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You are here: Home / Archives for Scott

The site was down for 3 days

February 6, 2025 By Scott 6 Comments

It wasn’t looking good for a while and I began to think that the site couldn’t be restored. Initially, all the content after March 2023 was missing. I requested that the website hosting company restore the site from backups, but the daily, weekly and monthly backups all brought up errors when they were restored. Finally, I fixed the errors on the Jan 9th monthly restore but almost a month’s data was missing.

I had the hosting company restore the weekly backup of Jan 30, and did some tweaking to get the plugins (additional functions added to the site) to play well. Whew…

This made me realize that the site has been up for 10 years. It started as a way for me to keep my technical skills up, and share some oama / papio catch reports and tips. Along the way, the cost of running a website has gone up significantly because now I need to protect the site from hackers, malware, and pay extra to view usage analytics because the number of daily views passed a threshold. Because of this recent problem with data disappearing, I now have to pay for a premium data backup and restore service I can operate myself. The total cost to run the website safely is close to $1,000 a year. No wonder there aren’t any small time, non-commercial fishing blogs anymore.

The site has been a knowledge base of tips and how-tos, fully supported by Holoholo writers who have filled in the many gaps in my fishing experience. It would be a shame to have this information disappear one day. Maybe I can eventually archive the site to one that becomes static and requires very minimal hosting services?

For now, the proceeds from the licensing of the shark video have helped cover operating costs. Mahalo nui loa for supporting the website over the years.

Reminder: Check the real-time radar map and recent rainfall totals with these links

January 30, 2025 By Scott 1 Comment

Just a reminder, if you want to see the real-time radar map of rain falling over the Hawaiian islands, and/or want to want to see how much rain has recently fallen, check the links below.

Might want to bookmark it so you can find it next time we’re going through a torrential flood.

National Weather Service radar map of Hawaii (pan and zoom to your area of interest)

To confirm how much rain has recently fallen, go to National Weather Service Rainfall Summary page and check the 3hr totals for the areas nearby.

With these tools, you not only see how much rain was falling that instant but also how much rain has fallen recently.

Tried Seaguar, Sufix and Promar Ahi fluorocarbon leader and line. Here’s my review.

January 20, 2025 By Scott 7 Comments

Over the years, I’ve used fluorocarbon as leader for my live bait rigs, and as the material I use to tie damashi/sabiki rigs. I’ve used Seaguar Premier, Seaguar Blue Label, Seaguar Invizx main line and Seaguar Inshore main line. Also used Sufix Invisiline and the new Promar Ahi GT4 leader. There are many other brands of fluorocarbon out there that I haven’t tried but these are my impressions of the fore mentioned.

Fluorocarbon is stiffer, and has less stretch than monofilament, and is less visible to fish because it doesn’t distort light that passes through it, while under water. Line companies sell leader material and castable main line made out of fluorocarbon. Fluorocarbon leader is stiffer, thicker and more abrasion resistant than the castable fluorocarbon main line, and costs more because more material that makes fluorocarbon fluorocarbon is required.

Seaguar

Seaguar makes the best fluorocarbon leader and line we can buy domestically. The parent company is actually Japanese, called Kureha, and the products are made in Japan to exacting standards. With fluorocarbon, thinner diameter is better and that’s what sets Seaguar apart from the rest. The Seaguar fluorocarbon leader and main line is thinner and more supple than the competition, and also more expensive. For the sake of thickness comparison, I’ll use 20lb test specs.

Seaguar Premier leader – 20lb .015 inch diameter, $0.68 per yd (Amazon). This is Seaguar’s 2nd best leader, after their Gold Label. I haven’t tried Gold Label because Premier was excellent and less expensive. It’s thin, supple, has low memory and is strong for its diameter. Very pricey. Good when the fish are line shy.

Seaguar Blue Label leader – 20lb .016 inch diameter. $0.50 per yd (Amazon). This is most commonly used fluorocarbon leader form Seaguar. It’s thicker than Premier and stronger and more abrasion resistant. Less pricey than Premier and recommended for offshore fishing.

Seaguar Inshore line – 20lb .016 inch diameter. $0.17 per yd (Amazon). It’s more supple than the same diameter Blue Label leader, and has less abrasion resistance. It’s quite a bit cheaper than Blue Label because it’s not leader line.

Seaguar Invizix line – 20lb .016 inch diameter. $0.13 per yd (Amazon). This line is meant for use in bait casting reels and fresh water. Even cheaper than Inshore line.

Sufix

Sufix Invisiline Leader – 20lb .017 inch diameter. $0.45 per yd. I’ve used this leader for my live bait leader and my damashi rigs. It’s very stiff and requires care when tying dropper loops but is incredibly abrasion resistant. I was mainly using it because we’re a Sufix dealer but now use the more supple options for damashi rigs.

Promar Ahi

GT4 leader – 20lb .017 inch diameter. $0.41 per yd. Same diameter as Sufix Invisiline but more supple and knots are easier to tie. More similar to Seaguar Inshore in suppleness but may be more abrasion resistant. Just started using it in my damashi rigs and like it for the knot tying ease and lower cost.

My Recommendations

For offshore or shore fishing around rocks, go with fluorocarbon leader and not fluorocarbon line, since you want the utmost abrasion resistance. If you can afford it, go with Seaguar Premier if you need stealth, or Seaguar Blue Label if you want an all-around excellent leader. If you want to save a bit of money, try the new Promar Ahi GT4 leader. If you want a really strong, abrasion resistant leader, go with the Sufix Invisiline.

For lighter applications like whipping inshore, the Seaguar Inshore line is a great, inexpensive option. I’ll keep using it for my damashi rigs until I notice that it breaks off easier than the competition.

Went back to where the shark attacked in 2023, under eerily similar conditions

January 17, 2025 By Scott Leave a Comment

I had been avoiding the area the shark rammed my kayak back in May 2023, partly because it was an area I don’t fish, and partly because I didn’t want to relive the experience. I had fished areas around it so it was time to do another check of the area. What made the outing even spookier was that it was flat calm like the shark attack day. I couldn’t find any partners to go with me, so I promised I’d keep my feet in the kayak, and have a Sharkbanz device on my right ankle for the rare times I had to put my feet over the side.

I started off at the opelu spot, a mile from the danger zone, and the school showed up on the fish finder. A fairly big one bit on the first drop and came up scratched up from something that tried to grab it. Oddly enough, that was the biggest opelu I caught all day, and the smaller ones didn’t get grabbed. After 5 were chilling in my footwell I decided not to use them as live bait, and instead dispatched them and put them in the fish bag. I had not had a hookup on live opelu for the last few trips, just bite marks from small predators, so I didn’t want to hassle of trolling a live bait while mining the bottom with the damashi rig.

