news Fish Karma
Brantly McFarlin is a tournament champion, first mate and sixth grade student By Abby Baker
BRANTLY MCFARLIN
12-year-old Brantly McFarlin is the first mate on a fishing charter in St. Pete Beach and a repeat tournament winner.
Boca Ciega Bay fish fanatics may remember the young Brantly McFarlin from the Rock the Bay Inshore Fishing Tournament and Festival this November. The 12-year-old captain placed twice in the tournament, and it wasnât his first rodeo. âIâve been fishing with my dad a lot of my life,â McFarlin said. âI have brothers and sisters but they probably donât like to fish as much as me.â Probably not, considering McFarlinâs multiple tournament wins â including leaderboard status at the Johhny Kellar Inshore Fishing Tournament and his position as first mate at St. Pete Beachâs Non Stop Fishing Charters. Itâs on Captain Kevin Waltonâs boat that McFarlin spends his summers and weekends hooking bait and âscaling the deckâ as a young St. Petersburg angler. He wants to get closer to the Gulf, and any tips he collects get set aside for college.
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âI remember him catching with a fake lure at the Pasadena Country Club when he was like two years old,â said McFarlinâs father, Drew McFarlin. âItâs all heâs ever really wanted to do, and he does it like itâs his job.â The father-and-son team credit one nontanglible source of success: fish karma. âThereâs not really a secret to fishing. Every place is totally different,â McFarlin said. âBut me and my dad always throw everything back.â Drew clarifies that fish karma is their private rule of releasing anything and everything that finds itself hooked, regarless of size â in the name of conservation. The act of catch-and-release is a fishermanâs way of playing tug of war with Floridaâs fragile waterways, says Drew. Keep up with McFarlinâs watery adventures via his Instagram: @Backwaterbrantly.
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