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You are here: Home / Archives for catching oama

Holoholo: Oama fail to oama success!

September 3, 2018 By Scott 3 Comments

7th grade Matthew continues to get better at the various shore fishing disciplines despite often fishing alone and without experienced fishers to learn from.  With just a few basic oama tips he really improved his oama game. I’ve never oama fished with Matthew so he hasn’t seen how lousy I really am and why I need good bait.

Matthew:
I have always had trouble with oama fishing, so I decided to basically quit. My first few tries resulted in failures. Often I would even find an oama school nobody else was fishing and then fail too. Finally, I got some, but with only 3 in a few hours. I got discouraged by this and I had quit oama fishing for a good 2 years or so. But then I met Scott, the oama master. He had a ton of oama knowledge and he told me I should try again. I thought maybe, but later.

After unstoppable nagging from Scott to try again, I decided to try a popular oama spot for an hour. I used cut fish, and chummed some right before I dropped my splitshot into the water. I hooked one on the first drop, but I was so surprised that I forgot to set the hook! I kept trying and surprisingly, got 12 at the end. By then I was itching to go again, but Hurricane Lane started to plow towards us.

I decided to chance it on Saturday and met up with Hunter at another spot. This was my first time fishing this spot, and I wasn’t really planning to go oama fishing, so I had to use his shrimp. It worked ok at first, landing 4 oama in 10 minutes, but then the bite really slowed, and I wasn’t smart enough to go to the other pile that was biting. I then filleted up a fish and used that for bait, ending up with 12-ish more oama. I, however, was convinced to go back the next day, and I had a different plan, I filleted the bait up and cut it into pieces before the trip and put it in a container. I also made an oama board out of a boogie board, fishing line, duct tape, and an upside down stepping stool. One person there even said “It is the weirdest thing I’ve ever seen, but it works!”.

I went to the same spot the next day, and found a pile that wasn’t biting but had a lot and nobody was fishing it. I remembered something that Scott said and tried to chum the school, almost immediately after the chum hit the water, the sitting oama turned into frenzied oama. I lowered my bait and immediately it got hit. Man, these things fight hard. I kept pulling up oama after oama until the others fishing the non biting pile noticed I was getting bites, so they came over and fished it with me. Still repeating the process, chum, lower bait, catch an oama. I eventually had to leave though, and I left Hunter, Issey, and Cade to finish off strong.

This was my best oama day ever, and I ended up with a massive 45!! Almost my limit! That is amazing for me! For a guy who is used to catching 3 oama per 8 or so hours, catching 45 in 2 hours was a miracle. Much thanks to Scott for turning my Oama luck around! He was right about bait being everything in Oama fishing! I plan to go back to that same spot later and test a new theory soon too.

How has your 2015 oama season been going?

September 2, 2015 By Scott 5 Comments

Reprinted w/Lawai'a magazine's permission

Reprinted w/Lawai’a magazine’s permission – Oama Season 2014

My spots didn’t have oama until much later than last year, and the piles have been small.  They’ve also been more skittish and harder to catch. On the upside, with less oama around for the predators, every time I’ve fished for oama this year (just a handful of times so far) the omilus, kakus and even oio have been stalking and hitting them.

I’ve only used oama for bait twice so far, but both times the oama got whacked on the kayak, and friends have caught papio and kaku with oama next to the oama pile.

I’d love to hear how you guys are doing this oama season.  You can either add a comment to this post that everyone will see, or send me a note via the Contact Page.

 

thanks!

Oama fishing basics (2015)

May 22, 2015 By Scott 22 Comments

Oama season traditionally runs from the beginning of July to the end of September.  Last year the oama came in early and schools kept coming all the way into November.  It’s been theorized by marine biologists that the common weke and red weke broadcast spawned earlier than normal due to last Spring’s warmer than normal sub-surface water temperatures and favorable currents brought the oama into the island chain.

