Capt Erik (referred to as “Erik” when I’m not on his boat!) had been experiencing some great outings in the bay, getting the schooling white papio (GTs) and awa awa to frenzy on his poppers. In fact, he hooked a 100 lb plus ulua on a Micky Mouse popper he bought from Bass Pro Shops near Disney World! That true story of the epic 2 hr battle will be reported here if you guys ask him nicely. 🙂
He knew I was struggling to get a decent fish to test the 13 Fishing Concept Z reel so he invited me out on his 14’ aluminum Lowe boat with Yamaha 9.9hp tiller motor, and picked a not-so-early morning start time because he was well aware of my aversion to early mornings. We reached the first spot at 8:30am and he hooked a big white papio on his 4th cast. The fish was too strong to be horsed in and got sharked, and Capt Erik ended up feeling the long runs of the shark. After a couple mins the lure popped free and as he cranked it back in, and it got hit! A smaller white was quickly brought in and released unscathed. The bite ended and we went looking all over the place. We even trolled but couldn’t find the school until Capt Erik called up another white from the depths a few hrs later with his popper. At the end I got a couple sub-7 inch whites in the shallows as consolation bites.
Capt Erik felt sorry for my lack of production so he invited me out again a few days later, for a true dawn patrol trip. This would be testing the theory that the school bites better in the early morning independent of tidal movement since the tide was flat. I woke at 3:30am, which is closer to when I normally go to sleep than when I wake up, and we were fishing at 5:45. He got bit on the 4th cast of his small 7/8 oz Yozuri Hydro Popper again, and tagged a 14.5″ white papio with PIFG tag #A5646.
We both were silently thinking that the bite would stop after that, but the school stayed and I managed to call a 17 inch white up with a JDM popper that I can pop just by line retrieval, not rod sweeps. I tagged that with #A5652.
We moved to the area that had been most productive for Capt Erik in the past, and once again he got them to frenzy on his Hydro Popper. He kept his white papio in the water to keep the school close, and I cast a heavy 1.5 oz JDM sinking swimmer I had never used before. It was the larger version of this 1 oz sinking swimmer that a big omilu hit.
It got boiled on, and the fish took line on a hard drag on the Tranx 400. No head shakes, it felt like a really good fish and I was imagining it to be a non-jumping big awa awa, or even a shibi! But soon enough it got sharked too and my brand new JDM lure was gone.
Capt Erik hooked up again and got the papio in the boat before it could get sharked. It looked like a white papio but the eyes were larger and the body was narrower. Menpachi papio! I had never seen one before. The fish were frenzying and my line on my big pole was cut. I looked at the Z reel and told it this was its chance to prove itself. The JDM popper got boiled on 3 times and I was on! I couldn’t horse the fish in with the small reel, and was pretty sure it was gonna get sharked but with the Captain’s encouragement I got it boatside and he netted it. 17 inch whitey. The little Z reel with 22lb max drag did the job. Stay tuned for the in-depth review. We had 3 papio flopping around in the boat, released the 2 whites and I asked Capt Erik if I could take the menpachi papio home for my parents.
The bite stopped so we trolled around and ended up further out, over a deep reef. Capt Erik was able to get a big boil on his GT Ice Cream plug but it didn’t stick. Our 4 hrs of early morning fishing were up and it was time to race in. I begrudgingly have to say that the schooling predators bite better at sun up than mid morning, and they seem to shut off just a couple of hours into the day.
The 14.5 inch menpachi papio had a semi-digested fish in its stomach and was riddled with worms the size of “orzo” pasta throughout its stomach cavity. I’ll spare you guys that view. The flesh was reddish, unlike omilu and papio, and I presented it to my dad worm-free. He fried and broiled it and said it tasted a little better than the more common papio. Maybe it was oilier? Thanks Capt Erik for ensuring I’d be able to test the Z reel against hard pulling fish by calling the school right to me, and sharing the rare menpachi papio with my family.
Rich says
What?!? You STILL no like wake up early for fishing? Lol!
Rich,
I made all my UH classes start late morning or later. Dunno how I went to high school, etc!
-scott
I still remember your tidbits of wisdom: “If they bite now (crack of dawn), they going bite later.”
No wonder I don’t catch fish! Did you take my advice to heart or remain an early morning fisher?
Neither. I wake up early…usually to use the restroom…think about going, then lazy-me kicks in and says ‘f-it’ the bed is really comfy…
You know the saying: The early angler gets the fish! 3:30 am is super early … thanks for the fishing report. Keep ’em coming 🙂
Right on! Good to see you pick up fish after your long bolo streak. ’m not a big morning person either, but I force myself to wake up cause where we fish late arrival means no parking, especially summer time . Let’s hear that 100 plus ulua story!
You weekend starts are really early Jason! I’ll let Capt Erik know that there’s growing interest in his 100 plus ulua story. It’s completely true too. A huge ulua that he fought for more than 2 hours that took them out to dangerous conditions.
Thanks for the push. The story is worth documenting so I’ll put fingers to keyboard and have it ready to post by the weeks end.