Hawaii Nearshore Fishing

A community of fishers sharing knowledge and Aloha

  • Home
  • Store
    • Shop
    • Cart
    • Checkout
    • My account
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Returns / Exchanges
  • How To
  • Haru’s Tips
  • Recommend
  • Holoholo
  • Recipes
  • About
    • Contact
You are here: Home / Archives for kawakawa

Tested the new Phenix Black Diamond East Coast rod and caught 3 different tackle strainers

October 7, 2023 By Scott Leave a Comment

Standard Black Diamond XHeavy on the bottom, Black Diamond East Coast Heavy on top. Zoom in to see details.

Recently became a Phenix Rod dealer to pair with the Avet reels we sell and realized not many, including myself, have used a Phenix Rod. Ordered two 7ft casting rods to try off the kayak: Black Diamond 30lb – 80lb Extra Heavy and Black Diamond East Coast 30lb to 80lb Heavy. The East Coast version is thinner and a little softer in the tip, with lighter components. The original Black Diamond series was made for West Coast style stand-up fishing, and built to fight big fish and take a beating.

(top to bottom) St Croix Mojo Salt 30-50lb, Phenix Black Diamond 30-80lb, Phenix Black Diamond East Coast 30-80lb

The St Croix Mojo Salt 30lb to 50lb is actually thicker and bulkier than the two 30lb to 80lb Phenix rods due to the tighter and stronger carbon fiber build that Phenix employs.

I put the diminuative Avet SX Raptor on the lighter Black Diamond East Coast and it felt very easy to handle.

The winds lightened this past week and I was finally able to explore a Windward ledge that has always intriqued me. I stumbled upon some big opelu inside the ledge and took one out to 270ft with no bites. One the way back into the shallow ledge I dropped the GoFish cam down and later confirmed it was a barren sandy area with just a few hagi too small to eat the opelu.

At the shallow ledge I traded out the big opelu for a slightly smaller one, and it got picked up by a strong fish with a lot of head shakes. To max out the ability of the Phenix rod and 2-speed SX Raptor, I put it in low gear and grinded away, hardly lifting the rod at all. 4 minutes later I was surprised to see an omilu over 10lbs trying hard to shake the hook. It was admired for its beauty and released. There is a video at the bottom of this post showing all the action, but don’t skip ahead!

Working my way back to the grounds I normally fish, I ran into more daytime opelu schools and caught 3 of them on my 3-hook damashi. That almost never happens to me. I put them out with a sliding weight and each got taken by something that pulled for a while and then held onto the rocks, and when I pulled the hooks out, the leader came out with no nicks at all. I have been suspecting a tako does this at this spot because when roi hole up in the reef my line gets nicked up. Whatever it was, it grabbed the 3 opelu and I was out of live bait.

I had fresh opelu from the Kalihi fish market, and sent one down. It got taken as I paddled away, and since I was so shallow, I assumed I hooked another papio. I was pleasantly surprised to see a kawakawa circle. I kage’d it to bring it onboard, and subdued it with Bert’s Brainer.

Since kawakawa always travel in schools, I put another fresh opelu down and it got taken immediately by a stronger pulling fish. Assuming it was a much larger tuna, I battled the hard surging fish, wondering what would have such strong head shakes. The fish had run through the rocks when it first grabbed the bait, and had pushed the sliding weight all the way up to the FG knot joining the braid to the leader. I couldn’t slide the weight back down and was worried I’d break the FG knot by trying, so I handlined the fish in. I was surprised and disappointed to see a small ulua gasping at the surface.

After releasing the ulua I pulled on the weight and sure enough the FG knot parted so I called it a day and went in.

The Black Diamond East Coast rod and SX Raptor were a delight to fish with yet, in low gear, brought all the fish in within 5 mins each. It was very easy to pull the rod out of the rod holder even when the fish were running, because the “slick butt” didn’t get hung up at all. What a powerful, effective combination.

Here’s the video of the action:

Eastside: We finally made it out deep; there was a lot of life out there!

