First Sponsored
Fish Caught In Maryland $1,000,000 Fishing Challenge
Tilghman man wins
$100 in merchandise from Clyde’s Sport Shop in Baltimore
ANNAPOLIS — David Daisey of Tilghman has caught the first
sponsored fish of the Maryland $1,000,000 Fishing Challenge. On June 17,
Daisey caught a 25-inch striped bass (tag #8) near the Sharps Island
Lighthouse. The fish is worth $100 in merchandise from Clyde’s Sport Shop
located at 2307 Hammonds Ferry Road in Baltimore.
Since the tournament kicked off on June 3, 52 tagged fish including 40
largemouth bass, nine striped bass, two croaker and one white perch, have
been caught and certified by Maryland Department of Natural Resources
(DNR) Fisheries Service biologists.
”The croakers are coming! As expected, we are seeing more tagged croakers
being caught in the contest,” said Martin L. Gary, DNR Fisheries
Ecologist. “The bite is best for croaker in the lower Bay and Tangier
Sound, but we are beginning to get nice reports out of the mid-Bay area as
well.”
The lucky anglers who landed tagged fish this week will receive a $25 gift
certificate to Boater’s World and a Maryland $1,000,000 Fishing Challenge
t-shirt. They will also be entered into the drawing to play for the $1
million prize. The below list also includes fish that were caught in
previous weeks but had yet to be certified or recorded:
June 21
• Derek Moyer of Alexandria, VA, caught a 17.9-inch largemouth bass the
Potomac River near the Wilson Bridge.
• James W. Bishop of Perry Hall caught a 15-inch largemouth bass on Dundee
Creek.
• Michael A. Ferrara of Baltimore caught an 18-inch largemouth bass on the
Sassafras River in Forman Creek.
June 20
• George Dobash of Joppa caught a 15-inch largemouth bass on Middle River.
• Benjamin Turner of Baltimore caught a 9-inch croaker on the Eastern Bay.
• Alton Lackie of Germantown, TN, caught a 15.2-inch largemouth bass on
Pomonkey Creek.
June 19
• Donald Muir of Perry Hall caught a 15-inch largemouth bass on the
Susquehanna River.
June 18
• William T. Veaux of White Marsh caught a 20-inch largemouth bass on the
Susquehanna Flats in the Tydings area.
• Larry L Rich, Sr., of Rising Sun caught a 19-inch striped bass on the
Choptank River.
• Bryan Nuckols of New Market caught a 15.5-inch largemouth bass on the
Choptank River.
• Stephen “Steve” D. Kennedy of Auburn, AL, caught a 16.7-inch largemouth
bass on the Potomac River in the Blue Plains area.
June 17
• John "Larry" Turney of Pasadena caught a 16.5-inch largemouth bass on
Swan Creek in the Susquehanna Flats.
• John F. Carroll from Lexington Park caught a 21-inch striped bass 2.5
miles south of Buoy 72.
• Mark Mahoney of Easton caught a 17.5-inch largemouth bass on Marshyhope
Creek.
• David W. Daisey of Tilghman caught a 25-inch striped bass near the
Sharps Island Lighthouse.
• William D. Crutchfield of Bel Alton caught a 15-inch largemouth bass on
Mattawoman Creek.
• Ronald Barnes of Charlotte Court House, VA, caught a 15-inch largemouth
bass on the Potomac River in Leesylvania.
June 16
• Jess Reed of Gaithersburg caught a 17.25-inch largemouth bass on the
Potomac River.
June 15
• Dewitt Keefer, Jr., of Crofton caught an 18-inch striped bass near
Deale.
• Scott Hertzberg of Upper Marlboro caught a 23-inch striped bass while
fishing on a charter boat near Buoy #72A.
All catches, including a photo of the angler with his or her fish, are
listed on the Maryland $1,000,000 Fishing Challenge website, which is
located at
http://www.dnr.maryland.gov/fish4cash/. The site also contains
official rules and frequently asked questions about the tournament.
The Maryland $1,000,000 Fishing Challenge is sponsored by Boater’s World
and the Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development (DBED).
Approximately 2,000 fish have been fitted with a bright green tag and
released into the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries. Anglers who catch
one of the specially tagged striped bass, largemouth bass, Atlantic
croaker and white perch are reminded NOT TO REMOVE THE TAG from the
fish and to immediately call the phone number listed on it. A DNR
Fisheries biologist will come out to verify the catch within 24 hours and
only after that should the angler release the fish back into the water.