Talk about a greasy calm, mirror-like surface

Next, I headed a mile north to the shark zone. I kept my eyes on a swivel and no sharks were spotted so I started damashi fishing. Fish bit in the areas with good sonar marks but they were either undesirables (hagi, hawkfish, trumpetfish) or too small (weke nono).

I considered keeping the bigger moano/moana but a lot of my friends aren’t fans of the small bones.

I took a break from the damashi action and dropped the Carolina rig with 2 tungsten weights knocking against each other. It got bit right away but sadly was a slimey nunu (trumpetfish). And look. More than halfway through the trip I realized I forgot to put the Sharkbanz on my right ankle!

I caught another random opelu one the way back to the first opelu spot, but that school had moved on. So it was time to crank up the Bixpy motor and head in through the flat water. I’m trying to figure out if the good bottom fish didn’t bite because the water was1) too calm, 2) the slow Winter season, or 3) the place is junk.

This was all I brought home, but I did get home shark-free. Note the bite marks on the largest opelu. My friend’s wife who loves fresh fish will prepare them like she does saba.

North swell died down a bit but dolphins, whales and sharks tried to prevent me from checking the shallow bottom fish.

January 7, 2025 By Scott 2 Comments

A week ago, the shallow bottom fishing was oddly slow and I suspected that the big north swell was the cause. Here’s how that trip went. To verify that, I started at the same area since the swell had slowed down, and the opelu bite was very good to start off. But the kanpachi, nabeta and juvenile opakapaka were still absent.

I trolled a live opelu out to 220ft and it got bitten but not taken by something not large enough to swallow it whole, it seemed.

Then a small pod of 5ft dolphins started playing in front of my kayak, so I left the area because I didn’t want to hook them. I don’t think they were the ones that mouthed my opelu but maybe they were?

I started heading to an area almost 2 miles south that I’ve only fished a few times that has held big opelu, big aha and ulua. I didn’t want to battle an ulua but hooked something as a lowered a weighted, live opelu down that felt heavy with some head shakes. My Phenix Black Diamond Heavy rod with Avet MX Raptor reel in low gear brought the fish in fairly easily and it turned out to be a mid-sized sandbar shark. Sadly, that was the first large fish I battled with the gear since fishing it for more than a year. It was nice to just grind the shark up.

Two small whales were spouting over the area I was headed to, which was a high spot that attracted bait, and luckily they kept moving south before I reached there.

Another live opelu got killed by an aha so I gave up on live baiting and focused on the damashi. I found the big opelu and they bit eagerly, but since I wasn’t gonna use them for bait I moved on to check the bottom fish.

The high (shallow) side of the drop off yielded small moana, small malu (side spot goatfish), hagi etc so I went past where the drop leveled off and found slightly larger fish on the flat areas. 1lb omilu, 1lb uku and 1lb malu.

The previous malu I kept turned out to be incredible steamed so I kept that but couldn’t find anything else to bring home.

My sister steamed the malu for my dad and said it was tender and flaky “melt in the mouth goodness”! I’ve only caught 2 keeper sized malu ever and they are an uncommon catch but are on the list of great eating bottom fish along with uku, yellowspot papio, kagami, weke nono, moana kali and nabeta.

Oio fishing and damashi fishing after the recent big North swells

December 31, 2024 By Scott Leave a Comment

A series of North and North West swells large enough to run the Eddie Aikau contest swept through and were still present when we fished the Windward side of Oahu. Waves were wrapping and breaking on exposed outer reefs but the inshore reefs just had stronger than normal currents swirling. Friends found the oio bite to be good for 4lb to 6lb fish, so I was hopeful that the damashi fishing in my regular spots would be productive.

I had brought a 4-3/8 inch, sinking 2-1/4 ounce Duo Blazin 110 in case I had to stay shallow and whip the reef, so instead, I trolled it on the way out to the damashi spot, averaging 3mph. In 10 mins, a very skinny aha was on. I’m convinced this lure with its tight wobble would be deadly whipped for papio, and trolled for pelagics. I’ll try to test this lure in the future. You can learn more about Duo Blazin here.

Out at 140ft, there were non-breaking N swells rolling through, and chop generated from far off squalls. Not dangerous but not calm by any means. The bottom marks present on the last few trips were absent and all that came up were small opakapaka, yellow barbelled goat fish and tons of lizardfish. The target nabeta and kampachi were mysteriously absent. I managed to scrape up 3 opelu off small schools and gave up to see if the fish on the reef were behaving oddly also.

The fish were clustered in 40 to 50ft but a weird assortment of very small moana, hawkfish (not the po’opa’a) and unusual hinalea were caught. I did get lucky with a 1lb moana kali, but couldn’t find anymore since the “rubbish fish” were mobbing the damashi. The wind changed to a cold, offshore blast so I headed in.

Friends later told me that bottomfish often move deeper when large swells roll through so that could explain why the bottomfishing was so slow, with very small fish caught. But the oio fishing was better than expected for this time of year. Maybe the oio moved in shallow to take advantage of the swirling current stirring up critters?

Malu (side spot goatfish) compared to Moano/Moana (manybar goatfish) steamed

December 9, 2024 By Scott Leave a Comment

Malu (Sidespot Goatfish)

Malu are less commonly caught than the ubiquitous moano/moana and I’ve actually only caught them on the Windward side of Oahu but at one time, they were caught all over. They are pink and white, with a black squarish spot in the middle of the body, hence the name side spot goatfish. They have a large head head like a moano, but a slimmer body like a white weke.

Moano have a stockier body than the malu and an 11 inch fork length individual is considered a big one. They have soft, flaky meat. Moano are usually steamed or fried, but have a lot of small bones so you have to be careful picking through the meat.

The 12 inch fork length malu I recently caught was steamed, and when we checked to see if it was cooked through, we found the uncooked flesh to be firm and mostly free of pin bones. When fully, the meat turned white, unlike the opaque meat of the moana. It was less fishy than moana and much easier to eat since there weren’t a lot of free floating bones. The meat melted in your mouth like moana does. Definitely worth keeping if they are large enough to steam.

Yellowspot papio compared to uku prepared sashimi and steamed

December 7, 2024 By Scott Leave a Comment

To compare the 1.5 lb yellow spot papio and 2lb uku written up earlier, my neighbor Brian filleted half and steamed the other half. Here’s his brief but detailed comparison of the young fish. Thanks Brian!

