FISHING REPORT
(Courtesy Les Marsh fishingcairns.com.au )
Akashi
& Tomiko were on their honeymoon - two days ago they were at Monkey
Mia in Western Australia swimming with the dolphins, yesterday they
arrived in Cairns, today they wanted to catch a marlin!
Phew ! You have
to be quick some times but that's the way of the modern world. Everything
is done at a hectic pace as we all lead such busy lives and have
limited down time.
Kim Andersen,
the skipper of New Moon III, eased back on the throttles. A quick
change of plans, "lets try for a G.T first". Akashi was handed a
two-metre spin rod loaded with 50lb braid and BIG surface popper.
Chuck it as far as you can towards the bommie and crack as hard
as you can - first cast nothing, second the same, two more brief
stops and crash. The monster G.T. Swallowed the popper in a boil
of foam.
Pump and wind
as hard as you can yelled Kim, Moose the deckie (don't ever call
him Jason) did his best to help as the rod buckled under the pressure
an Akashi struggled to gain line. Tomiko was ready with the camera
and peeled off a few shots of her husband straining under the weight
of a good fish.
We soon had
the 30 lb G.T. Thumping on the deck, a quick de-hook, some more
happy snaps and it was back in the water.
Try over there
yelled Kim from the tower, a few more cranks and another surface
explosion but this time the hooks pulled after a brief fight. Time
to head out wide for the real quarry, a giant black marlin. The
diesels purred as we passed through Grafton Passage, past Michaelmas
Cay on out to the continental shelf. The 15 -20 knot north - north
Easter was not ideal conditions as it made the seas stand up quite
sharply against the shelf. There was also a raging 7 knot current
heading south as well.
We had a skipping
scaly mackerel on 130 lb on the starboard rigger, a small stripy
on the port side and a small green plastic squid down the middle
on a straight 80.
"More marlin
are generally caught in the afternoon" I quizzed Kim - "Yeah, from
1 to 4 is probably the best time for some reason" so we has some
time to kill I mused. "I expect a marlin after 1.00 pm then". No
sooner had we settled into a trolling pattern than the flat 80 screamed,
a small stripy was quickly brought on board, bridled and sent back
out.
Another school
of feeding tuna was found and this time the flat 80 really howled.
Probably a good yellowfin Kim noted, there had been plenty of them
around the day before, real horses nudging 80 lb, we had to cut
them off yesterday as the gear and the anglers were just not up
to the task on light tackle. If we let them have their heads too
long the sharks will have the lot. If you fell overboard out here
you would not last five minutes - the tigers would have you in a
flash. I now understood why all the panic is on when big fish are
hooked. Its not the mad scramble to just land the fish, it's the
hope of releasing it fit and healthy before the gray suits move
in for the kill.
Akashi
was really struggling this time, Tomiko took more photos - it took
about eight minutes to land the 30 lb yellowfin but it was back
in the water, bridled up on the 130 outfit in three. Moose did the
job with the bait needle and I held the deck hose in the tuna's
mouth - circulating fresh water over its gills to keep it alive.
This was valuable bait.
No sooner had
Akashi sat in the chair and clipped on the harness to the 130 when
the tuna went on a slugging run. It had its head down and obviously
in a bit of a panic - the rod sprang up, the line went limp and
it was all over in 45 seconds. A big tiger perhaps - a frustrating
way to lose such a good marlin bait. It was now lunch time and Lavain,
a sun tanned, ever smiling Kiwi lass had prepared fresh fruit, ham
and salad sandwiches, a good cuppa and a real treat for our Japanese
clients - a big bowl of fresh yellowfin sushi!
It was bloody
good too as I helped myself to three portions - served like that,
fresh from yesterdays catch and with all the right trimmings - you
begin to understand why it commands such high prices in a seafood
craving country like Japan.
"Kim", I said,
"its almost 1 o'clock, you had better start producing the marlin
we came after".
Moose began
scrounging around in the bottom of the bait freezer. He pulled out
what arguably is the best dead bait of them all - a two kilo oceanic
queenfish that he bridled up to swim like a giant bibles lure. To
see the skill of his work was amazing. The belly was sewn, lead
put inside the head and the hook sewn on at just the right place
to get the bait to dig down into the current. The backbone was cracked
several times to allow plenty of life like action and it was over
the side on the port rigger at 1-08 pm.
Moose watched
carefully for a few seconds to make sure it was tracking correctly.
Satisfied, he took three steps up to the skippers steering tower
to get a better look. "We've got one up yelled Kim - Les, bring
the starboard bait in, Moose get back down and drop it back. Hell
it missed, Les put it back, No hold on its back, give it some action
Moose. Its gone, no its back again. Les, get that bait out and drop
a small rigged stripy down to it. Hold on its back, Moose get ready,
no gone again" - hell I though computer work was tough on the reflexes!
We've got her
on - after five attempts the lit up marlin snaffled the queenie
and took off on a blistering run that has the backing showing in
no time. I was still struggling to bring the skipping scaly back
to the boat when Akashi was in the chair, the rod put in the bucket
and the reel clips put on. Hell that 500 pounder sure had some power,
poor Akashi wasn't sure whether he would go over the side as the
marlin forced him up to full lean on numerous occasions.
There was diesel
fumes all around as we backed up on the big fish, Kim barked orders,
Moose took a wrap only to be blown away by the sheer power of an
obviously still very green fish and I stood by with the tagging
pool. Four more times the fish jumped, not skywards but away from
the boat in shallow powerful runs. Straining every muscle and putting
the pressure on skipper, crew, angler and gear while Tomiko took
the pics. "Les, if I get caught up in the trace you just cut the
leader with this tool" pleaded Moose, "but make sure that there
is a swivel behind me first!" Never really figured that one out
in all the rush but luckily I was not called upon to do the deed.
I'll
give it one more try yelled Moose and the fish came up again at
the back of the boat - just tantalizingly out of reach of the tag
poll. Moose took a wrap, the fish almost took him over the side,
there was a faint crack and it was all over.
500 lb of lit
up giant black marlin was free to fight another day.
The sheer power
of the fish was awesome, the brilliant colour of the lit up fish
was a beauty to behold, the adrenaline rush was superb - but at
1.18 pm it was all over!
Akashi was shaking,
his arms ached, his legs were sunburnt but he has the broadest beamy
smile on his face that told of a dream come true. On his honeymoon,
with his new bride taking the photos, in one short part of the day
he had caught a monster G.T, landed a prime yellowfin, and done
battle with a giant black marlin.
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