Unbelievable technique catching underground big stuck 11kg blood carp fish

Angler Lands Legendary 11kg “Blood Carp” with Unbelievable Underground Technique

LAKE VERIDIA – In what is being hailed as one of the most ingenious angling feats of the year, local fisherman Elias Vance has landed a fish most thought was only a myth: a staggering 11kg (24.2 lbs) “Blood Carp,” famous for its deep crimson colouration and elusive nature. The catch is remarkable not just for the size and rarity of the fish, but for the mind-bending technique Vance employed to free the beast after it became hopelessly stuck in a submerged, underground snag.

For years, whispers among the local fishing community have told of monster carp hiding in the treacherous north cove of Lake Veridia. The area, known as “The Labyrinth,” is a graveyard of tackle—a sunken maze of ancient tree roots, collapsed earth, and rocky overhangs that create a series of underwater caves and tunnels. While it’s known that big fish seek refuge there, successfully extracting one has been considered nearly impossible.

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“She took the bait and ran straight for her house,” Elias explained, still buzzing with adrenaline. “I felt the line go taut, then that dead, sickening weight. I knew instantly she was stuck. Not just snagged on a branch, but deep inside one of the hollows under the bank. It was like hooking a boulder.”

Most anglers in this situation would face a heartbreaking choice: pull until the line snaps or cut their losses. But Vance, who had spent months studying this specific spot, had a wild theory he was determined to test.

The “Seismic Shock” Technique

Instead of applying more pressure, Vance did something that puzzled onlookers. He quickly set up a second, heavier rod. On this line, he attached a heavy, 10-ounce lead weight but no hook. With remarkable precision, he cast this weight approximately 20 feet beyond the point where his main line disappeared into the bank.

“The goal wasn’t to pull the fish out,” Vance said. “It was to convince it to leave on its own.”

Once the heavy lead settled on the bottom, Vance began a slow, rhythmic retrieve. He would drag the weight a few feet across the rocky lakebed and then sharply jerk the rod, causing the lead to bounce and slam against the submerged rocks and hard clay.

“I was creating vibrations, a ‘seismic shock’ on the other side of its shelter,” he described. “Fish are incredibly sensitive to pressure changes and unusual disturbances. I gambled that if I made its safe space feel unsafe—like it was collapsing or being invaded from behind—it would bolt forward, out into open water.”

For nearly ten heart-stopping minutes, nothing happened. Then, the tip on his main rod, which had been dead still, suddenly bucked violently. The carp, startled by the persistent, threatening vibrations from behind, had panicked and fled its subterranean lair.

The battle that followed was a brutal, ten-minute tug-of-war in open water. The immense power of the 11kg titan tested every component of Vance’s gear, but freed from the snags, it was a fair fight. When the legendary Blood Carp finally slid into his net, its deep red, almost maroon flanks glowing in the afternoon sun, a crowd of astounded onlookers erupted in applause.

The fish, a muscular and perfect specimen, was weighed, photographed, and released back into the lake.

“A fish like that doesn’t belong on a wall; it belongs in the water, becoming an even bigger legend,” Vance stated. His “Seismic Shock” method is already the talk of the town, with anglers debating its applications in similarly “unfishable” spots. It stands as a testament to the fact that sometimes, the biggest catches require not just strength, but an unbelievable stroke of creative genius.