Brian:

Yellow spot papio on left, uku on right.

Both fish were great as sashimi. The yellow spot was tender and mild. The uku was firm and had a stronger flavor. The uku was easier to slice since it was a thicker fillet.

Uku on top, yellow spot papio on bottom.

Steamed, the yellow spot papio was more flaky and dense whereas the uku was more moist and light. Texture wise, the uku was preferred but both were very good.

Damashi/sabiki out fished live opelu and jigs but big fish kept breaking off, even with 40lb line! Early Winter shallow bottom report.

December 5, 2024 By Scott Leave a Comment

I have been focusing on shallow bottom fishing since I don’t start early enough for productive pelagic fishing. Bottom fishing has less variables since the fish are usually somewhere in the general vicinity but the trick is getting the right ones to bite.

Almost all species of predatorial fish seem to be attracted to small bait imitations moving up and down in unison. Often the morning starts with opelu biting mid-water column, and when that slows, fish near the bottom eagerly hit the damashi rig. Some spots are loaded with taape and small moana. The former I kill and release back to the reef, the latter I release unharmed.

While it’s always fun to feel the bites and bring up fish, unhooking unwanted fish is just time away from catching the desirable fish like uku, yellow spot papio and kagami papio.

This report comprises of the last 2 trips. 1 trip back, a 1.5 lb uku got tail wrapped and hooked multiple times and by the time I unraveled it, it was in bad shape so I had to keep it. While I’ve been trying to get uku here for years, normally I wouldn’t keep one under 2lb.

Then some toau (invasive black tail snapper) started biting, and since their bones are easier to deal with than the small boned taape, I brought them home.

I went out to the 200ft area but could only get a kahala checking out the underwater camera.

On the way in, I checked the nabeta spot with a small piece of aku belly on the bottom damashi hook and something hit harder than a nabeta could and took some drag. I was stunned to see a 2.5lb uku come up, which is still on the small side but the biggest for this greater area that lacks large rocks and caves.

A fat 11 inch moana hit next and joined the catch. All in all, a productive day learning the bottom fish grounds. My neighbor fried the moana and toau fillets tempura-style and said they were amazing. The smaller uku was steamed, and the bigger one was given to a friend who said the sashimi was firm enough and very good despite only being 2.5lb.

CHL Minnows added to store-bought damashi set

The winds dropped again this week and I set out to bottom fish the damashi armed with the 1.5 inch CHL Minnows (the ones with the split fish tail) and some leftover Japanese wormy lures. Since even my 20lb rigs were broken off on the previous trip, I had rigs tied all the way up to 40lb test.

Look at the bait school on the fish finder!

The opelu showed up on the fish finder and bit in the shallows. I filled the bait tube, requiring me to drag the tube around. Although the wind was down there was a strong current running South to North that kept pushing me away from my spots.

I put out a live opelu and landed and released a big kawalea (Heller’s Barracuda). Good eating but like all barracuda, its slime is really stink.

The next opelu was neatly sliced in half but there were small teeth marks also, meaning it probably wasn’t an ono. The following opelu just had small bites taken out so I gave up live baiting and focused on the damashi fishing.

The afternoon bite really turned on, and omilus and bigger jacks kept jumping on the hooks. I released 3 omilu and each of my rigs from 15lb to 40lb eventually get their branch lines cut or light gold hooks broken off by heavy, strong fish. Those brutes didn’t fall for a jig, interestingly enough.

I was feeling a little desperate with nothing but opelu in my fish bag and then I stumbled upon a very small area where a 1.5lb yellow spot came up, followed by a 2lb uku and then a light colored goat fish that turned out to be a large 12 inch malu (side spotted goatfish). Whew, finally got some great eating fish to take home.

It was a lot of work to get these small good eating fish, with so much bycatch (taape, hagi, small moana, lizardfish, etc). I gave the big opelu to a friend at the beach who plans to make lomi opelu out of them, and kept a small one to freeze for bait.

The malu had crabs and some red & white shrimp in its stomach a little bigger than my CHL Minnows, and the yellow spot papio had translucent baby fish just a bit bigger than the minnows. No wonder the small damashi lures were so effective. Maybe really big fish were eating the same small food? I’ll be taking 40lb damashi with longer shanked Gamakatsu hooks next time and hope to see what’s been busting me off!

Here’s a comparison of the yellow spot papio and uku, prepared as sashimi and steamed.

Here’s a comparison of the malu and moana, prepared steamed.

We split up, friend went shallow for oio, I went after opelu. Kayak fishing during a rain storm.

November 11, 2024 By Scott 2 Comments

I had been under the weather and missed a few light wind days. I needed a calm, safe day to ease back into offshore kayak fishing. Guy, who I last fished with more than 1.5 yrs ago, and hadn’t kayaked since, wanted an easy day to make sure his equipment and body still worked. There looked like some rain but light wind on the Windward side on a rare day our schedules aligned so we made the plan that he would stay inshore and troll for papio, and dunk for oio. I would head out to the bait spot and try to catch opelu and other bottom dwellers on the damashi rig.

We drove through heavy rain and ponding water but our destination just had moderate showers. The wind was light as we launched but half a mile out, I began to get hit with increasingly stronger onshore wind and chop, 15mph with higher gusts. It was a slow slog to push through all that, taking much longer than normal. 2 miles from shore, I lost radio contact with Guy probably due to all the showers and mist.

Fish bite well on overcast, rainy days and I had high expectations. I turned on my old GoPro Session 4 I had mounted to the bow of the kayak, to share a view of what it looks like when I’m trying to catch opelu on the damashi rig. Sure enough, the opelu were in the mid-water column and hit all 3 of my hooks. If I could stay on top of the school and drop on them, they’d bite. You’ll be able to see the action on the video below.

The fish like foul weather but me, not so much. I was socked in and couldn’t see land, and the swirling currents kept spinning me around. I had to use my fish finder’s compass to figure out which direction I was drifting. It was so choppy and swirly I almost got sick, and had to do all I could to clear my head.

I really wanted to stay and bottom fish with the damashi but I had live opelu after all, so I put one out with a sliding weight and paddled around the area for a bit. Eventually that line got tangled with my damashi line since I was spinning around so much. When I checked the bait, it had been pulled off. I gave up on live baiting and focused on catching stuff on the bottom. I dropped the camera rig on good marks but didn’t hook anything. Was really hoping to capture some interesting footage.

