My mom started feeling better after not feeling well for a week, and wanted fresh fish. There was a really nice tidal rise starting from a negative tide, and the trades were up so I decided to wade a spot I hadn’t fished since 2015. It was kind of a long shot since it wasn’t the peak oama season but I hoped to be able to walk out a bit to reach some deeper channels.
The trades combined with the NW and S cross swells really bumped up the water. Wading out to thigh-high still sent waves knocking me back. Masa’s recommended lure that did so well on the kaku the last time out cast well but tumbled in the turbulent water. A light brown kaku and some just legal omilus checked it out but didn’t hit it. I put on another JDM swimmer with a tighter wobble and it seemed to track well in the churned up water.
Suddenly I got a strike that took line. I had made my drag looser since the previous kaku tore themselves off the hook, and the fish dove into the rocks and got stuck. I could feel that the fish was still on and was pretty sure it was an omilu, but omilu rarely rock me like that. I really wanted the fish for my mom, and wanted the expensive lure back. Watching Frank dive for his lure a few weeks ago gave me the idea to do the same. Problem was, no one was around to hold my gear. I walked up the beach and placed my rod/reel, hat, sunglasses and sling bag on top a hedge and followed the line into the water. It was neck deep and the line led to a small tunnel in a rock pile. As I eased the fish out I sure hoped to see a blue finned omilu and not a brown eel or an ugly roi.
Out came an omilu connected to my lure by just one hook of the rear treble hook. Even though I had tried to smash the barbs down, there was enough of a barb to keep the hook in its jaw. Good thing the fish was retrieved otherwise it might have been eaten by something larger down there.
That was the only strike I got during that short whipping session but the 12 inch omilu was exactly what my mom wanted. It was bagged, not tagged and looked small on my new fish cleaning table.