A man stands barefoot on a sandy shore next to a wooden dock, holding up a large fish beside a kayak and a fishing net, with a calm lake and misty trees in the background.
Andrew Oestringer with his (unofficial) record catch at Lower Symes Pond in Ryegate. Photo courtesy of the Vermont Department of Fish & Wildlife

Vermont fisherman Andrew Oestringer wrangled in a nearly 2-foot smallmouth bass on Lower Symes Pond in Ryegate in August. Weighing 7 pounds, 6 ounces, the catch could have broken the official Department of Fish & Wildlife state record by a long shot.

Oestringer — not realizing the catch he had — filleted the fish before weighing it on a certified scale, which would have landed him a spot in the annals of state angler history. 

Shawn Good, a fish biologist and administrator of the department’s State Record Fish Program, said that Fish & Wildlife can only accept fish weighed on a certified scale for the program but said the “new ‘unofficial record’ is one heck of a fish story.”

The bass’ uncertified weight is 10 ounces heavier than the official record-holder catch back in 2003, Good said. 

“It’s a dream come true for me,” said Oestringer, according to a department press release.  “There is no better place to fish than Vermont.”

While Vermont and particularly Lake Champlain is known for bass fishing, it is noteworthy Oestringer reeled in an unofficial record-breaking fish kayaking on a pond in the Northeast Kingdom, said Good.

“We have an incredible diversity of fishing opportunities across the state,” Good said in an interview. “We have this resource in our backyard of small ponds, mid-sized lakes, rivers and streams that offer phenomenal fishing that are kind of unknown and overlooked.”

The State Record Fish Program was established in 1969 to recognize the most sizable catches of each fish species in the state based on weight, Good said. 

In 2010, Good launched and now runs another effort, the Master Angler Program, to increase incentives and participation in fishing across the state, he said. In the past 15 years, there have been 13,174 entries, and only one person has caught all 34 fish species accepted by the state in the program, according to Good.

Unlike the State Record Fish Program, the state measures fish in the Master Angler Program based on length rather than weight. For adult anglers, the catch must be in the 5% length percentile of the fish species to submit to the program, whereas youth anglers can submit catches that fall within the 10% length percentile. 

At Lake Bomoseen, another inland water body in Rutland County, a Fair Haven Middle & High School student, James Lenox, 14, pulled in a 22 inch, 7 pound largemouth bass. The fish is the largest youth entry to the Master Angler Program and third-heaviest largemouth bass catch this year. 

A boy holds a large fish while standing next to an older man on a gravel path, with trees and a blue car in the background.
Fair Haven Middle & High School student James Lenox, 14, shows off the 22 inch, 7 pound largemouth bass he pulled from Lake Bomoseen. Shown here with his father Michael Lenox. Photo courtesy of the Vermont Department of Fish & Wildlife

Michael Lenox, the young angler’s father and coach of the school’s varsity bass fishing team, said his son has participated in the Master Angler Program from a young age. James pulled in the largemouth bass on the south shore of the lake Sept. 14 and said it was the most exciting thing he has ever done, according to Michael.

“He has been fishing ever since he could hold a rod,” Michael said. “Lake Bomoseen is a great place to fish.”

VTDigger's Southern Vermont reporter.