On Saturday 5th May, David, Divan and I launched “Selfish” off Richards Bay. We were looking for cuda which were making the odd appearance. Our first stop was at the pipeline where we caught several maasbankers. Next we headed to a reef between the ships and caught a bunch of redeye sardines. With the bait stocks replenished, it was off to the 50m ledge to have some fun with the bonnies and small yellowfin. On the first pass, 4 rods went away with kawa-kawas. Unfortunately the hooks pulled on 2 and we released the other 2. On the next pass, all 5 rods went on with small yellowfin. We kept 2 for sushi and released the rest. After a few more turns, and releasing several yellowfin and kawas, we headed for Petingo.
The water was perfect. A clean green, 23.5 degrees, slight current and a slight chop. The baits went out and I trolled around the wreck. T just after 11, the big bonnie on the surface was eaten by a fish which took very slowly. We assumed it was a shark, but it turned out to be a 12kg cuda that had been foul hooked. Oh well, you sometimes you get lucky...
Trolling resumed and about 20mins later the deeper bonnie was eaten, this time by a smaller cuda of about 8kg. Divan rerigged and I made another turn over the wreck. As we came over the northern tip, Divs and I saw the surface livebait rev followed by a bending rod and screaming reel. Dave made short work of a 7kg shoaly. Things went a bit quiet and apart from one missed strike on a livebait, nothing much was happening. At about 1pm, I trolled over a really thick showing of bait and just as I was about to say we should get a strike here, the wala on the surface was eater and the reel smoked off ... a real screamer. I immediately turned towards the fish so Dave could gain line and Divs cleared the other rods. I got right on top of the fish and next thing there was very little resistance and then the head section of the cuda popped up. It had been taxed within about 2 minutes of hooking it! Not great. The fish would easily have gone 18kg but we will never know for sure.
We fished for another 2 hours without a pull then upped lines and returned to port.
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