August 24, 2022 By Scott 6 Comments

I hadn’t caught the target fish (anything big enough and great eating) for 4 trips in a row but had a feeling I was getting closer on the last trip as 8 inch weke nono / weke ula and 11 inch opakapaka pups grabbed the damashi hooks intended for opelu. The one opelu I did manage to land went untouched past 200ft and eventually taken by a line-cutting kaku at 70ft. With so much life crowding the shallower opelu grounds I had a feeling the opelu were being pushed deeper.

Weke nono too small to keep

Finally a very light wind day aligned with our schedules so Frank I made plans to go all the way out to the 500ft ledge per Big Island kayak guru Shea. That’s 3.7 miles of paddling with Bixpy motor assist so definitely we needed really calm conditions.

Past 100ft, the first damashi drop yielded 2 weke nono on the top 2 hooks and something broke off the bottom hook and lead. Ugh, I had to dig out another pre-tied damashi from my tackle bag and re-rig.

Next drop, bigger opakapaka teamed up and broke my 12lb damashi rig, again taking the bottom hook and lead. Ugh, ugh. Then something even heavier broke the 3rd rig at 170ft. Ugh, ugh, ugh. There were so many fish busting my damashi that I couldn’t even find any opelu.

So we decided to troll frozen (mine was thawed at least twice) opelu out to 500ft and then drop bait to the bottom. I put on a sliding bullet weight to get my bait down a bit and make the frozen bait swim better, and got a jerky hit at 250ft. I could see a small mahi porpoising in the distance and it didn’t seem like my line was connected to it but it was. Finally, I got to fight something on the new St Croix Mojo Saltwater boat rod, which felt light and powerful.

After a much stronger fight than I would have expected, I kage’d the 6lb female mahi and secured it. Mahi have short lifespans, growing quickly, spawning multiple times a year, and dying by year 4, so there’s no shame in taking a small one, since they are super dangerous to try to unhook alive.

(Sorry for the less than ideal on-the-water photos. It was so hot I kept dunking my cap with the GoPro in the water and the cap was angled upward when I shot videos, cutting off a lot of the view.)

Frank had made it out to the 500ft ledge and attached a 4oz sinker to his leader and dropped his opelu down. I added an 8oz sinker to my rig and put cut aku belly on my 2 hooks. There was very little current on this calm day so the rig eventually reached the bottom but never got touched. Cranking it back up with the Avet SX Raptor in either low or high gear was a breeze though.

Just as I was thinking we should return to where the mahi was, Frank hooked something as he dropped and retrieved his opelu like a jig. With so much line already out, the fish took even more line and a tense battle with a strong running fish ensured. Frank was chanting “hope it’s not a shark, hope it’s not a shark” and was rewarded with a really nice kawakawa, his first. He gave thanks to God, carefully bled it out, then iced it. We didn’t get any more action out deep so we headed back in.

Frank’s bait got raggedly cut in half at the 250ft zone, and when I reached that area I marked what looked like a nice opelu ball. I slowed and my weighted bait got hit and the line was cut above the first hook. We had been out for a long time in the hot, windless day and still had more than 3 miles to go, so it was time to use our Bixpy motors to help us get in.

Frank’s kawakawa was a 13lb female with eggs so he fried the belly, bones and eggs and poke’d the fillet, sharing with family. My sister baked the mahi with lemon, butter and garlic, and also teri panko fried it for my dad. He said “it wasn’t bad but wasn’t good”. He seems to only like salmon and butterfish, two fish I can’t catch in Hawaii.

Seems like the best season of Hawaii kayak fishing has arrived. Light winds in the Fall and pelagics still within reach. With so much life around, I want to go back and see what fish we missed, and fight something bigger on the St Croix rod.

Holoholo: Live Bait and Vertical Jigs = Mixed Bag

June 11, 2021 By Scott Leave a Comment

Shea started kayak fishing 3 yrs ago, briefly on an Ocean Kayak Scupper Pro, soon after, moving up to an Ocean Kayak Prowler 15. He built his safety awareness in the confines of Hilo Bay, unintentionally flipping the Scupper Pro twice and found the Prowler 15 to be a much more stable fishing platform. He has only been fishing offshore for 3 months, mainly on a 2015 Hobie Revolution 13, but attributes his rapid success to the years of learning how to catch live opelu outside the bay as well as hours of watching kayak fishing videos on YouTube and receiving tips from the kayak fishing community. He fishes on the Big Island with Coach Haru when their schedules match up. I asked Shea if he wouldn’t mind sharing his most recent outing with us. Here’s his recap, with video of the day on the bottom of this post.

