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Tammy fighting on 4kg |
On Sunday 15th June at
7:30am, Tammy and I launched “ABF” out of Richards Bay. We were just going for
a casual days fishing and to enjoy the beautiful weather. I stopped on the
pipeline and both Tammy and I went about fishing for bait. With a livewell
full, I suggest we head to small high pinnacle. There had been a few bonnies around,
and thought it would be fun on Tam’s light 4kg spinning rod. Just before
running out there, I made a quick double, joined a few meters of 40Lbs flouro
leader and tied on a 1/0 ultrapoint Mustad. The bonnies did not stand a chance!
When we arrived at the pinnacle I
was surprised to see that there were no other boats. I stopped close to the
mark and pinned a small live maasbanker before casting it out a bit and passing
the rod to Tam. I told her to let the line out a bit while we made our way towards
the pinnacle. The sounder was already showing the reef and a big showing, so I
pulled neutral to drift. Tam asked how much line she should let out and only
then did I notice the line flying off the reel. I calmly said “just close the
bale arm, you are already on”… As she clipped the bale over, the rod loaded up
and the small spinning reel smoked off! The chase was on.
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My Deckhand at work |
The fish was all over the place
taking heaps of line as it went all we could do was follow until it slowed down.
Slowly Tam put line back on the reel and but after 20 minutes, the fish was
still making good runs. Every time it would sound and then make a fast run, we
assumed a shark was on its tail. After 45 minutes, I could see the fish down
below making big circles. It was a nice yellowfin. The double came up but the
fish stayed just out of reach before taking some more line. A short while later
the leader was on the tip but out of the corner of my eye, I saw a big brown
shape materialise and the yellowfin made another short dash under the boat.
Luckily, the shark disappeared as fast as it appeared and Tam could get the
fish back on the leader where I gaffed it! MAGIC!
With a long, hard fight behind
us, we decided not to put out another bait for tuna and rather focus on some
eating fish so I rigged up 2 live mackerel and 2 maasies. Two up top and two
down deep. On the first pass over the southern marks, the deep mackerel went
away. I took the rod and fought a nice 15kg cuda to the boat where I finally
got a gaff into it.
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Tammy's 24,6kg Wahoo |
I reset the lines and worked the
area. It was a bit quiet, but eventually I saw the surface bait rev a bit
before the rod bent a bit then flicked straight. Looking back, I saw a big
swirl on the surface. The bait had been chopped cleanly, missing both single
hooks but kinking the wires properly. I checked the other baits and saw that
the other surface bait was missing… The baits were quickly rerigged and just as
they were set, the one rod slowly bent over. I wound into the fish and it gave
a few really big head shakes. Tammy increased the speed a bit (just incase)
before taking over the rod. I had just cleared the other lines when the fish
absolutely rocketed off! It left a big trail of spray and foam as its tail cavitated
on the surface. I swung the boat around and gave chase. At one point, we were
on the plane and the fish still taking line! After about a kilometre (with the
strong current), the fish settled and fought deep. Tam gave it everything she
had and started to lift the fish. I looked into the depths and saw a long
silver fish circling upwards. When it broke surface, I put the gaff in and
lifted a beautiful wahoo into the boat. What a great fish! It was way too big
to fit into the hatch so we wrapped it in a wet towel on the deck.
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13,6kg YFT on 4kg line |
There was still a little time left
to fish so I run back to the marks and started setting the lines. While letting
out the second line, the first one went away. Looking back, we saw a 15kg yellowfin
clear the water before going on a deep run. I took the rod and pushed the drag
right up. The fish never had a chance to turn and within 5 minutes, it was
gaffed and bled before going into the ice. We knew that with all the fish,
there was a lot of cleaning work to be done so we upped lines and headed home.
Tammy’s yellowfin weighed 13,6kg (a possible Ladies All Africa Record) and the
Wahoo weighed 24,6kg. It was an awesome day out!
The line test results are back and its official, Tammy's yellowfin is a new AAR on 4kg line for Ladies...
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