Here’s what you need to know before they arrive.

oama gear

oama gear

What You Need

  • Short, straight pole. You could use a bamboo pole but I like the cheap, telescopic fiberglass poles with the eyelet at the tip.  4 to 5 feet is normally long enough.  Tie  2 – 4lb test Mono or fluorocarbon line to the eyelet.
  • Small hooks with the barb pinched down for easy release of oama and net snags.  Some fishers start with a number 20 J-shaped hook early in the season when the oama are small.  I like to use the larger number 17 hook, or a slightly larger Owner Mosquito hook.  Small hooks are harder to tie and harder to unhook.
  • The larger sized split shot.  One larger shot works better than two smaller shot since two shot tend to tangle easier.  Pinch the larger shot on about 4 inches above the hook.
  • Small landing net. Spend a little more on a net with nylon netting.  It would snag less than the common red cotton-blend type.
  • Footwear to walk on pebbly sand and slippery rocks.
  • Floating live bait bucket.  I like the yellow Frabill Flow Troll with the spring-loaded door.
  • Bait.  Opae, frozen shrimp, aku belly and oama flesh.  There are a few “secret” baits people use that I won’t reveal.  When the oama are biting well, frozen shrimp legs dragged on the bottom work surprisingly well.

Optional:

  • Hat
  • Polarized sunglasses
  • 5 gallon bucket and live bait aerator/pump if you’re planning to keep the oama alive
can you see the oama?

can you see the oama?

Where To Find Oama

  • There are some fairly well known spots on Oahu to catch Oama.  Ala Moana Beach, Wailupe, Heeia Pier, Ka’awa, Punalu’u, Haleiwa, etc.  You can drive by and check those spots from the car, looking for oama fishers.
  • The less visible, less fished spots will have to be checked by foot.  Generally oama will congregate in areas sheltered from wave action and at the shore end of a shallow protective reef shelf.  The areas will be open with good visibility so the oama can see their predators coming from far away.
  • Oama also seek protection in mangrove roots but aren’t usually in a feeding mood when they’re hunkered down.

How to Catch Oama

  • When oama are breezing from spot to spot, they aren’t interested in eating.  To get these breezers to start eating, you can palu with a mixture of sand and sardines/bloody fish scraps.
  • When you see the oama sniffing around on the sandy bottom with their barbels, they’re looking for food. This is the best time to catch them.  Drop your bait to the bottom.  When the oama swim to it and start nibbling, lift the bait up in a smooth upward toward the approaching oama.  If you don’t hook one, drop down and repeat the lifting movement every few seconds as the oama are headed for your bait.  Lift early, before the oama has tasted and rejected your bait.  This takes practice; watch how the oama pros do it.
  • When the oama aren’t actively eating but are mildly interested in your bait you can try dragging it sideways on the bottom.  This makes the bait look more like the critters they feed on and sometimes gets them to bite.
  • Oama tend to bite better when the tide is moving.  If the oama are really not feeding, wait until evening when they normally binge before looking for a place to sleep.

Handling of Oama

  • Pinch down the barb of your hook so the oama can be removed quickly.  This will cause you to lose quite a few but it’ll be less damaging to the fish.
  • If possible, tuck your landing net on your body somewhere so you can guide the caught oama into the net rather than holding the net with one hand and the rod with the other.  Unhook the oama in the net gently and place it in your floating bait bucket with as little trauma as possible.  Once in the bait bucket, the oama will calm down.  You can place quite a few in the bait bucket as long as there’s good water flow.
  • When pau fishing, transfer the oama in the floating bait bucket to your 5 gallon bucket that you filled with cool, clean sea water.  A little sand on the bottom of the bucket helps calm the fish down.  Turn on your portable aerator and make sure there’s good oxygenation.  If that aerator stops, the oama will suffocate in a few minutes.
  • If you’re not planning to use the oama right away, take an extra bucket or two of water home so you can do a water change.  The oama release ammonia which is toxic to them.
  • Keep the oama container shaded and covered so the oama are less traumatized.

