Port Stephens - Killer marlin day
Got this report in from my mate AndyLoops:
Where to start! We had a blinder of a day last Friday out of Nelson Bay. Joined a charter on a boat called Calypso with Captn Tim Dean and Muzz (these guys have Champion Boat at the Port Stephens Interclub the last 4 years and one of the most successful running out of Port) we were hopeful as most boats been getting 4 or 5 a day in the week leading up to Friday.
Anyway I didnt even bring a camera as I was flying solo but there was a guy joining the crew who writes for a gamefishing mag in British Columbia.. As a result I was very lucky to be able to produce these two pics! (I was stoked when he sent them to me as the fishwrecked logo is nicely presented - You and I had joked about this over a year ago!)
The first pic is a small black about 60kg - we picked him up first line in the water at 9.05am and had him to the boat quicktime. First Marlin and first black for me so I was stoked! That fish had been a long
time in the making! Anyway, the second photo was my third fish for the day - a better Stripey of about
110kg - unfortunately cant see him as the skipper went a bit nuts on the reverse and straight into a nice bit of eastern australian current generated chop! Muzz got the leader and we let him go. The guy that took the pics reckons that water shot is going to be a full pager in the magazine article!
Anyway - little did we know that first little black greyhound was the start of 2 hours of fishing MADNESS. From 9.15 to 11.30pm we raised 14 fish and had multiple double hookups (3 times double hookups and we only lost 1 of the 6 fish..!) with 11 fish to the boat from 12 strikes. We were exclusively skipping Bonito around bait balls 20-40m on the sounder and pitching the odd Slimie mackeral to a fussy fish.
Some highlights from the day include:
* Pulling a holographic shoal teaser to the back of the boat only to have a lit up striped Marlin swim up to it and whack it with its bill - right in front of me!!!
* Tracing a +100kg striped Marlin at the back of the boat while the fish still really green - I was $hitting myself - this thing was bigger than me and was tail walking in the prop wash!!! I reached out and the leader popped as soon as the glove made contact - went off like a rifle and I was half relieved...!
* Watching a guy nail two big striped Marlin without the use of his legs wheelchair bound.. He went to work with a bent but stick on 80! Champion effort.
* Cant speak highly enough of Calypso. Those guys are the best over here and I learned so much just watching the deckie all morning.
Anyway this is only the start of the season as we have a couple months to go yet. I will be back up there all March.
Mate - I am heading here in April http://www.goldeneaglefiji.com/ for 5 days of liveaboard action on the deep seamounts.... Primarily chasing monster dogtooth tuna but wouldn't mind a Blue haha. Will be packing the
fishwrecked shirts for that one as well :-) Leaving in 6 weeks! Happy Days. :)
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shanedm
Posts: 153
Date Joined: 25/06/09
awesome mate. sounds like it
awesome mate. sounds like it was an epic trip :)
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carnarvonite
Posts: 8671
Date Joined: 24/07/07
Love it!!!
Don't you just love it when you are backing up into a good sea.All you can do is sit there and cop it sweet,well salty and bloody cold and wet.
AndyLoops
Posts: 18
Date Joined: 29/10/08
cheers Adz
Thanks for posting that up mate it sure was an epic trip - we will have some pics from Fiji so watch this space...
Cheers
Loops
Lucky Tim
Posts: 2536
Date Joined: 28/11/07
it's always good to see some
it's always good to see some action shots, makes a nice change from normal holding fish photos.
Good luck in Fiji, I'll be very interested to hear how you go.
Faulkner Family
Posts: 18032
Date Joined: 11/03/08
great read and that second
great read and that second pic is a classic.well done to the guys that nailed the fish
RUSS and SANDY. A family that fishes together stays together
big john
Posts: 8751
Date Joined: 20/07/06
Clean up
Looks like the camera would be in for a good clean after that second shot.
Excellent stuff!
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Colin Hay
Posts: 10407
Date Joined: 23/10/07
That second pic is an absolute classic
Port Stephens is an awesome place. And when the fishing is like that it is sensational.
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bod
Posts: 2319
Date Joined: 03/05/06
Great read
good stuff AndyLoops, looking forward to hearing about Fiji. Love that second pic.
Iceman
Posts: 747
Date Joined: 17/03/09
Whitsundays Islands
Great report and pics. I'm heading to Hamilton Island in April and have just booked game charter. Can't wait to get over there and catch these fantastic fish.
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Andy Mac
Posts: 4778
Date Joined: 03/02/06
Brilliant pics
Sounds like that charter is the one to book.
Cheers
Andy Mac (Fishwrecked Reeltime Editor & Forum Moderator)
Youngest member of the Fishwrecked Old Farts Club
AndyLoops
Posts: 18
Date Joined: 29/10/08
back from Fiji
Hey there thought I would carry on with the Fiji report following this one.
