DNR Harford County Youth Named 16th FishMaryland Master Angler

newsBot

Automated News Bot
Staff member
Luca Tucciarella is the third youth angler to reach the milestone award

Photo of young man in a river holding a fish

Angler Luca Tucciarella caught a 38.25-inch northern pike in Loch Raven Reservoir on Nov 17, 2024, on his way to earning a Master Angler Milestone Award under the Maryland Department of Natural Resources’ FishMaryland program. Photo by Vincent Tucciarella, used with permission by Maryland DNR.


Luca Tucciarella, of Forest Hill, has earned a Master Angler Milestone Award under the Maryland Department of Natural Resources’ FishMaryland program.

Fifteen-year-old Tucciarella is the 16th Master Angler and the third youth angler to reach the milestone award since the program began in 2019. The award recognizes recreational anglers who catch ten trophy-sized fish of different species in Maryland.

Tucciarella started fishing with his father at a local neighborhood pond when he was 3 or 4 years old.

“After the first time he took me fishing, I realized it was something that I would enjoy for a very long time,” Tucciarella said. “My dad told me about the Master Angler program in early spring of 2024, and I thought it would be a cool challenge to pursue. I wanted to pursue it because it’s an award that recognizes a passion that I’ve had my whole life.”

Tucciarella’s qualifying catches, in order, were:

  • Carp – 36 inches
  • Brook trout – 12 inches
  • Flathead catfish – 34.5 inches
  • Sand tiger shark – 79 inches
  • Bullhead catfish – 15.25 inches
  • Rock bass – 11 inches
  • Blue catfish – 44 inches
  • Largemouth bass – 22 inches
  • Northern pike – 38.25 inches
  • Chain pickerel – 25.75 inches

He has a particular interest in fishing for the invasive Chesapeake Channa (northern snakehead).

“Snakehead fishing has always interested me because of where they live, the different techniques used to catch them, and how hard you have to set the hook,” said Tucciarella. “My most recent snakehead was 29.5 inches long, and I hope to catch one that is 30 inches or larger for my next FishMaryland species award.”

The second largest fish out of the newest Master Angler’s ten qualifying catches was an invasive blue catfish that was 44 inches in length. The exact weight of the fish was unknown because Tucciarella’s scale maxed out at 50 pounds.

“It was an awesome fight that lasted over 10 minutes and I caught it on 20-pound test braided line,” Tucciarella said.

His final qualifying fish was a 25.75-inch chain pickerel. “The coolest thing about my last fish is that I actually caught two trophy pickerel over 24 inches that same day,” he said.

Tucciarella noted that the hardest fish to catch was the northern pike, “My dad said he didn’t think I would catch a pike, let alone one that was over 38 inches long. I’ve been trying to catch a pike for the last four years.”

“I would like to thank everyone at the Maryland Department of Natural Resources for providing this program,” Tucciarella said.

FishMaryland is Maryland’s recreational fishing award program and is a fun way to explore year-round recreational fishing and enjoy affordable, accessible, diverse, and high-quality fishing opportunities. More information on the Master Angler Milestone Award and the FishMaryland program is available on the program’s website.
 
Top