Surf was booming on the north and west shores and surf on the south side was projected as high as 5ft so we went east to a new spot Erik, our small boat buddy, had recommended. Erik provided all the intel as far as where to launch, where the opelu were, where the nabeta were, and if he were free he would have met us on the water! How many guys would share their secret spots like that?
Frank and I made it out to where the opelu were supposed to be, but it was after 9 in the morning and we couldn’t find a good mark. We paddled over to a deep reef and Frank damashi’d up moana and taape on ika strips while I bottom fished with frozen opelu. I was surprised how few nibbles I was getting so I went all the way out to 200ft and had a hard thump that took the whole fish. I put my second to the last opelu on and dropped again. Thump, thump and a strong run. I was thinking shark but soon there were really hard head shakes. Not as quick as uku head shakes so I assumed it was ulua. The fish took out a lot of line so I buttoned down the Avet SX Raptor 2-speed to stop it, and after struggling to gain line in high gear, I dropped to low gear and man what a difference! The fish didn’t make another sustained run again and it floated so quickly it came up on the opposite side I was expecting and scared me!
I debated keeping the white ulua but had always said I’d release my first kayak caught ulua so I did. Looking at the photos again, it was probably just a bit over 10lbs but at the time I thought it was much bigger because of the bullish fight. Nothing else bit the last opelu in the deep so I went to look for nabeta.
Tipping the damashi with ika strips Frank gave me initially yielded hagi until I moved off the deep reef and onto sand. I dragged the weight instead of bouncing it and could feel fish lightly tugging at the ika and not hooking up. Finally I hooked a yellow nabeta (deepwater gold!). I had to wade through little puffer fish and nunu before I got 2 more nabeta in the deep, then I went a little shallower and started getting reef fish. By then it was time to go in so I turned up the Bixpy motor to contend with the offshore wind, and could sustain a 3.5 mph pace by paddling along with the jet. Without the motor I’d be struggling at 2 mph and be hurting the next day.
Usually I don’t do well the first few times out at a new spot but we were productive because of Erik’s accurate directions. We left a few stones unturned so we need to go back!
Jason T says
Congrats, Scott!! First kayak caught ulua, that’s a significant milestone… plus the nabeta! Wow! I say the fish looks like at least 10, maybe as much as 12 lbs. Nice job releasing it, too. That’s some good juju for your future outings 😉
Scott says
Thanks Jason! Yeah Kelly put it at 12 – 14lb, hard to estimate just from photos. Man these fish pull hard!
Nabeta is sooo ono! Caught me a 14.5″/2.75 lb nabeta the other day… didn’t know they even got that big. Thanks for your content, really love when I refresh the page and there’s a new post!
Hi Courtney,
14.75″ is huuuuge! The two bigger ones in the photo were close to 7 inches and thick enough where they weren’t covered in oil and dried out slightly when I deep fried them. How did you cook that big one? Our friend Erik started to steam his big nabeta and I’m gonna try that next.
Subscribe to the posts so you don’t have to keep checking for new content!
thanks,
scott
good job. you da blue waterman now!
Dunno about that Deano, but thanks!