Mate what can I say. We were on Golden Eagle for some action packed fishing. There were some fish of a lifetime captures in a part of the world that can only be described as truly amazing. Golden Eagle is a 51 Bertram completely decked out with all the best game gear, popping gear and jigging gear any fisho could wish for. My mate Mikey Brown and I chartered her with just the two of us fishing. The boat can handle more obviously but this was a treat to ourselves and we wanted to enjoy it without sharing ha!
There were four days of hardcore fishing in total. Heres a summary
Day 1.
We were fishing a seamount called Cape Washington - the country was amazing deep water rising to within 150m of the surface. Lots of birds working indicated yellowfin and we picked up a few of these little suckers to feed down deep to the big doggies that we went there for. No trouble picking up a few of these 5-8kg models and we sent one down on the Penn 130 with high hopes of a monster smashing him. surprisingly he was swimming strongly for some time - we fed him down to about 100m and then a few panicked tailbeats and a slow tick tick off the big Penn as some monster ate him. We all looked at each other - this wasnt the screamign run of a big doggie much more like a monster shark that didnt even know he was hooked. Sure enough after following the slowly ticking line for a couple minutes the bugger bit us off. Sent down another livie and this one actually made it back to the boat after going for a swim. Right - doggies werent playing we figured after spending some time with the big bait down deep.
Off we trolled and a mix of big dollies, wahoo and more of the jellybean fin. I am sure I am forgetting some more will have to go back through the pictures..
By now we were heading into the arvo session and the guide - a champion by the name of George Trinkler (you have probably heard of this fishing legend as a contributor to some of the better known magazines and fishing dvds out there including capturing some awesome GWS footage from Stockton and surrounds among other things) - was keen to see us get stretched on some monster GTs that lurk the washes of southern Kadavu Island.
Mike and I had never been popper fishing but second cast and I am on. This is real heart in the throat stuff with a big take on the surface and a screaming run back to the coral. The fish worked me over but we got him to the boat and I was all grins as a 20-25kg GT comes aboard.
Now my mate Mike is a bit of a whizz with the surface lures. In sydney he constantly outfishes me with small poppers on the flats for whiting/bream and sure enough upsizing the popper only upsized the fish for this keen young angler. Mike had watched the first GT come in and then went to work with his popper landing it right in the strikezone. Blooping the sucker back almost to the back of the boat and no $hit just as I looked up at his lure about 10 foot off the stern a massive take with a tail the length of my forearm explodes from the water as this monster screams back to the reef. A smoking run- have never seen anything like it - and Mike and Trinkler were trying desperately to stop the fish from making it to the reef (I got it all on video!). A top of the line reel had its drag fused solid and Trinkler literally burned his hand as he was trying to slow down the locked up spool. Mike was holding on for dear life as this fish was finally turned from what must have been inches from the reef. With a fused drag Mike had to fight the fish for the next 10 minutes pretty brutally and despite being taken elbows to the gunnells a few times eventually the biggest GT ever brought to this boat was dragged through the marlin door. This was Mike's first ever GT and was honestly a fish of a lifetime. Will let the pictures do the talking (to follow Adz will send them to you). Needless to say the beers were cracked and we trolled back into the anchorage for the evening. A great end to Day 1.
Day 2.
High hopes with perfect conditions greeted me as I woke up at around 6am. I was massively hung over on day 1 and after an early night was feeling 1000% better on day 2! I made a cup of tea, grabbed a popper rod and walked out onto the bow to have a couple casts while the crew woke up and had breakfast. Second cast and a 5 foot spaniard smashed the popper. I was stomping on the hatch of Mike's cabin (he was in forward berth) saying wake up mate fish are on! and Johnny the deckie led the toothy critter down to the stern and we brought him in. Right - that was lunch sorted. Today sure felt fishy.
We packed up quick smart and got the lures out as we headed out a bit wider. Having landed the big GT the arvo before we were going to have a crack at a monster Blue. The guys had been spooled on 80 in 90 seconds the week before so we knew there were some big fish out there. We set the 80 on the rigger and then two 15kg outfits for livebait and a 24kg for whatever might eat the R2Sea bibless minnow. What can I say the day was a blinder we caught at least 8 or 9 Wahoo to just under 30kg, stacks of yellowfin, had a jig for a couple of small doggies, and would you believe it 2 blue marlin within an hour of each other. The blues kindly ate the 80. Unfortunately the first fish came up tailwrapped and dead so we dragged him onboard but the second fish was green as at the back of the boat. Some handy leader work from the mighty Trinkler and we pulled the hook and let him go. High fives all round what a day! We ended up running the blue and a few of the bigger Wahoo into the village that allowed the boat to use the anchorage (this is remote Fiji where a big fish is as good as currency) and hung him from a palm tree then donated him to the islanders. Everyone on the island - all 157 ppl - got a chunk of marlin and the next day the smokers were cranking all over the hillside. No refrigeration means smoking is the best way to preserve the flesh.