Shea: The surf on Hawaii Island’s east side was flat – 1 foot and winds were forecasted light and variable all through Memorial Day, so my friend and I decided to launch at 4:30 AM. We reached the fishing grounds just as the horizon was lighting up and started searching for opelu to use as live bait. It didn’t take long before we started marking large bait balls feeding 25-50 feet down, and I dropped my home made sabiki rig baited with HiPerformance Lures “fish sticks” and managed to pick up 6 baits before the sun was even up. On previous trips, I had only caught 1-2 opelu after hours of trying, so things were off to a much better start than usual! We moved out into deeper water and passed over huge bait balls that weren’t biting, so I decided to drop an 80g jig that Haru had given me on a previous trip. Within the first 10 cranks of the very first drop, I hooked into a fish that doubled my Tsunami Trophy jigging rod and peeled the 40lb braid from my Penn Slammer III 5500 in long, powerful runs. It didn’t take long for what I’m pretty sure was a good sized Ulua to find some structure to cut me off on.

I tied on a 120g Jigpara Slowfall and dropped again, immediately hooking into something that felt much smaller. It turned out to be a 2-3 lb Uku, and I decided to let it go to and put out my first live opelu on a wire stinger rig in the hopes that some predators might be hanging around the bait schools.

I let out ~100 feet of line and set the drag on my Penn Spinfisher VI 8500 as light as it could go to mimic the “liveliner” function on other reels. After 45 minutes or so of no action in spite of many promising marks on the fish finder and a couple drowned baits, I decided to switch to straight 40lb fluorocarbon leader and hooked another live one through the nostrils with a 5/0 Gamakatsu Live Bait hook. I was still free-spooling this bait out when line started flying off way faster than I knew an Opelu could take it. I gave it about 5 seconds before clicking the bail over and tightening the drag down to set the hook. After a few good runs and a heavy pull that made me think I had a shibi, the fish started giving in and spiraled up to the surface. I was surprised to see a chunky 19-lb Kawakawa float up on its side. I sent out another live bait, then dispatched and bled the fish for ~10 minutes.

Just after stowing the fish in my fishbag, I noticed some promising marks on the bottom ~170 feet down, so I dropped the jig and pulled up a 4-5 lb omilu. After taking a couple pictures, I tossed him back to hopefully become a reef donkey someday.

As I was dragging my bait back up to the ledge, I felt the telltale tugs of something grabbing my opelu and quickly flipped the bail open. After a few seconds of letting line fly off the spool, I closed the bail and tightened down again and the first run of this fish was much faster and longer than the kawakawa’s had been. After five minutes or so of tug-of-war, I got my first view of the fish ~50 feet down and briefly saw the sickled outline of a shibi before it took off on a run straight down. Another five minutes of pumping and cranking later, the shibi was exhausted and surfaced, giving me a chance to hit it with my home made kage gaff. Not wanting to take any chances, I sank my handheld hook gaff into the fish as well and pulled it aboard. This was definitely my largest shibi so far, weighing in later at 29-lbs. I brained and bled the fish out and stowed it in a Hobie fishbag behind my seat.

At this point I had what I thought were two live baits left in the tube, so I gave one to my friend who had just lost his last bait to what we believe was an ono. I tied on a wire rig hoping to use my last bait to try for an ono, but the last bait had a busted lip from my damashi and had drowned. I sent it to the bottom on a 4 oz bank sinker, hoping for a shot at a bigger uku instead. After drifting around for a while, my rod bent over slowly as if I was hung up on the bottom. As I pulled the rod out of the holder, line started ripping off the reel and after a seven minute battle, a small ulua came up to the surface. Not the uku I was hoping for, but it was a nice fight. With two fish already in the bag, I decided to release this fish after taking some pictures.

After previously fishing the windward side in 6-foot swell and pouring rain and being unable to catch more than one or two baits, this trip really stands apart and will probably stay with me for some time. It’s not often that the east side is calm as a lake, so I feel super lucky that we got this break in the weather. I gave away most of the fish to my friends and family and made sashimi, tataki, and poke with the remainder over the course of the following week. The kawakawa meat aged especially well and still tasted great even six days later. 

