The last 3 deeper water kayak trips were plagued with sharks and bait stealers. I went out solo this week, in light wind, but wasn’t too optimistic because the moon was so big. My plan was to catch opelu (which I have yet to accomplish), then drag them around to entice the sleepy, pelagics with full bellies.
A school of 8 inch opelu actually swam by me, 10 ft below the surface, but I wasn’t quick enough to drop the damashi down, and they didn’t look like they were feeding. When I did find some marks on my Garmin Echomap 44CV, nothing bit my damashi. I could hear other kayakers on the VHF expressing how hard the bait bite was so I gave up and paddled to my spot that has yielded an uku before but lately has been the shark fighting gym.
This was still the bottom of the tide, and the current was slack. Even more reason not to expect any action but soon there was the tell tale “tap, tap, tap, yank, tap” of the uku. The yanks were harder than I had been feeling in the past, so I kept the rod in hand, with light drag and clicker on, and soon the line took off. But the fish felt too strong for an uku and I thought I was fighting another shark. Sigh. At least this one stopped after its first run and didn’t feel like it would be a half an hr battle. Then I felt the spastic headshakes of an uku, much quicker than papio headshakes, and began to hope.
My GoPro battery was drained ‘cuz I forgot to turn off the “connection mode”, so I wasn’t able to video the battle. The fish battled longer than any other uku I fought so I was still unsure what it was. When I saw my biggest uku at color, followed by a free swimming uku about the same size, there was no one to yell out to. I unsheathed the kage Frank “The Fabricator” had made for me, and was stoked to use it for the first time. Course my first stab missed the head and just caught the tip of the nose, so I pulled it out and stabbed it again. This time I got it in the collar, so it wasn’t brained but I pulled it onboard.
Used the kage again to try to kill and bleed it, hence all the holes you see in the pictures. A kage really is easier to use than a hook gaff, to penetrate fish with thick scales and skulls. Thanks Frank, it felt good in my hand. Just need more practice. 🙂
I had drifted off the spot, fighting the fish and stowing it in my fish bag, but had marked where the uku bit, so I was able to return up current of it. Dropped down, and felt the strong taps again. Maybe it was the one that came up with the first fish? This fish ran with the bait eventually but managed to shake the hooks. I planned to fish the reel in freespool with no clicker the next time a fish tapped, but that was the last bite I had for the rest of the day. The bite ended right before the tide started rising. Odd huh? Not even the pesky aha took a swipe at the bait. Is that how it works on big moon days?
Well I had two goals for the day. 1) Catch more than 1 uku since I have never done that before, and 2) poke something with the kage Frank made per my specs: short and light.
And while I only caught one uku, it went 21.5″ in fork length and weighed about 6lb, and 5 different families got a taste.
Sure looks like the deep water kayak season has turned on!
Mark says
Wow! Nice one Scott.
Scott says
Thanks Mark! We’re working our way to catching our first pelagic on opelu. It’s been a long learning curve but we’ve having fun and getting exercise in the process. 🙂
-scott
Wow nice Scott. Yummie.
Hey Craig,
It’s definitely one of the best eating fish I can catch (so far). The other is nabeta.
By the way, got early sightings of oama in some places already!
-scott
Nice fish. I find PBs often come on otherwise slow days!
Maybe the smaller pesky fish aren’t around so the PB fish can finally get to our baits? Good point Jason.
Either that, or the larger fish have to feed more often. But that’s just another one of those “fishing theories.” ?