A teenager from Alabama who went solo fishing to blow off some steam after his final exams returned to shore with a pending state record for a species that was new to the area.
“It’s not the biggest fish I’ve ever caught,” Gardner Love, 17, an Elberta resident, told Fox News Digital.
“We catch a lot bigger fish offshore, but I’ve never caught a state record before – so this is definitely one for the books.”
Love caught a 27-inch, 7-pound snook on Tuesday, May 14, while fishing in the brackish waters along Soldier Creek, which leads to Perdido Bay.
Gardner Love, 17, is hoping to add the title “state record holder” to his name after reeling in a 7-pound nook off the Alabama shore. (Len Love)
The catch is awaiting official certification by the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources – a process that could take up to 15 days.
“I wasn’t really fishing for the snook,” Love said. “I was fishing for whatever it was biting, trout or redfish. The weather was nice. It had been raining for a few days and it was finally starting to clear up, so I thought I’d just take the boat out for a little while because I didn’t have anything else to do.”
Love, who said he’s been fishing since before he could walk, grew up on the Gulf Coast.
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Besides being a recreational fisherman, he also works as a deckhand on a sport fishing boat.
Love said he had no idea he had reeled in a snook until it jumped out of the water midway through the fight. (Len Love)
“I was back in the back of the creek, and it’s a spot that I normally don’t fish,” Love said.
“It’s like a big grassland back there, a big marsh, and there was a little tree hanging over, right there on the edge of the marsh.”
Casting toward the grass, Love’s lure got snagged in the tree, he said.
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“I yanked it, and it fell on the water,” Love said. “As soon as it hit the water, the fish blew up on it through water and into the air. And at first, I thought it was a tarpon. I didn’t think it was a snook at all until I got midway through fighting and it jumped out of the water and I saw it.”
Love had to jump into the water to grab the fish before pulling it into his boat. (Len Love)
Murky waters, due to all the rain, made it difficult to identify the fish.
“I got up really close and was probably about waist deep in the water,” Love said.
“I didn’t have a net on the boat because I wasn’t expecting to catch anything that big. Usually, I’ll just slip them [into] the boat on the line. But I saw that he was barely hooked when I got him up next to the boat.”
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Love said he set down his rod, hopped in the water and grabbed the fish and pulled it into the boat.
Love and his father made their way to Zeke’s Marina in Orange Beach to weigh it on a certified scale. (Len Love)
“I knew I’d had something right when I hooked up,” he said.
“As soon as I got the fish in the boat, I called my dad. By the time I got back to the dock, it was only a two-minute ride away — he was already waiting down there for me and he said, ‘You got the state record.’ He was really excited.”
The young angler and his dad, Len Love, brought the fish to Zeke’s Marina to weigh it on certified scales.
The snook tipped the scales at 7.04 pounds.
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The current official snook record is that of a fish weighing 5 pounds, 2.6 ounces, caught in 2023 by Richard Carver Webb of Orange Beach, Alabama, according to the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.
Scott Bannon, director of the Marine Resources division of the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. (Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources)
What makes the catch even more interesting is that Love’s fish is only the second record-setting snook in Alabama, Scott Bannon, director of the Marine Resources division of the state’s Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, told Fox News Digital.
That’s because it is a species not native to Alabama.
“We’ve seen a few over the last couple of years show up in that particular area of Baldwin County, which is adjacent to the Alabama-Florida line,” Bannon said.
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“But snook are native to Florida,” Bannon added. “We knew that they were in the Pensacola area and over the last few years, they started showing up in Alabama, mostly juveniles.”
The first ever snook state record was certified last year since the species is not native to Alabama. (Len Love)
Last January, the department certified a snook (Webb’s fish) as a state record for the first time, Bannon said.
“It was the first common snook that was landed that met the minimum criteria to establish a state record,” he added.
“We have several rules that you have to follow and one of them is [that] the fish needs to be considered an adult and in the top half of its size class or weight class.”
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Bannon explained that as water levels change and water temperatures increase slightly, snook are more at home in Alabama.
Now, what has previously been an unregulated species in the state may soon get more official recognition.
“We don’t have a season on [snook], with a minimum size limit or a possession limit,” Bannon said.
“So, we’re in discussions now about putting something in place.”
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Bannon said the upside to the environmental changes that have brought in snook, for example, is that it provides more opportunity for fishermen in the state.
Love is waiting to hear back from officials with the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources in hopes of receiving recognition for his catch. (Len Love)
“We look for diversity in our fishing opportunities,” Bannon said.
“It adds a little excitement to fishing. So, at the end of the day, it’s a good thing. I love to see the quality of fish that people are able to catch in Alabama because that means that we must be doing things correctly to ensure that we have healthy fish stocks and that we provide that access to the public.”
Bannon added that there are “several” record-holders who are kids, and he believes that’s because fishing is a family sport in Alabama.
Gardner Love (right) said he hopes to break even more fishing records after reeling in the snook. Pictured left, Gardner’s dad, Len Love, stands beside his son who is holding the potential record-breaking catch. (Len Love)
“Fishing has just always been my favorite thing to do,” Love said.
“It means a lot to me and everybody down here on the Gulf Coast. I’d definitely like to catch another record fish if I could.”
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Gretchen Eichenberg is a contributing reporter for Fox News Digital.