-Shea

Check out the video:

Lucky damashi -> one opelu -> first kayak Kawakawa

April 22, 2021 By Scott 7 Comments

Frank, Guy and I were blessed with near epic weather on the Windward side. The trip didn’t start off too smoothly though. Frank and Guy ran into heavy traffic on the H2-H1 merge, and then Guy’s fish finder went on the blink. Guy also had to do an on-the-water reattachment of his Hobie inflatable ama, but got things situated.

I had heard reports of ono being caught close to shore on Oahu and really wanted another one. The only ono I ever caught was on a live opelu Robert had gifted me because I was so bad at catching my own. Here’s how that trip played out. Since Robert wasn’t with us on this trip, I figured the next best thing would be to use the damashi he made for me that I was saving for a special occasion. I “baited” the damashi with CHL Minnows in the May Day color.

My GoPro was angled too high and cut off the bottom of what I tried to capture

First drop of the damashi over scattered marks brought up an opelu! I couldn’t believe my luck, called the guys over but we couldn’t catch any more. Meanwhile Guy hooked a 3lb oio on his damashi and carefully brought it to the surface, but he had forgotten his net. The oio broke off as he tried sliding into his Compass.

Wanting to take the opelu out to the ono grounds, I zipped out with the help of the Bixpy motor. Guy joined me, landing more lizard fish and little puffers than he cared to count. Nothing bothered the opelu and it was still kicking after 2 hours.

I told Guy I wanted to head over to the deep reef where maybe an ulua might give me a yank, and was heading that way when he radio’d to say fish were busting on the surface and birds were dive bombing. I circled back to the area, didn’t get any hits and turned back to the reef when I got the strike. It started with a few yanks as the fish tried to swallow the 9 inch opelu, and then the fish took off. The runs were very strong and the weight of the fish didn’t feel heavy like sharks do, so I began to think it was a big uku. I dropped the Avet SX Raptor into low gear and pumped and cranked the fish in, hoping to see a 20lb uku. Instead I saw what looked like a small yellowfin tuna! The fish snagged the keel guard under my kayak twice and I thought I lost the fish. When it got closer to the surface I could see that it was my first kayak kawakawa. Man are those fish strong. It was making clockwise pinwheels and my first attempt at kage-ing it missed because the fish dove as it neared the yak. Two more pinwheels and I was lucky enough to get it right past the gill plate.

Sharky had splashed my GoPro lens

Guy and I tried bottom fishing with frozen opelu and he got two hard strikes that literally rocked his kayak, but both shook the single hook he had in the opelu head. He rigged a trailer after that but the mystery fish didn’t return. My opelu got taken by a sandbar shark which I winched up in low gear. I thought of unhooking the shark with pliers but decided to keep my digits and cut the leader instead.

Here’s a short video of the landing of the kawakawa.

Frank had been on a papio hunt and caught two omilu within the first hour, trolling last year’s oama. Switching to damashi, he brought up a nabeta and a yellow spot papio. With his fish bag full of great eating fish, he radio’d us to say he was safely heading in.

The kawakawa ended up weighing 9lbs. It was good training for the 25lb shibi (small yellowfin tuna) that’s hopefully in the near future.

Capt Erik and Kelly gave me tips on how to clean the kawakawa. Because I didn’t have to scale and gut it, it was actually easier than cleaning a smaller reef fish. I was shocked to find the kawakawa’s stomach stuffed with 2 fresh ika and two small opelu. And yet it tried to eat the 9 inch opelu.

I was a little leery about eating the kawakawa since I don’t like fishy tasting fish. Turns out the Hawaiian bonito could be bloody but not fishy like limu-eating reef fish, and since I bled it on the yak it wasn’t really that bloody at all. It had a firm, meaty texture and a good taste. I did get one piece that left a slight bloody after taste though, maybe I didn’t cut out the blood meat on that one.

Guy took this photo before he and his wife ate the entire plate. It definitely tasted different from ono and uku but good in its own right. Bleeding, icing, cleaning right away and wrapping in paper towel definitely keeps the flesh fresh.

Guy paid some dues on just his 3rd offshore trip and will be a better kayak fisher because of it.

