reports.

And, that’s exactly what Dino Ferrari did after he recently reeled in a 280-pound catfish in Italy’s Po River. Ferrari says he wrestled with the catfish for more than a half hour before he successfully met the beast.
 
http://events.nationalgeographic.com/exhibits/2015/03/26/monster-fish-search-last-river-giants/
There are lots out there....

He took photos and video with his colossal catch before ultimately releasing the creature back into the river.

The photos and footage are amazing for anglers and web-surfers alike. It’s not everyday you encounter a monster fish … unless you’re Zeb Hogan.

Hogan, a National Geographic explorer and host of the Nat Geo WILD series Monster Fish, will talk about his search for freshwater giants at a National Geographic Live event on March 26 in Washington DC.

While the talk is one-night only, Washington DC tourists and residents can join Hogan on a journey to find and protect the world’s largest freshwater fish at the National Geographic Museum.

The exhibit, Monster Fish: In Search of the Last River Giants, will run from March 26, 2015 to October 11, 2015. Guests will meet about 20 of these gargantuan creatures from river basins in Asia, Australia and North and South America.

The exhibit will feature five life-size sculptures, as long 20 feet, of these big fish—including a climbable sawfish. There will also be a gallery of aquariums with live fish, including a juvenile alligator gar, to showcase multiple healthy freshwater ecosystems from around the world.

Visitors can test their survival skills in the obstacle course game ‘Monster Size Me’ and help Hogan complete a series of scientific missions in the touchtable game ‘A Monster Mission.’

The littlest museum guests be gone fishing with magnet poles along a stylized riverbank where catches can carefully be released back into the river through clear chutes, while older visitors can take the ‘Fishin’ Decision’ digital challenge to see how many fish species they can quickly decide to keep or release.

For more information about this interactive, family-friendly exhibit, please visit National Geographic Museum’s Monster Fish.


Read the article HERE.

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