Occasionally Guy and I were able to hear each other for a garbled sentence or two so we both knew the other was ok. I think my old vhf radio was at fault and probably doesn’t have the range it did when it was new. It sounded like the papio trolling was slow inshore.

I was leaving the bait area at 2pm and ran across some really good marks. So I dropped the damashi down again and a strong fish busted off a branch line but a nice lai (leather jacket) came up. I hate handling lai because its dorsal and anal fins have venom, but figured Guy could eat it and use the skin to make lures, so I snipped the offending spines and kept it.

The next couple of drops yielded opelu so I tried to catch as many as I could (see the video) but eventually other fish like lizardfish and the yellow barbelled goat fish hit the damashi baits. Even nabeta were in the feeding frenzy.

I ended up with 18 opelu for the day, my best so far.

Oio #1
Oio #2

I started to head in and got in radio range of Guy. He said he was anchoring in shallow water and using some freezer burnt tako (octopus strips), and caught a small oio. As I got closer to him he landed an even bigger oio that fought like a white papio, with a lot of head shakes. Nice!!

Guy said the shallow inshore waters were eerily still with steam coming off the surface. Such a contrast from the conditions I experienced. Here’s the video.

Guy’s family wanted raw fish dishes, so he sashimi’d the lai, made lomi out of the oio (2.5lb and 4lb) and made a simple poke (inamona, salt, dried shrimp) out of the opelu.

He’s drying the lai skin to make lures.

Another friend’s wife Mayumi is from Japan and would eat fish everyday if she could. They don’t buy whole, local fish so I wanted to see what she thought of opelu and nabeta.

She deep fried the nabeta enough to eat the skin and scales but not the bones. She said the opelu tasted very similar to the saba (mackerel) she eats in Japan and really appreciated both fish.

I vacuum sealed the smaller opelu and froze them for bait. In hindsight I wish I had caught more since so many people enjoy eating opelu.

Holoholo: 40g beveled flatty tungsten jig slays Los Angeles Harbor fish!

October 24, 2024 By Scott 2 Comments

(top to bottom) 60g tungsten jig – repainted, 40g tungsten jig – repainted, 40g non-tungsten JDM jig, 40g Daiwa TG Bait

My buddy RJ, of the Promar – Ahi USA crew that took care of me when I attended the Fred Hall Show in Long Beach, had recently started testing the new Promar Ikara jigs and was really getting into micro jigging.

I had some knicked up tungsten jigs we sell, that I had touched up with glow paint and nail polish, and a couple other JDM jigs I hadn’t used in a while, so I sent them to RJ to compare with the non-tungsten jigs he was fishing.

He had a successful outing with them and agreed to share how the tungsten jigs worked on the saltwater bass of SoCal. Thanks RJ!

RJ Oropeza:
My background: Hi Scott. Being out on the ocean, with our lines in the water is where I always want to be.  For me, targeting and landing large Calico and Sand Bass is always an option, but when the weather is good, heading offshore is a must.  If it’s not Santa Barbara Island, then Catalina Island is the next best location. Fishing for rockfish when it’s in season, hunting for large yellowtails coming up from the South in the summer, and drifting for Halibut can result in big and memorable catches when offshore. When I am not fishing on the boat, I scratch the itch by surf fishing, and kayak fishing.  I am open and enjoy all forms of saltwater fishing.  I find the ocean to be my mediation zone, and when I am fishing, I am meditating.  

On Saturday, we were able to take the boat out for a couple hours to see if we can catch some keepers inside the Los Angeles Harbor.  We left the dock at 11:15am, the skies were slightly overcast, with light wind blowing.  The outside temperature was 69 degrees, and there was a slight chop.  Our first stop was a spot, near the San Pedro Bay Area, inside the break wall.  It took about 5 minutes to arrive to our desired location, we shut the engines off, and prepared the trolling motor for a slow drift. 

We could see via the fish finder that there were a few fish sitting on the structure, waiting to be caught.  I reached for my Daiwa Harrier rod armed with the 40gram tungsten jig (Blue/White/Silver/Pink) with VMC Techset assists.  To keep things stealthy yet somewhat abrasion resistant, I was using 30lb Seaguar Premier as the fluorocarbon leader. It didn’t take me more than 2 minutes to get my line in the water.  Before I could feel the jig hit the ocean floor, I was already hooked up to what felt like a nice size bass.  I was shocked at how fast it took to catch the first fish of the day. This is always a good sign, when you catch the first fish within 10 minutes of starting out the trip.  I had a feeling the day was going to be fun. 

With the help of the new jig, we managed to put a few more bass on the deck along with a fighting mackeral.  I was able to hook them on the free fall, the retrieve, and on the bounce.  It was clear to me that this tungsten jig was very attractive to the bass in the harbor.  The predators around could not resist the sexy dance that this lure displayed.  The beveled edges create a realistic sharp darting motion,  and the weight allows you to launch the lure far enough to have a long retrieve back, giving the angler plenty of time to dance the jig back to the boat.  The color scheme, with added glow dots, seemed to be very effective. 

On several retrieves, I was able to see fish come near the boat as they chased the jig in hope of a better view.  This jig made what could have been a slow day, turn into a fun and productive one.  Overall I felt that this jig was a must have for any angler interested in slow pitch jigging.  The small and simple design could not be ignored by the fish we were targeting.  Thanks again, for your recommendation, as always I appreciate the wisdom that you share.  You were right, this jig, “slayed the bass in the harbor“.

I look forward to landing more fish in the future, with this sexy piece of tungsten and will give the other jigs their fair shot in the water.

Aloha Scott!  Keep your pole bent, and your line tight. 

Editor: You can find the 40g and 60g tungsten jigs, dressed and undressed, in the Store here.

Dropped the CanFish CamX camera down and was amazed at the diversity of life

October 9, 2024 By Scott 2 Comments

I drove to the Windward spot as early as I hoped to, but a rain squall delayed my launch, and the onshore chop slowed me from getting to the grounds nearly 3 miles out. But the brown boobies greeted me as they always do and made a tight circle. When they do that, I find usually bait in the circle and sure enough an opelu bit on the first drop even though it was close to 9am. Scattered, feeding opelu appeared on the fish finder.

For the next hour opelu bit along with lai, small opakapaka and lizard fish if I dropped too deep. I stuffed 8 opelu in my bait tube, a record for me I think. I weighed one down with a sliding tungsten weight and took it deeper and then onto the shallow ledge but it only got pulled off by a small aha, I’m guessing. I put another opelu on and the same thing happened. Nothing was big enough to swallow the opelu and get properly hooked by one of the 2 hooks.

