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You are here: Home / Fishing Report / One mystery sea monster unmasked

One mystery sea monster unmasked

February 5, 2016 By Scott 6 Comments

During the winter “off season”, I’ve been fishing the deep water Windward spots.  Haven’t landed a decent fish in the last 3 outings. Each time I had a big strike that either broke off or slipped off.  So I went back to the general area where I got the awa awa a few weeks ago, and fished the slight tidal rise in pure glass conditions. I headed away from the area that had been productive, and paddled around for nada.  Nothing wanted to eat a slightly tired, tub-raised oama.

When I returned to the previously productive area, my fish finder lit up with fish on the bottom and fish breezing near the top.  I slowed to let my oama sink to the bottom and sure enough something pulled against the hard drag for a few seconds. The oama was gone but the two hooks were left intact.  This happened 2 more times even though I made the drag really tight.  I found out what this strong armed Houdini was on the next strike.

I got a hit near the papa (reef) edge and the fish ran faster than a papio normally would.  It fought the tight drag for a while and stayed deep. I could see the oama’s white color but couldn’t see what was under it.  When I finally began to see color, I saw fluorescent blue fins and a tail. A long omilu perhaps?

Arrghh, no, a big crocodile needlefish or aha, nicknamed “blue bone” because it has blue-green bones. These fish have been known to jump out of the water and unintentionally (we hope) spear people in the head and chest, causing a few very unfortunate deaths.

Not sure if you can tell how large the fish was, next to the kayak with the oama still on one of the hooks, but it was somewhere between 3 and 4 feet.  The rear hook is in his jaw but he had bitten off the line connected it to the front hook.

If you look at his top jaw, I think those cuts were from each successful attempt to steal the bait.  So this is the guy responsible for all the hard strikes and lost fish I’ve been getting.  Kill fight yeah?

Well, I had a few more live oama so I lowered one down the side of the kayak and immediately hooked up.  Ugh, another aha since I was right on the papa edge?  But no, this fish pulled a little slower and more steadily; it could even turn the kayak.

I was pleased to see a lightly hooked, 2lb plus awa awa.  I looked at my watch and it turned out that the flurry of action happened right at the peak high tide and ended 30 mins later.  I guess aha and awa awa like the slack high tide so they don’t have to fight the current. Kaku are lazy like that too.

So now I know what’s been ripping drag and stealing baits.  I did have a strong fish cut me off on the reef, and a really heavy creature pull me around for 20 minutes.  Guess I need to go back and solve those mysteries.

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Fishing Report, Kayak Fishing Tagged With: needlefish, sea creature

Comments

  1. Jason T says

    February 6, 2016 at 1:33 pm

    II would send a GoPro down on a separate line to see what’s doing it. Similar to what this guy did:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qhqe0ChrZ8M

    The part from 1:55 – 2:30 is pretty funny. It shows that what may seem to be a “smart” fish could really just be a lucky fish.

    Reply
  2. Scott says

    February 6, 2016 at 5:25 pm

    I wonder if those fish in that video are dumber that ours? Maybe fish are less guarded way down deep since they don’t suspect fisherman to be targeting them?

    Great video, thanks Jason.

    Reply
    • Jason T says

      February 7, 2016 at 6:46 pm

      Yeah, they say suspicion tends to be a function of fishing pressure which to your point is probably pretty low in waters that deep. In any case, i thought it would be a pretty cool way to see what’s down there. OTOH, it could also be a quick way to lose a $400 camera.

      Reply
  3. Kelly says

    February 8, 2016 at 4:04 pm

    Do it Scott! I like see da live oama get nailed … 🙂

    Reply
  4. Kelly Shishido says

    February 10, 2016 at 7:36 am

    Wow, thanks for unfolding the mystery, I was waiting excitingly in anticipation. Love this story. Thanks for sharing this. Cool fish, never saw this before.

    Reply
    • Scott says

      February 10, 2016 at 10:43 am

      As always, thanks for the support Kelly S.

      -scott

      Reply

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