On the 26th May, At and I
launched “ABF” out of Cape Vidal. The launch was one of the easiest that I have
seen in a while. Once on the backline, we sounded around looking for some live
bait. There were a lot around, but most were tiny. We struggled for over an
hour to get a decent supply of bait before we headed north. We put out a few
lures and trolled along the ledge hoping for a wahoo, but we only managed to
catch a big bonito and a small yellowfin tuna.
When we arrived at vegetation, I
rigged up 3 livies and At tacked us between 24 and 30m. There seemed to be some
life on the 28m depth. We saw several big manta rays, a few shoals of bonnies
and what looked like a big shark. We had worked the area for about an hour when
the surface bait went away. At took the strike while the fish took a fast run
on the surface. I turned the boat to follow the fish and saw a bunch of dolphin
heading towards the fish. We were 100% convinced that they would eat the fish,
but by some miracle, they swam straight past it and left us alone to fight it.
Soon At had a nice 9kg cuda on the boat. We were pretty chuffed and went about
resetting the lines.
About an hour later, At was busy throwing
a stickbait when we saw a big dark shape behind it. It faded off before we
could get a good look at it, but it looked to be a billfish. On the next throw,
the fish rushed up and grabbed the stickbait but didn’t hook up. We now knew it
was indeed a sailfish, not only that, but there were three of them in the
water. I ran to the back, retrieved the mid water line and removed the sinker,
just as a fish came in and grabbed the bait. I gave it a bit of line then
tightened up. There was a bit of tension, but then the hook pulled. I cleared
the line and retrieved the deep line to try the same move, but on closer
inspection, the bait was missing… I still had a far surface line out, so I
brought it closer, but nothing came up to it. The fish had faded off so At turned
the boat back to the area. He threw the stickbait again and again the fish
followed it.
A movement behind the boat caught my eye. There was a fish on the
surface bait. I held the reel in freespool anticipating the strike, which came almost
immediately. I fed the fish then tightened up. It hung in the water just
shaking its head a bit before slowly moving off. It was almost as if it did not
know It was hooked. A few minutes later, the reel smoked off and the sea
erupted as the sailfish made a series of jumps. It was beautiful to see
especially at such a close range. After the excessive jumping, the fish had
tire itself out, so it behaved next to the boat. I passed At the rod and took
hold of the bill. The one hook was a bit deep, so I opted to cut the wire and
leave it in. After a quick pic, I revived the fish and sent it on its way. Very
cool!
I'm hooked on fishing! |
In the next two hours, we had 3
cuda pulls, but they just chopped the bait in half. We worked the area and soon
had a proper smoker but unfortunately it bit the wire off. At that stage, it
was getting late, so we opted to up lines and head home after a great day on
the water.