So I went back out to the bait spot and the bait marks were gone. The only thing that came up were lizardfish. The afternoon solunar bite was supposed to be starting but the fish weren’t cooperating. Since the fish finder wasn’t helping, I attached a 20lb leader 2-hook damashi rig to the CanFish CamX underwater camera, attached that to my heavy jig rod, and dropped it over what looked like small patches of structure. Occasionally I’d hook a small opakakpaka or lizardfish, but the action was really slow.

After dropping a bunch of times on what I hoped were areas of small structure, I went to the sandy area where nabeta have bit in the past and dropped the camera down with some opelu meat. I felt tugs through the stiff rod but the fish were just pulling off the bait. I was really hoping the culprits were caught on camera.

When I got home and looked at what was recorded, I was astounded at how many species were on that small structure I initially dropped on. There were small patches of rubble holding some type of short seaweed. And those spots were packed with fish.

The sandy area I had my bait yanked off did indeed have nabeta. This video captures one coming out from under the sand to grab at the bait. And I didn’t bring up any nabeta so maybe they are always there but I often can’t hook them?

The CanFish CamX may prove invaluable for aiding us in determining if fish are around, even when we aren’t getting bites. My friend Shea on the Big Island has used the discontinued GoFish cam attached to his live bait trolling rig to see how many ono have sniffed his bait and turned away.

If you’re interested in purchasing a CanFish CamX, lemme know. I’ll be putting together an order for friends. Please contact me through the Contact page.

Super thin tungsten “knife jigs”. Had to order some to try since the compact ones were so effective.

September 30, 2024 By Scott Leave a Comment

Duo Semi Long 125g 13cm/ 5″ non-tungsten jig on bottom for comparison.

The price of tungsten jigs has been steadily climbing because of various economic factors having to do with the production and import from China. A manufacturer is letting me buy these jigs in relatively small quantities but they are so expensive even at wholesale pricing. The current retail price of the 180g size is over $40!

The thin, long jig is meant to “slide and sweep” back and forth as it falls, unlike the more compact tungsten jig shapes that fall quicker and need to be jigged with the rod tip to look like small crustaceans or bait fish. Knife jigs work well on mid water column fish like pelagics and jacks, but these have been proven to work well skipping over the bottom from shore.

160g jig
Top
Bottom

160g 17cm – 5.6 oz 6-7/8″.

180g jig
Top
Bottom

180g 18cm – 6.3 oz 7-1/8″

I was sent a blue/silver/pink 160g jig and a green/gold 180g jig to inspect. The almost holographic finish was dazzling, and the thin jigs couldn’t be bent. I was convinced and ordered a batch of 120g and 180g jigs to satisfy the shore, kayak and boater’s needs.

Stay tuned to hear how these unique jigs fish.

In this video from GoGoGoFishing Nabu, you can see how a smaller version of the lure looks skipped underwater.

1) Did I catch a Kona Kampachi type of kahala. 2) How did my small kahala get worms? Life cycle of worms explained in simple terms.

September 25, 2024 By Scott 4 Comments

In Hawaiian waters, we have two species of kahalas or amberjacks. The better known one is the greater amberjack, which is the larger species. The smaller, slightly less encountered one is the almaco jack, which is being farm raised in Kona under the name “kampachi“. Both are actually good eating but because of ciguatera accumulation and abundance of parasitical worms, they are normally released.

I’ve never caught small kahala until this year, and recently kept a 14 incher to see if it was too small to have worms. Sadly, it had quite a few 1 inch long, off-white worms about the diameter of round dental floss I was able to pull out from the spinal cavity. The fact that they could be removed so easily made them suspect, and probably not part of the fish’s nervous system. Disappointed, I did a quick internet check and found this on the website ncfishes.com, about the lifecycle of the Amberjack Tapeworm.

It’s pretty creepy actually. Sharks are host to adult tapeworms. The sharks poop out the eggs of the worms which develop into a very small, young form of a tape worm on the ocean floor, that are then consumed by crustaceans. The tape worm then grows into its next life stage, still very small, and is intact in the crustacean when it’s consumed by a small fish. The small fish is then consumed by an amberjack and the tape worm develops further, into the “spaghetti worm” stage. Finally, when a shark eats the amberjack, does the tape worm fully mature in the shark, lay egg and the life cycle starts again.

I think the 1 inch tape worms I found in the 14 inch kahala were waiting to grow larger and thicker as the kahala grew. If they overwhelmed the kahala, the host fish would die and so would they. Kinda like how viruses work.

Credit: gulfcouncil.org

I had kept the 14 inch kahala because it fit the description of an almaco jack. It had a deep, flat body, and its jaw ended before its eye started. It also had a tall dorsal fin. See the chart above from gulfcouncil.org. It was gross to find worms but omilu and white papio have worms too, and this kampachi wasn’t fishy tasting like omilu and white papio. No wonder they are farm raising the almaco.

I’m gonna try to get another small almaco to see if it has worms, and will cook it up again! Not brave enough to eat it raw though.

Holoholo: Aim, load, cast, repeat.

September 23, 2024 By Scott 8 Comments

Matthew Ikeda started guest posting for us as a 6th grader. He’s our most prolific poster with close to 50 posts so far, and as his shore fishing knowledge has grown, so has ours. Congratulations Matt, on your many high school accomplishments and may God continue to bless and guide you as you go off to college.

Matt: The sun was well below the horizon, and I had gone three hours casting my lure without even a tug. It was so dark that I had no clue where my cast was going, and only muscle memory told me how to work my lure. I thought about packing up – after going through many “whitewash” trips, you sort of know the feeling when you’re not going to catch a fish. But something told me to stay. After all, this was one of my last chances to catch an Ulua before leaving for college. Catching a shore-based Ulua on a lure had been my goal since I started fishing at nine years old. I was now almost nineteen. 

I thought about the real likelihood of an Ulua being around. This summer was one of the slowest I had experienced, with many back-to-back whitewash trips. June, July, and August are generally the best months for fishing in the year, but something was different this year. However, all of my doubts soon vanished. 

A few casts later, I heard an explosion of water and felt my rod almost getting yanked out of my hands. I immediately snapped to attention, jerking my rod to set the hook and planted my feet to brace against the fish’s first run. I knew this was the Ulua I was looking for. 