Thanks to Robert for the lucky damashi, Guy for putting me on the kawakawa, Frank for spreading Aloha, and the crew for teaching me how to clean and eat fish. God has really blessed me with great fishing friends.

Jigging and popping for pelagics and ulua

May 17, 2016 By Scott 11 Comments

(top) Shimano Trevala with Daiwa Lexa HD400XS (bottom) Shimano Terez with Shimano Tranx 500

(top) Shimano Trevala with Daiwa Lexa HD400XS
(bottom) Shimano Terez with Shimano Tranx 500

Erik and his dad, Ed, invited me out on their 16 ft  center console catamaran to troll to the nearest buoy, hit some deep and shallow jigging spots and finish up with some evening ulua plugging.  I brought the Shimano Trevala jigging rod and Daiwa Lexa HD400XS reel to jig and the Shimano Terez Waxwing rod and Shimano Tranx reel to plug.  Both setups were untested because I hadn’t been able to target large enough fish in the past. We definitely exceeded the nearshore range on this trip but hopefully you guys will find this report interesting from the tackle and technique perspective.

80g blue sardine flat fall

The wind was light and seas fairly calm so it was relatively smooth sailing to the buoy. Unfortunately nothing wanted our trolled lures or dropped jigs so we headed back in to their 200 ft plus jigging spot.  They had caught big kahala and pelagics at this spot before so we rigged up with the heavier jigs.  Ed went big with a 280 gram Shimano Butterfly Flat Side jig, Erik went with the 130 gram Shimano Butterfly Flat Fall jig, and I went with the smallest Flat Fall in the 80 gram size.  80 grams are equivalent to 2.8 ounces, so my jig wasn’t exactly small either. The Trevala medium heavy action jig rod has a soft tip with a lot of backbone and the Daiwa Lexa HD400XS brings in 43 inches of line per crank with a max of 25lb of drag. I slipped on a belt gimble and an extra pair of assist hooks to the front of the flat fall, and was hoping for something larger than a hage to test my gear.

kawakawa 5-13-16 2The guys let me fish the starboard (right) side of the bow, which had a lot of open space and allowed me to cast right handed.  On the second drop, about 20 ft off the bottom, I got hit.  The fish pulled a bit of line and then I could feel frenetic tail beats.  The soft tip of the Trevala rod made it a fun fight and soon we saw a tuna-shaped fish swimming in circles. Kawakawa for Erik’s grandma!  The guys were stoked that I was able to get my first flat fall fish and we resumed jigging and cranking with anticipation.

kahala 5-13-16After a couple of drops we weren’t seeing anything on the fish finder so we were about to move. I burned the flat fall back in and got hammered about a third of the way up.  This fish took drag and kept the rod bent.  I wasn’t sure-footed enough to stand and fight the fish so I sat side-saddle on the bow’s platform (I don’t know the proper boating terms) and tried to short pump it up.  It felt like a decent sized jack and made some powerful runs straight down, but the Lexa’s smooth drag eventually tired it out.  Erik got some great underwater shots of the fish and then deftly lifted it over the side of the boat. My first kahala ever.

The strange thing was my flat fall jig was missing and the kahala was hooked on one of the assist hooks I had clipped on to the Tactical Anglers Power Clip.  (zoom in to the top photo of the Flat Fall jig attached to the Trevala rod to see how the lure had been attached).  The clip was slightly bent.  It’s pretty hard to slip off a lure to remove it, so I was stumped as to how the jig was pulled off and the kahala was still hooked.  One optimistic theory is that another kahala had hit the jig on its rear assist hooks and the kahala I landed tried to take the jig away and was caught on the top assist hooks.  They pulled against each other and somehow the flat fall was pulled off the power clip.

We didn’t measure or weigh the kahala but Erik estimated it to be at least 10lbs.  Because of its reputation as a worm-filled ciquatoxic fish, it was released to battle the next angler.  I replaced the clip but made a critical mistake that you’ll read about a little later.

Ed scaled down to the 130 gm blue sardine flat fall and resumed his speed jigging with big rod sweeps.  Something heavy stopped his jig about 1/3 from the bottom and repeatedly yanked the rod down but didn’t run too far before the hook slipped.  The guys think it was a fairly big kahala that successfully shook the hook off.

