Sent: Wednesday, July 03, 2013 10:38
Subject: FW: We Made History !
Hank
Subject: We Made History !
Going tomorrow, Wednesday, April 11th. We will leave from the public pier in the first “alley” of the marine industrial area just past the old departure point which was the public pier next to the Aberdeen Marine Police Station.
Departure around 07:15 and return around 18:00
--- Fishing Report 20120403
The trip out looked promising as water was grey-blue by the mid channel and blue on the tip of Leema Island. There were also several schools of sardines on the surface but nothing apparently with them.
Just a half mile or so bearing 120 the water went green again. We proceeded the 9 miles to the first wreck seeing one school of small tuna with no takes.
From that wreck there was an obvious line due south of us by a couple hundred meters. As we approached there was a school of small tuna on the north side and we made several passes without a strike. We continued south and saw it was a wind line with wind stronger on the north side of the line marking blue water of 22.3 degrees celcius on the south side and 19.8-20.1 on the north side. There was a good trash field in the line with dozens if not hundreds of small birds floating in the line for as far as we fished it. There were also hundreds, if not thousands of cuttlebones in the line making the area look like there was a wholesale slaughter of an entire school of cuttlefish either by predators or a trawler/trawling pair.
We fished up and down that line seeing a few small baitfish and a mahi mahi or 2 cruising in the trash line without experiencing a singles strike. From there we trolled south to another wreck about 9 miles away coming across large patches of seaweed and F&J. As we neared the wreck we saw water temperatures as high as 23.2c or a tick under 74f.
The trip south yielded nothing and by now it was about 2pm so we turned north to troll back toward the first wreck to see what we could find. In blue water we had zero hits, but shortly after the troll toward home from the first wreck, in water that was extremely green, we caught a 4 pound mackerel tuna.
From about 2pm onward there was little wind. The surface of the ocean was like glass. As we came back toward Leema we found many schools of sardines in balls being harassed by small mackerel tuna. We hung out jigging until nearly 6pm hoping to find bigger predators in the area, but nothing doin’.
We had a miss on a very hard strike and extremely fast run that lasted 25-30 seconds. The pickup was on a TLD30 with plenty of line so I set the drag a little harder and gave one pull to make sure the hook was set, felt the fight on the other end and then just let it run. Unfortunately the run ended as abruptly as it started with the lure being dropped. That was the most exciting part of our day.
Shing’s 40’ Egg runs like a top on filtered and polished used vegetable oil. The cat 3208 is a fairly smooth engine to begin with as it’s 636 cubic inches producing only 425hp with a .67 hp to cubic inch ratio it’s not working hard. The experience on waste vegetable oil is smoother still and apparently we got a little better economy using around 300 liters the entire day.
I should be ready to be out in mine for the first time of the season on Saturday as I’ve had my generator being rewound.
Hank
At around 500 meters away two rods went off and we caught 2 more small kawa kawa tuna. This was the beginning of a day that saw fish continuously, often in double and triples hookups, averaging 1 or 2 fish on every 30 minutes.
From there we trolled slightly west of due south and headed for the near wreck which is about 9 miles south south-east of the north east tip of Lema Island.
After making a couple of large circles in the area of that wreck we headed on a little bit south south-west parallel to Lema Island leaving a couple of darkening storm cells in our wake.
That path was very productive as we had several more tuna, the largest mahi mahi of the day and three wahoo during that run.
I had taken a break from the flybridge to adjust the spread and was going around the rods bringing the lures in a little closer and putting rubber bands around the lines attached to the reel handles to keep our rigs running right and tangle free. The port corner had just been reset when it went off in front of me in a serious scream.
I thought the excessively loud sounding drag was because it had been adjusted light and so cranked down on the lever just a bit. That was when the wahoo knew I was there and started to give a bit of a fight. It was only maximum 12 pounds however and it was in the boat in just a few minutes
We put the lure back into the pattern and continued the troll. It probably was not 2 minutes afterward that 2 more rods were singing. This time Van Sternbergh and Greg Mclaughlin were on the rods to bring in 2 more wahoo between 10-11 pounds.
Again, we put those rigs back in the pattern and quickly set off on the troll again when another wahoo came straight out of the water with a lure in it's mouth. Unfortunately it wasn't hooked and that one took off.
We started the boat forward again and Jeff Fisher was in front of the short corner rod on the staroard side where a nice mahi mahi had taken a red and white islander.
Unfortunately that fish was freed when the net and the fish made
contact creating just enough slack for the hook to fall from the fish's mouth. That mahi mahi would have been the largest one of the day as it was around 30 inches and was probably 8-10 pounds. It was Ingvar's second week in a row to execute a "release" on the day's biggest mahi mahi!
From there we took an offshore route to avoid a nasty downpour that had been chasing us. Before heading off I entered a waypoint in the GPS so that we could return to fish that area. Once the storm passed we returned only to find that the wahoo were no longer in that piece of ocean. We trolled the area for another 2 hours or so before beginning the troll toward home. Again, we were picking up a fish or 2 every half of an hour or so.
The water was a gorgeous, deep blue all day, as seen in this picture with Ingvar's feet; he captioned this with one of his favorite sayings: "it doesn't hurt anywhere now."
We picked up the last fish on the north eastern tip of Lema just before entering the ship channel as we trolled back toward Hong Kong. On the day we had more than 30 strikes, boated over 20 fish and kept 6. I saw 3 types of tuna on Saturday: kawa kawa, skipjack and bluefin. Along wih the wahoo and mahi mahi it was a great day with plenty of action and variety.
I’m heading out fishing tomorrow. You want to come?
Trip report from yesterday:
First 30 minutes we had already experienced a great day out! Two tuna and three mahi mahi were caught by 10am. The action slowed down through high tide and only picked up a little on the outgoing. We caught another 3 tuna and 7 mahi mahi from 11:45 until around 3pm
See pic attached.
Are you up for fishing Friday or Saturday?
I’ll be fishing with Kim tomorrow and out on my boat Friday and Saturday.
http://www.hongkongsportfishing.com