Keeping the Oama Alive at Home

  • If you plan to use the oama the next day, they can remain in the 5 gallon bucket in a cool, shaded place. Make sure your pump will keep running over night, in fact, it’s worth investing in an electric pump which won’t cost much more than the battery powered ones.  You can buy those at a fish supply store.
  • Change the water daily.  Remove any dead or dying fish.  To get the most out of your sea water, treat the water with Ammo Lock, which neutralizes the ammonia the fish are releasing.  You can buy Ammo Lock in a fish supply store.
  • If you want to keep your oama longer than a day or two, get a large, black, circular plastic tub from a pet store or garden supply store.  The darker background will calm the oama and the circular shape prevents them from running into a corner.  Use an electric aerator that puts out a lot of bubbles, and if you really want to keep them happy, add a power head that circulates the water.  The electric aerator and power head should be less than $40 together.  The plastic tub could run you anywhere from $20 – $100 depending on the size and quality.
  • To keep the oama from fouling their water too quickly you can add Stress Zyme, which contains live, good bacteria that consumes the gunk produced by the fish.  This can be purchased in fish supply stores.
  • If you want to keep your oama alive a long time you’ll need to add a filter.  I use an external canister filter that extracts physical waste and adds water circulation.
  • It’s not easy raising wild, saltwater fish.  After many die-offs I can now keep most oama alive for a few weeks with some living for more than 3 months.

Using the Oama for Bait

  • Ideally you can fish the live oama with as little terminal tackle as possible, allowing it to swim naturally.  Some fishers walk out to reef dropoffs and “free line” their oama with just a hook.  Dunkers use a lead line and shorter leader tied to a small papio hook  Slow trollers, like me, hook the oama in the head with a second hook dangling near the last fin.
  • If you’re able to make a soft cast, you can lightly hook the oama behind the dorsal fin to cause the least amount of damage.  If you want to hook the oama as securely as possible, you can hook it from under the lower jaw, out through the top of the head, but in front of the brain so you don’t kill it.  Since I very slowly troll mine on my longboard or kayak, I hook mine through its nostrils so it can still gulp water.
  • Lively oama get bit better than sluggish oama, but even dead ones still work.
  • If your oamas die but are still in pretty good shape, you can freeze them for use later.  First lay them out and salt them with Hawaiian Salt or rock salt.  Let them sit that way for a few hours, in the fridge.  The salt will draw out water from the fish, which minimizes freezer burn.  If possible, vacuum seal the oama, then freeze.  The oama will look a little dehydrated from the salt but will plump up when you use them in water.

 

Great late season oama outing

September 13, 2014 By Scott 3 Comments

perfect oama catching conditions

perfect oama catching conditions

 

Pete, part of the out-of-town duo I took fishing back in May, was back on Oahu with his family.  He managed to free up for a few hours so I took him on his inaugural oama fishing trip. The oama were there in the South Shore shallows but didn’t want to bite for the first hour.  I began to feel the pressure of being a lousy host, but we finally found a school of larger fish in deeper water that sniffed our baits.  They eventually turned on and were fighting each other and the small papios for the bare hook.

The tide was rising enough to make them feed but not so steep that they would move to shallower water.  Add calm winds that enabled us to peer down into the waist deep water, and the conditions were about as perfect as they could be.

oamas getting cozy

oamas getting cozy

My oama will be used to restock the ones that died last night of ich.  I’m hoping I can keep this batch free of parasites for more than a week.  Click here to see how well the live oama worked.

 

 

 

deep fried goodness

deep fried goodness

Pete fried his oama up crispy along with one of the papio I caught on my last trolling trip.  It was a hit at an island potluck.  Sort of ironic that the papio ended up in a tray with the fish that were the cause of his undoing.

Tungsten Jigs

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