Willy Dean has an incredible fish tale to tell. On Tuesday, he caught a shark while on the Potomac River in St. Mary's County, Md.
Don't believe him? He has the pictures to prove it.
Dean put out a net Monday at Cornfield Harbor in the Potomac three miles north of Point Lookout with hopes of catching cow-nosed rays for a Solomons Island Marina biologist. When he checked Monday night everything seemed normal. But when he checked again Tuesday morning, he made a startling discovery.
In the net was an 8-foot-long shark. He said it was a bull shark. According to National Geographic, experts consider them to be "the most dangerous sharks in the world."
Whatever kind of shark it was, Dean knows two things: it had a heck of a lot of teeth, and it didn't go out easily.
"We had an interesting morning bringing it in," Dean said. "It was quite a fight."
Once the shark was captured, the next question was: What the heck do you do with it?
U.S. & World
"I am probably going to have it mounted, maybe the head," Dean said. "Right now, the shark's in the freezer."
Which means there's no chance that this fish tale ends with the big one getting away...
Selected Reading: Washington Post