The fish ran wildly, reminding me of just how powerful Ulua were. Then it stopped. To my dismay, I felt the dreaded feeling of my leader rubbing on the reef. The fish was stuck and not budging. My heart sank. It would really suck to lose my Ulua this way.

Using my headlamp, I could see the rock my line was wrapped around. I opened my bail and frantically ran further into the surf. After taking a couple of waves to the face, I was able to free the line. I immediately started boosting the fish, and after a few smaller runs, I could see the chrome outline of an Ulua in the water. I knew I was close but I knew I couldn’t rush the fish, not wanting to pull the hooks loose. 

I kept steady pressure as the Ulua stubbornly resisted, using its full body to ride the strong current. But it had reached its limit, and I could see just how exhausted the fish was. It gave a few strong kicks before finally coming to the surface just a few feet away. I grabbed the Ulua by the tail and quickly retreated to a safe area. I was stoked. 

Looking at the Ulua on the rocks, I couldn’t help but think how amazing of a fish it was. This was a fish that had tormented me over the hundreds of hours I spent learning how to catch it, requiring tens of thousands of casts and many, many fishing trips over the years. I had hooked a few in the past, but every one found a way to get loose. But now it was all over. 

However, the action was not over. A couple of days later I was lucky enough to land a Pao pao Ulua while sight fishing on the flats, a true rarity and a fish that I never thought I would even get a shot at catching.

Shortly after, I landed a nice 8.5# white Papio and then another Ulua to cap off the most insane two weeks of fishing I’ve ever experienced – a great way to wrap up my time in Hawaii. 

As the first to learn fishing in my family, it was never easy. This Ulua is just one fish that represents a lifelong journey of learning, failing, and trying new things. While fishing has been difficult, I’ve never been alone. I started writing for Scott when I was in sixth grade, and I’ve always been grateful for the people I’ve met and advice I’ve received through this site. Thank you to everyone who has supported my passion for fishing over the years. It’s hard to capture in words how much fishing has meant to me, but I’ll always remember the good times we’ve shared together. Until we meet again🤙.

“Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day, teach him to fish and you feed him for a lifetime”

Some of the new gear worked well and some didn’t

September 19, 2024 By Scott Leave a Comment

In case you were wondering how the test products were working, here’s the quick rundown.

DUDS

The VMC Octopus Live Bait hooks didn’t seem to hook fish any better when used on a damashi/sabiki rig, and were harder to quickly unhook from the fish. I did like the how the bent-back eye of the hook made the hook hang straight when tied with a snell, but the offset angle of the point didn’t release from the fish easily.

The scented 13 Fishing soft plastics weren’t any more effective than the Completely Hooked Lures minnows I normally use, and were more expensive.

STUDS

The flexible Rapala Fish Pro 6 inch Fillet Knife has performed really well, especially on soft fleshed fish. Such an improvement over my thicker, stiffer knives.

NOT TESTED YET

Haven’t used the 13 Fishing Concept Z SLD reel yet. Need to throw some plugs for papio or kaku while they are still close to shore.

I have used the Phenix 6’6″ Black Diamond Heavy boat rod and 6′ PE 2-4 Megalodan jig rod, but haven’t fought anything significant on either. I do like the lightness and strength so far, though.

I’ll drop a Duo Drag Metal Force Semi Long jig on the Megalodan jig rod.

And to add to my backlog of products to test, I purchased a Chasing Can Fish Lure underwater camera since the GoFish camera is discontinued. It has an external on/off switch, full 1080p and more than 2 hr of battery time. I’ve used it once so far and the ease of use and clarity was a big upgrade to the GoFish. If the camera turns out to be a winnah, I plan to become a dealer and sell it at our usual killer prices.

This was taken in 50ft of water and hasn’t been photo edited at all. I wasn’t able to drop on fish in the deeper water, but water clarity at 130ft was clearer than this shot.

I caught the monster that was grabbing my opelu and rocking me. So we smoked it!

September 16, 2024 By Scott Leave a Comment

For years now, when I put my bait and jigs down near the bottom at a certain ledge on the Windward side, something would grab it and rock me but when I pulled to break off the snag, the feeling was stretchy before the hook tore free. The weird thing was I always got my leader and hooks back without any nicks. I suspected it was a tako but no one believed me. The next likely suspect was a roi, which I’ve caught there a few times in slack conditions.

On this outing last week, it was too calm in the morning with very little wind and not much of a ripple on the surface. The bottom fish weren’t at the normal spots and nothing wanted the fresh opelu I trolled out to 300ft and back into 70ft, covering 2 square miles. Finally, after 12pm, a ball of bait showed up under the kayak and 2 opelu came up. I put one out on the unweighted “flat line” and an aha immediately pestered and killed it. Since the opelu was still intact, I put it down on a weighted line and before it reached the bottom something grabbed it. Luckily I was holding the rod so I could wrest the creature away from the rocks and a tako popped up!

I’ve never kept a tako and wasn’t sure how to dispatch it. I ended up putting it on the deck of the yak and stabbing it between the eyes with the big brainer I use. It eventually lost its color but had leaked out chocolate brown ink all over the yak. I put it in my fish bag and wondered how I’d process it.

By now it was 1pm and I had been struggling to find biting fish since 9am. I went back out to the dependable damashi spot and marks began to appear. I hooked something strong with headshakes and was surprised to land a 14inch almaco jack, a type of Kahala, that is farm raised under the name “Kona Kampachi“. I kept it, hoping it was too young to be infested with worms, like most kahala are. My 15lb damashi got busted off on the next drop by a strong running fish so I put on a store bought rig with fish skin flies and 25lb branch lines. I couldn’t hook anymore almaco jacks but suddenly the opelu and small halalu started biting the damashi. I can only attribute that frenzy to the solar lunar bite period turning on.

It was later than I had expected to stay out so I had to leave the fish biting. The tako’s ink was all over my gear and fish bag but surprisingly didn’t smell too bad and cleaned up fairly easily.

My family felt sorry for the tako and didn’t want to eat it after watching various octopus documentaries showing how smart they are, so my neighbor accepted the task of cleaning and smoking it. He’ll do a guest post showing how to easily turn a raw tako into a delicious meal. For now these photos of the resulting, super ono smoked tako will have to do.

I cleaned the little almaco and there were off-white, roundish 1-inch strands about the diameter of dental floss embedded in the spinal column that I could pull out. Assuming they were juvenile tape worms, I was pretty grossed out. I quickly filleted the fish for practice since I had never cleaned a kahala before and was surprised the fillet was darker than a yellow spot papio, which the thick skin and small scales resembled. I considered dumping the fillets but decided to check them carefully for worms and have my sister pan fry them for me dad.

