Braeden Rouse, who lives in Michigan, went fishing with friends on the Lake St. Clair and the results surprised everyone.

As a rower , but this time Braeden Rouse decided to try his luck in fishing.
Braeden Rouse said: “In the winter, when the weather is cold, we don’t have to practice rowing. My friends and I go fishing in the river as a fun challenge in the cold weather. Weekends are a good time. suitable for me to try my luck”.
The sturgeon that Braeden Rouse caught was 2.5 meters long and weighed about 159 kg. He and his friends had to ‘fight’ the monster for about half an hour trying to bring it closer to shore.
It is not easy to get a fish of such a large size. Braeden Rouse did everything possible, managed to get the fish to move, but it was very difficult.
He said: “I knew it was huge. I pulled but it didn’t move, didn’t move. My friend realized it was a very large fish and started recording video. But actually I was the one who got caught by the fish. dragged all over the river. I fought it for about 25 minutes in the river.”
To get the video, Braeden Rouse’s friend was forced to board his own kayak and follow him. In the video, it is clear how fast the sturgeon pulls Braeden Rouse away. “The big fish pulls me faster than you can row,” Braeden Rouse says loudly in the video.
Braeden Rouse said there were about three times when he almost fainted when the sturgeon aggressively swam away and he had to work very hard to keep the rod end at the bow of the boat to avoid capsizing.
The man caught the giant ‘living dinosaur’ in the Lake St. Clair, Michigan
After a man shared a picture of a giant flounder on social media, which attracted the attention of netizens, many people were quite shocked to learn that Braeden Rouse caught a huge fish from just a kayak. .
After bringing the fish to shore, taking a commemorative photo, Braeden Rouse and his friends released the fish back into the water environment. “I liked the release part after catching the fish. This was especially helpful. The fish swam away soon after, it swam quickly, looking very graceful. When it made the final push, the caudal fin came out. It looks huge out of the water.”
The giant sturgeon is known as a living dinosaur, originating from the Triassic period. The oldest fossils of this primitive fish date to 245-208 million years ago and have not undergone any major evolutionary change since.