This village produces the best Kava in Fiji - Kadavu Kava - and Mike and I were invited into the village that night as heros! and we drank stacks of this stuff. Numb mouth and pretty relaxed and chilled out we ended up staggering back to the boat around midnight and crashed out ready to do it all again the next day.
Day 3
Disaster. Anchor wrapped on the coral bommie we were secured to and couldn't move the Bertie.
Trinkler and the Captain wanted us out there fishing and a quick "Plan B" was hatched and implemented. Mikey and I grapped a few popping rods and jumped into Baa's longboat intending to head out to the open side of the reef and get into some GTs before breakfast. Mate first cast and we realised what a mistake it was to not bring gimbal belts and try to tackle these brutes from such a primitive boat! The old Tohatsu motor kept carking it which was exciting as we were in the bloody surf zone in a reasonable swell.. Anyway I managed a nice 20kg odd fish which I will never forget given the way it was caught! Then Iron Mike (he was renamed from Mikey to Iron Mike after his brute GT on day 1) gets his popper into the 1-2 foot of water in the suds and he gave out that "oh no" that I think all GT fishermen must be able to relate to as you just know your going to get smashed and smoked. Explosion on the surface and a much better fish then tries to bust mike up multiple times. Those poppering rods are brutal on the fisherman and from a longboat in a swell with no rodbucket again made Mike feel the pain!
Another great battle and after some fancy longboat work to pull the sucker from the reef and a GT of 30-35kg gets lip-gaffed and dragged into the boat. Another great fish Iron Mike!
That was about all we could handle in those conditions - not a bad start to the day and a pre-breakfast fish at that. We got the call we were going to dump the anchor and made our way back to the mothership. The rest of Day 3 was pretty quiet as we were again back out this time with the 130s and the 80s really trying to cover some ground for that monster blue. Unfortunately he didnt turn up and the bycatch was limited on this heavy gear.
Day 4 we cracked the beers at 9am, cranked the tunes and were trolling around the Eastern side of Kadavu on our run back to Suva. We caught a stack of big dollies, wahoo, a couple barracuda (stinky buggers!), and I caught a nice YFT a bit bigger than the smaller models. The mighty Trinkler quickly turned him into a couple backstraps for sashimi lunch and we ate like kings an hour later once the fillets had cooled in the fridge. On food - the villagers were bringing us out mudcrabs each morning which were bloody awesome in exchange for some fish at the end of the day. Good deal if you ask me. Not every day you can chow down on muddie claws while trolling for marlin in paradise!
Only one slight issue was niggling Trinkler - we hadnt landed any doggies with size. I was keen as to get some metal in the water and jig hard. All day if need be - I wanted a doggie!
In the last hour of fishing on the last day we mark up a big pyramid school of tuna and I drop the jig with only half hopes. We had jigged quite a bit for not much which was disturbing to me. I was wishing I had my sounder within arms reach and the center console over the reef - somethign about not being able to see the sounder was bugging me and it was the thing I was thinking to myself as being the reason we werent picking up the fish. Who knows if I was right or not but hey you get these things when you go fishing.
Anyway the Captain was confident - so confident he came down from the flybridge to help handle the fish. First time he had done this during the trip so my interest sparked a little.
Hit bottom - right lets work this baby - jigged hard and yes! the rod loads up and I am on! Couldnt believe it and there was some serious weight pulling the locked drag on the saltiga. Eventually get the fish to the boat and couldnt believe it he was half the size I was expecting but still a serious upgrade on the models we had caught on day 2. Had foul-hooked him in the pec fin which explained the weight.. I was that happy I am not sure who had the toothier grin - me or him - I had honestly written off catching a decent model of one of these guys and to get him in the last hour before we pulled stumps left on a high for the 2-3hour run back to Suva.
Conclusion
Sorry about the length of the report I am getting a bit carried away here. In short it was a trip of a lifetime with my fishing buddy of 4 years Mike. We ticked all the boxes in terms of target species and - just as importantly - really had a great experience in the southern islands while doing it.
Not a cheap trip but you get what you pay for in life and I highly, highly recommend these guys if you are looking for that trip of a lifetime with your crew.
George Trinkler is a champion and really took good care of us and the Fijian crew - Captain Tom and Johnny - were legends.
Adz I will email you through a stack of pics and if you could put them up would really appreciate it mate.
P.S. left my fishwrecked shirts on the boat for the deckie so I am gonna be in touch for a couple new ones haha!!
Get there if you can.
http://www.goldeneaglefiji.com/
Cheers
Andy