I was stunned when my picky dad said “it’s a good fish” and my sister said the skin crisped on the bottom of the pan and separated from the meat which had turned white. She said it was one of the best tasting fish she has pan fried. Who would have thought!

So a very slow outing resulted in identifying 2 very sustainable food sources, tako and almaco jack. I’ll try to do another post on the lifecycle of amberjack (kahala) tape worms. It’s a bit gross but explains why almost all kahala have worms.

Holoholo: May – August shore line report

September 13, 2024 By Scott 1 Comment

Merik Chun returns to share how this summer’s bait fish, whipping, shore casting and throw netting season has been. We’re very blessed to get his insight from all the hours he spent on the water.

Merik:

Potentially the most rewarding time of the year for any fisherman. The summer months. This usually ranges from mid-April into May, and can last all the way till August, and as of recently maybe even September. 

Throughout these last few months the primary focus was shore fishing. To be specific bait casting and even throwing net (ʻupena). There was definitely a presence of fish, but knowing how to catch them is always the tough part. 

11 inch Moi on Tako light baitcasting

The first form of baitfish to show up this year were the nehu, followed by small schools of halalu and sardines. This attracted predators such as papio, kaku, and moi. This summer the main baitfish which I had focused my attention toward was the halalu and sardine piles. I usually target these baitfish by whipping for them, using a light game rod, with a smaller size reel. Using a California style rig with at least 2 arm spans of 2# mono to a small hook with an aqua strip, with the right stroke it was possible to catch these small baitfish. While the halalu in particular are good eating fried whole, I usually just caught enough to free line in hopes of Papio or other predators. The best time of the day I’ve noticed was right as the sun was going down, and that’s where the action came. I managed to get lucky with a few small papios, the occasionally kaku snip, and even an out of season moi, all on live sardine/halalu. 

3.5lb Mu on Tako baitcasting

This summer has also proven to be productive in the shore cast category, which was primarily baitcasting with the occasional slide bait. Baitcasting is a popular way to catch a large majority of Hawaii’s nearshore fish, using a long casting rod, and a reel (conventional/spinner) usually spooled with monofilament line. From the beaches to the rocky shores, bait casting has proven to be productive. I managed to get lucky with everything from Oio’s to mu’s and even another out of season moi! While baitcasting, I usually like to fish around the tide changes around 2 hours before and 2 hours after the slack tide. This is when I’ve noticed fish feeding actively consistently, but it’s also a variable which is heavily dependent on location and time of year. 

Another focus for myself this year was throwing net (ʻupena kiloi) which is the art of using a cast net to target fish along the shoreline. In Hawaii, there is a legal size requirement for the eye of the net which is 2”. This ensures that smaller fish are able to swim through which would be too small to take home. Knowing the size requirements of your net and the fish you’re after is a must. For the most part, the fish population in the areas I usually try are quite normal. Schools of kala and manini grazing on the reef was a sign of a healthy reef, but were not my main targets. One thing I’ve noticed this year was an influx of uhu and pananu close to the shoreline. This is a fish I haven’t seen much of in the past. Everything from blue and brown pananu, to even red whiptail uhu’s were plentiful in numbers in an area where I haven’t seen them before. They proved difficult to throw on always sitting right out side of throwing range. Though every once in a while when they climb up the reef or a flush of whitewater covers them, I’d get lucky. This was a good sign that the parrotfish population was present in what seemed to be sustainable numbers. 

When it comes to throwing artificial lures, I hadn’t gone on as many trips as I would have liked. I would go on the occasional flats trip bringing along a light-game setup with the hopes of hooking into an oio, while really the main goal was to find some fresh bait! Ironically although I wouldn’t have much luck in the bait department, I happened to consistently get lucky with oio strikes. It’s always the case when you go out with a goal in mind, and it happens that you get lucky in some other way shape or form. Whenever I walk the flats with the hopes of targeting an oio, I end up finding tako. I guess that’s why the Hawaiians never speak about what they’re targeting and just keeping it simple by saying that they going go “holoholo”. I was quite surprised that I was hooking into so many oio as during the summer months they usually are a bit harder to come across. In the few trips I had gone on, I managed to get lucky with a handful of strikes, and a few solid fish landed. A fantastic sign that the oio are still actively feeding and are around. 

Before the summer months came around, I told myself that I was going to try go on more plugging trips. That never really came to fruition as I only managed to get out and try three times. Although I never landed any fish, I did get action two out of the three trips. These trips were dawn patrol trips which I’d get out to the spot at around 5:00 in the morning before the sun peeks over the mountain. I would work a stretch of grounds where I have gotten action in the past, until around 8:00 where I’d feel like the action had shut down. The first of the three trips came in early June, where the grounds looked fishy, only to find myself cast after cast with no action. I had seen one small omilu in the 5# range and casted at it only to have it ignore my lure and swim off.

14 inch White Papio on Live Sardine (Freeline)

The next two trips came around Mid-August and these trips are where I had noticed an influx in fish activity. As soon as the sun peeked over the horizon, I’d find myself watching omilu in the 10+ pound range following the lure up to my feet. Then no more than five casts later, Hanapaʻa! The strike came following the sweep of my stickbait, and was strong enough to pull me off my feet. I had a hard time keeping the rod up as it stripped line from my reel, but out of all my strikes this was the first where I felt like I had a chance. But to my disappointment with the dense reef structure and intricate ledges it managed to get pinned down and spit the hook.

After the action from that day, I decided to try again two days later. Same plan with similar conditions, get to the spot crack of dawn, and play the rising tide. This time the action came later in the morning around 7am. It’s a type of excitement that you must experience first hand in order to truly appreciate. Being able to witness an ulua chase after your lure. In this case I was able to watch the fish swimming chasing my lure only to take a single swipe at it and miss the hooks completely. Immediately next cast in the same area, I had another black Ulua follow my lure up to the ledge only to turn last second. These two fish were just above rat size around 20-25 pound range, but the excitement was there nonetheless. A few casts later, a pair of proper Omilu around the 15# range followed my lure up to my feet, only to lose interest in my figure eight’s. This amount of action in Mid-August was no surprise. During this time about a week prior, oama schools began appearing at some spots in the area. The past few of years the oama have been making a late summer appearance in around Mid-August to early September, which would  make sense on why the omilu seemed to be more plentiful at this time. Soon enough oama and papio action is going to be a part of a Winter report. 

