Watch: Oblivious pier angler hooks, reels in angry surfer

Video footage captured Thanksgiving Day shows an accidentally hooked surfer being reeled by a fisherman on Huntington Beach Pier.

**Warning: Video contains profanity

On the pier was a fisherman who had accidentally hooked what Stab Magazine described as “the biggest catch in Huntington Beach this holiday season.”

In the water was a surfer with a hook in his wrist, shouting profanely (and in vain) for the angler to “let the string out” so he could remove the hook.

That wasn’t happening.

The accompanying footage, captured Thanksgiving Day by Instagram user Dan’s Surf Cave, shows Will Dobrenen, the surfer, pleading with the angler to allow his line to go slack.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Stab Magazine (@stab)

Instead, the unidentified angler reeled, tightening the tension, as if he didn’t grasp that the surfer at the end of his line was in pain. Finally, the line broke, freeing the surfer.

ALSO: Can you spot the coyote blending into the Texas prairie?

Dan’s Surf Cave wrote: “So if surfing the Northside Huntington Beach Pier wasn’t challenging enough with the unruly crowds and lack of surfing etiquette you also have to be aware of becoming this evening’s catch of the day.”

Dobrenen told Stab Magazine: “I could not get the hook out with my finger because there [was] so much tension. I had to use my teeth to rip out the hook from my wrist.

“In doing so I was hoping that the hook would not catch my lip and make the situation worse.”

Dobrenen, thankfully, avoided becoming lip-hooked and continued to surf.

Dan’s Surf Cave added that the same “idiot” on the pier hooked two other surfers before calling it a day.

[listicle id=1980234]

Large shark washes ashore on Southern California beach

A 13-foot thresher shark washed ashore in Huntington Beach on Wednesday with a hook in its mouth.

A 13-foot thresher shark washed ashore in Huntington Beach on Wednesday with a hook in its mouth.

Images of the shark were posted to Facebook by the California State University Long Beach Shark Lab. The mature female shark was collected by lab personnel and a necropsy was planned for Thursday.

Thresher sharks, which can measure nearly 20 feet, are targeted by anglers but it was not immediately clear if being hooked was a factor in the shark’s death.

The shark’s length was measured from snout to the tip of its tail fin. Thresher sharks, which are not considered dangerous to humans, use their scythe-like tails to stun prey.

–Top image courtesy of the CSLB Shark Lab