This is scary. What would you have done differently.

I saw that video this afternoon, I think the only other thing John could have done, is once the leader touch was made, & the entire event recorded, would be to realize you were out matched & cut the leader. The amazing part is he never dropped the rod, managed to get back in the kayak & land the fish. When that Tarpon made its first jump it looked like a Mako.
 
Get a bigger boat...
🛟 Roccus maureen and I saw the video earlier when George post it,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,we said the same thing get a bigger boat 🛥️,,,,,,,,,funny you said it too before us ,,,,,,,,,,,glad John made it (out) ok ,,,,,or should I say back (in) 🛶 the yak 😜 ;),,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,><)))):>
><)))):>
 
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I saw that video this afternoon, I think the only other thing John could have done, is once the leader touch was made, & the entire event recorded, would be to realize you were out matched & cut the leader. The amazing part is he never dropped the rod, managed to get back in the kayak & land the fish. When that Tarpon made its first jump it looked like a Mako.
I agree with you completely, John. I don't think anyone denies J.S's ability as a top-notch angler. I suspect very few of us could have hooked, fought, and held on to what had to be a Tarpon of well over 100# on that tackle and from a kayak, no less.

What concerns me is that far too may "experts" have serious, if not sometimes fatal accidents because they believe they are experienced enough to avoid the potential dangers of situations like this. What if John hit his head going overboard and was unconscious? I don't think his vest was self-inflating as he mentioned hitting the inflate button once he realized what happened.

I certainly don't believe anyone would have thought any less of his accomplishment if he just cut the leader as you suggested. As the old saying goes, "No fish is worth dying for".
 

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