The action during these summer months never ceases to amaze. From slinging lead to casting lures, there is always something to do. This year’s summer had been filled with action in every shoreline department. Main thing is that you just get out there and try. Just remember, it’s an amazing gift to be around the ocean, and any catch is simply a bonus.  With the winter months ahead and oama still around there is a good chance that the action will continue. Just gotta get out there and go fishing! 

Holoholo: I caught a Kagami ulua on a Duo jig I was testing!

September 10, 2024 By Scott Leave a Comment

Editor: I had picked up some Duo Drag Metal Force Semi Long jigs from our local Duo Distributor to try out. If they proved effective, I was gonna order some for the Store. I shared an asymmetric sided 155g pink with glow stripes jig with my friend and occasional kayak partner, Lawrence, who consistently catches fish jigging off his kayak, when the pelagics aren’t biting his live opelu.

Lawrence:

Here’s how it it all went down… I paired the jig with a JI Fishing Co assist hook and dropped it on a school of fish. No immediate bite, but did see a mark on the fish finder and noticed it was chasing my jig on the way up. I let my jig back down to the bottom of the ocean and the fish hit my jig. The fight felt like an ulua and during the fight one of my other live bait poles goes off. I’m double hookup. Focusing on my jig rod, I let my live bait rod fight alone and hoped it could handle the constant pulling. Unfortunately the fish pulled really hard and broke the line.

Refocusing on the jig line, I get to the point that I see color and first thing to my mind is ohh, white ulua. Nothing wrong with white ulua but I’ve caught a few, along with kahalas. Once it got to the surface, I realized it was a Kagami (African Pompano). Quickly grabbing my Kage (Hawaiian Spear), I stabbed it in the gills and brought it on board. Super Stoked to catch this dream fish of mine.

The kagami ended up weighing 11.24 pounds. I liked the Duo Semi Long jig so much I bought another one in 155g and a smaller one in 105g from HI Fish Gear in Ewa Beach!

Here’s the video of the action.

Note (9/29/24): The 155g jig I bought caught a small kawakawa!

Thanks for reading!

Editor: I plan to put my compact tungsten jigs away for a while and fish these larger Duo jigs. I’ll also rig them with BKK or Shout assist hooks and put some in the Store. Stay tuned!

Holoholo: Plugging Report Summer 2024

September 7, 2024 By Scott 4 Comments

Thad, our JDM product expert, breaks down how his papio/ulua season has played out.

Thad: The plugging season at the spots we frequent on Oahu began a little later this summer than in the past couple of years.  My fishing buddies Dino, Travis and I devoted a few sessions here and there from early April with the hopes that we would catch the start of the season but to no avail.  On a whim, Travis wanted to try plugging a brand new spot in early June and convinced me to skip the flats fishing that day and I’m glad I listened.

We walked out near the edge of the reef and began casting our lures at the crack of dawn.  It was still mostly dark with just a slight glow of the sun on the horizon when on my second cast, something came up from the deep to attack the new popper I had ordered from Japan.  As it tried and missed three times, I could barely make out the splashing in the dark even though it was only 20 yards from me, but I could hear it.  As the lure reached the tip of my rod in an area about shin deep, I kept the popper in the water and swept my rod back and forth to keep it moving with hopes the fish was still around.  The ulua came up onto the reef shelf and while swimming sideways in the thin water, grabbed the lure and took off for the deep!  It may have been the most exciting eat I’ve ever experienced.  Unfortunately, after a hard 5 minute fight, the ulua popped off and got away.  Based on the strength of the fish, it was a good sized one and definitely the largest I hooked this year. 

I checked my lure and hooks and everything looked ok so I cast it back out and proceeded to show Travis the retrieve style I was using for the first hit when I got another one.  This one felt smaller and I quickly brought in a 4lb white papio.  After a few pics, the fish was released.  I ended the short morning session with another catch and release 4lb white papio before we called it a day.  Overall, it was an exciting start to the 2024 season. 

The next weekend, Dino and I decided to try a spot on the opposite side of the island from the previous week.  I lucked out again and within the first few casts, I felt a tug as the lure was nearing the rocks I was standing on.  I set the hooks several times – harder than I did when I lost the first ulua.  This fish felt heavy but wasn’t running nearly as hard.  As it neared me in the whitewash, I pointed my headlamp towards the area of the fish and I could see that it was a small ulua foul hooked on its side.  No wonder it felt heavy.  I was able to tag my first ulua of the season with a PIFG tag and safely release it to grow some more.

The next two weekends in late June were spent traveling in Japan with my family and friends.  I didn’t do any fishing there and constantly imagined all the ulua swimming around our Oahu shores just waiting to be caught.  I returned home on a Saturday in early July, determined to get back out the next morning.  My friends and I don’t normally fish the same spots very often and enjoy rotating them or testing new ones so that Sunday, Dino and I decided to try another spot, different from the ones I recently went to.  As usual, we met early in the morning before sunrise and started our walk to the spot.  It was a dark moon that weekend with small surf and light winds. Excited to be home and fishing again in near perfect conditions, I told Dino I had a very strong feeling one of us would be hooking up.

We were throwing our lures for about half an hour and the sun was just beginning to glow on the horizon when I felt a strong tug in the distance on my second sweep of the cast.  To ensure a good hookset, I yanked hard several times.  This fish also felt like a good one on the initial strike but I was using a slightly heavier set up than before so I boosted the fish in quickly – so much so that at one point I told Dino I didn’t need help landing it because it might be a papio.  When the fish in front of me, I shined my headlamp at it and to my surprise, it was a decent sized ulua.  I yelled to Dino that I needed his help after all so he quickly got to the water’s edge, grabbed the ulua’s tail and brought it up on the rocks.  What a great feeling to start the season 2 for 3.  Unfortunately I forgot my PIFG tags so after taking a few pics, the fish was released tagless.

The rest of July and August was filled with more missed ulua strikes and papio landed without any slow down in the action.  It seems the late start to the ulua bite this summer means the action will continue later around Oahu as well.            

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Tungsten Jigs

Most Recent Posts

  • Fished in the rain. Was wet with rolly swells and the fish didn’t like it as much as I expected. Worked hard to get some kau kau. May 8, 2026
  • New non-tungsten jigs in the Store, in time for Summer! Intro Pricing!! April 29, 2026
  • Papios mugged the damashi so I kept ’em and friends ate ’em! Catch & Cook. April 27, 2026
  • Is this a sign that a good papio/ulua season is about to start? April 25, 2026

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