On Friday 8th June at
8:30am, Zander and I launched “ABF” out of Richards Bay. The SW wind was supposed
to improve in the afternoon, so we decided to take the punishment in the
morning and head south into the wind and come back with it in the afternoon.
We first battled for about an
hour to get live bait before making the 18km trip. This took us quite a while
in the small boat as we headed straight into the wind and waves. It took over
an hour to get there and to say we were wet and shaken was an understatement.
To make things worse, as I slowed down on arrival, the one motor died and would
not start for the love or money. A bit frustrating considering it had come back
from a service the previous day! We decided to fish on with one motor and later
when the weather settled, we would try to fault find. In the meanwhile, it was
time to fish. Zander put out 4 rods and I trolled around the wreck looking for
a cuda. There were some good showings but no action on the baits.
Time passed and at about 3pm, I
trolled over a good showing. I suggested that Zander put down a bucktail on the
spinning rod to see what it was. On the second flick, he went on with a fish.
While he was tussling, I noticed the one rod with a big bonnie on it bump a few
times. I wound the reel a bit and I could still feel the bait there. The leader
was on the rod so I stopped winding. Suddenly a long black shape came speeding
in and hit the bait. I freespooled and let the fish start moving off before I
tightened up. The line melted off the reel as the fish went on a long fast run.
We were in a bit of a pickle and Zander was still fighting his fish and I
needed to chase after mine! Zander put max drag on his fish and managed to land
a blacktip kingfish which was unceremoniously released. With the lines cleared,
Zander followed the fish and I put line on the reel. The fish came up to the
surface where Zander put the gaff into a good size cuda. It was a great fish,
but unfortunately had no condition.
A late weigh-in of cuda |
It was after 4pm and knowing that
it would get dark soon, I suggested we try to sort the motor out. With the
jumpers connected, we tried to start it, but no go. After pull starting and trying
every other trick we knew, it would not start so we upped lines and made the
long trip home on one motor, returning well after dark. At least we were safe.
The fish weighed in at 25kg and 27kg. Not bad for our first cuda for the
season.
Just FYI, the motor was sorted
the next day. It was a plug that was not reconnected, causing the battery to
drain to a point where the computer could not start up…