On Thursday evening, 25th
October, I arrived at the St Lucia Ski-Boat Club for the briefing of the 12x12
species tournament. I was invited to fish by Ockie Theunissen and Zander on
Ockie’s boat “Hannock”. This was the first time that I would be fishing this
tournament and from who I saw at the briefing, there was some strong
competition. The tournament rules stated that a team was only allowed to weigh
in 5 fish of a species for the duration of the event. There were 12 target
species. For each specie that was caught on the day, bonus points were awarded
(12 pts for the 1st specie, 24 pts for the 2nd specie, 36
pts for the 3rd specie etc.).
On Friday 26th at
5:30, we launched for the first day’s fishing. The weather was great, but the
water was cold and green with minimal current. This was going to be a difficult
few days. Our first stop was to get livies which would be essential for some of
the possible target species. While catching livies, I managed to get a small
sarda-sarda which we would use for cuda. With the tank full, we headed to Big
Hill and trolled lures around hoping for a tuna, dorado, wahoo or billfish. It
didn’t take long to get a small yellowfin and a short while later another two. With
a 5 fish limit, we could only catch 3 fish on day 1 and leave 1 for each other
days to score the bonus points. With the tuna done for the day, we headed
inshore to look for a cuda. We rigged a few livies and the small sarda-sarda
and trolled around. I was designated skipper while Ockie and Zander would work
the deck and catch the fish.
Some nice Dorado for team Hannock" |
After trolling for what seemed
forever, we managed to get a pull on the sarda. It turned out to be a bigger
sarda that narrowly made the 3kg minimum weight for “Other tuna species”. That
was great, 2 species down. I suggested we run a bit further south on the ledge
and troll livies hoping for a dorado or billfish. Again, we trolled for a few
hours with no success. Just before we started to lose hope, the far line went
away with a dorado. We were super excited, but this changed quickly as the
hooks pulled. We rerigged and set the lines hoping that we had come into a good
area. To our delight, the close livie was eaten and Ockie fought a dorrie. It
had a follower so I flicked a bait out and went on. Moments later, Ockie’s fish
threw the hook so I passed him my rod and pinned another livie. As it hit the
water, I went on. Zander gaffed Ockie’s fish then the next one too. Just when
we thought it was over, we had another fish go tight but unbelievably, it also
threw the hook.
That was the last action we had
for the day and ended up with 3 species. At the end of day 1, we were in 2nd
position just ahead of “Fintastic” and closely behind “Wave Dancer” who had 4
species.
Ockie with a GT prior to release |
On day 2, we were on the beach
early and had an easy launch. We knew where the live bait was from the first
day it only a few minutes to get a good supply. There were a few fish straight
off the launch the previous day, so we made a quick drift with livies on Chisa
but never had a pull. A few boats had found yellowfin on the deeper ledge, so
we headed out trolling lures. As I passed over the ledge, two rods went on with
yellowfin. We could only weigh one so released the smaller one. Trolling
commenced, and we soon had 2 small bonnies in the livebait tubes that we would
use a bit later. We made a deeper turn hoping for a wahoo or billfish but were
rewarded with two skipjack. Unfortunately, one pulled hooks but the other made
it to the scoreboard as a second specie. Knowing that we had found some dorado
on the ledge, I ran back to the same area and put out the same spread as the
day before with an addition of a fresh bonnie that we sent deep. We worked the
ledge for about half an hour when the bonito was eaten. Ockie took the strike
and put some big pressure on the fish. There were some good nods then it
started coming up. I could mark it on the echo sounder, so I was pretty sure it
was not a shark. Soon we could make out a big silver shape of a good kingfish.
The rules dictated all kingfish needed to be measured, photographed and
released so we sent it on its way.
We knew that was our joker species for the
day and needed to capitalize on it so we persevered with the dorado search. We
did have 4 big sharks eat the other 4 bonito that we rigged for kingfish, so
Zander was a bit buggered going into the last hour of the day. We were pretty
desperate and eventually I saw a flying fish jump out the water near the far
bait. Moments later the rod bent and a dorado showed itself. There was a bit of
panic around the boat, but we managed to gaff the fish! We only had a half hour
left so we quickly reset. As luck would have it, the far bait went on almost
immediately. It looked like a nice fish and it had a follower. Ockie pitched a
bait and went on and at the same time, Zander’s fish pulled hooks! To our
surprize, that same fish stayed on the surface and followed the hooked one, so
I pitched it a bait and was dumbstruck when the fish turned and ate the bait.
It just hung there hardly moving. We managed to gaff both fish just in time to
hit the beach.
The coveted 12x12 trophy |
At the weigh-in, we ended the day
on top with 4 species followed closely by “Wave Dancer” and “Bizy Liz”. The
last day was going to be hectic.
On Sunday 28th, the
tension in the air was palpable as the boats launched. We had a game plan and
were going to stick to it. We needed to catch our banker species so after
catching some livies, we ran to the ledge and put out some lures on the second
turn we got a yellowfin, but it was under the minimum weight of 5kg so we tried
a while longer without any luck. The water had turned green so we moved to
stage 2 of the plan and made a few deep turns and found a shoal of skippies.
The very first one we got was a weigher, but the next few were too small but at
least we had 1 species. We ran back to the ledge trying for the tuna but aside
from a pulled hook, we had no action. With the dirty water pushing out, there
was a strong colour line in 100m. We had been working the edge with lures
looking for a dorado or wahoo but didn’t have a touch. At one stage I saw a big
flying fish launch itself out of the green water. This was the first sign of
life that we had seen and was an indicator that there was a gamefish in the
area. We immediately stopped and put out live baits. This time luck was on our
side and within 20 minutes the close live bait went away with a dorado. There
was a second fish with it, so Zander fed it a bait and hooked up. While I was
clearing the other lines, the far livie went away. I hooked the fish then put
the rod in the holder to gaff the other fish. After Ockie’s fish was gaffed, he
took the third rod and loaded a beautiful 16kg dorado. We had 3 dorries in the
boat of which we could only weigh one, but at least we had our second specie.
2018 12x12 Winners - Team "Hannock" |
Now we had to get a third to make sure we were safe. Going into the last hour
of the comp, our nerves were shot. The wind was blowing a gale and the water
was a terrible colour. Despite trying all the tricks, I could not find a
yellowfin and at 1pm we called it a day, hoping that we had done enough.
At the prize giving that evening,
the results were revealed. 3rd was “Bizy Liz”, 2nd was “Wave
Dancer” and we had managed to clinch the win! Aside from that, we also took prizes
for the top individual, biggest Kingfish, biggest dorado and biggest fish on
day 2. Thanks go to Ockie and Zander for a great weekend with some good laughs
and memories. Well done to St Lucia Ski-Boat Club for a top event!
Thanks for the post Jono
ReplyDeleteWELL DONE TEAM HANNOCK!
Well done, excellent fishing and reporting
ReplyDelete