The action slowed so we moved to a shallow water spot (50 ft deep) that produced ulua on the poppers for the guys before.  Ed went up on the stern’s deck (I really need to learn the proper boating terms) and started throwing a 150gm Pelagic Warrior Gladiator blue/green Lumo popper with his Okuma Makaira heavy jigging rod and Shimano Saragosa 10000 spinning reel, spooled with 100lb braid and a 150lb fluoro leader.  They’ve learned from past battles that a strong, abrasion resistant leader and main line that can handle a very tight drag are requirements against the scutes and tail of ulua and coral reef caves.  Ed heaved the heavy popper and noisily gurgled it back to the boat, and Erik and I jigged with micro jigs but there were no takers at this spot.

Ed's uluaErik moved us to another shallow reef and Ed woke an ulua from its slumber.   The beast came out of the water to intercept Ed’s popper and tumbled tail first.  The fight was on and Ed was able to stop the fish after its initial run, but then it made it to the reef below and ran through the rocky valleys until it could expose the braid to the sharp rocks.  CRAAACK! The line popped like a gunshot and Erik caught his dad as he fell backward.  While we were disappointed, we were pumped to witness such raw power.

The spot we were in didn’t leave much leeway to safely fight large ulua but appeared to hold fish.  Erik decided to risk his favorite 125 gram Spartan blue Lumo GTFC popper on a Shimano Tallus Bluewater Series extra heavy rod and Saragosa 10000 spinning reel packed with 80lb braid and a 150 lb fluoro leader.  He set his drag tight and launched the lure as far as he could.  Sweeping the rod explosively, he created a bubble trail that called up another ulua. The ulua turned and headed back for his cave.   Erik cupped the reel spool, crouched and leaned back hard against the rod and hoped against hope that his line would withstand the razor-sharp live coral below.  CRAAACK!  Just like that two favorite poppers donated to the depths below.  The guys felt bad that they left lures in the fishes’ mouths and hoped the hooks would soon be worked free.

We moved to a deeper reef that provided a little more cushion and Erik resumed plugging while Ed and I micro jigged.  I had a 30 gram blue and silver Jigging World jig clipped on to a 60lb flouro leader and 65 lb braid.  After seeing Ed and Erik get rocked, I set my drag pretty tight, to where I could barely pull line off the reel.  Something slammed my jig as I did a fast lift-crank-drop and burned line back to the bottom. I was shocked to feel such power and speed and called out to the guys. It surged a second time and then the line went slack.  Rocked on the bottom? No… The leader’s end was in loose curls.  Not quite like how it would look if the knot unraveled but why else would it be curly? I’m thinking that when I tied on the power clip after replacing the bent one, I didn’t use pliers to pull the 60lb fluoro leader tight.  Rookie mistake made while rushing to get back in the action.  The surge that popped the line was strongest I’ve felt in years.

What a versatile, action packed trip.  I am so grateful for Erik and Ed’s hospitality and generosity.  And I have to admit, after seeing the ferocity of the ulua strikes on the poppers, I wasn’t ready to throw a big Waxwing at ’em and risk getting pulled off the deck.

Semi-nearshore shallow water jigging

May 7, 2016 By Scott 8 Comments

I know the blog’s focus is Nearshore Fishing, so I’m gonna ask for a little leeway on this post.

A new fishing friend and new Lawai’a feature writer, Erik, very generously offered to take me out for a quick bottom fishing / shallow water jigging expedition yesterday.  It had been 15 yrs since I’d been on a boat so we picked a very light wind day to launch.  My fishing window was short so we had to run, drop, jig and gun.  The cross-directional swell bounced the 14 ft aluminum boat enough for me to get a little green around the gills but the fishing action managed to keep my mind off the shifting horizon.

Live Deception, Waxwing Baby, Waxwing Boy, Flat Fall 80g, Flat Fall 80g

1 oz Mackeral Live Deception on left. 2.8oz Black Anchovy and Blue Sardine Flat Fall on right

Erik was fishing a pinkish, silvery 30 g (1.05 oz) Japanese micro jig he purchased from Charley’s Fishing Supply, and I started with an 80g (2.8 oz) blue sardine Shimano Flat Fall (furthest right in the photo).  Erik expertly put us on the spots, fishing the reef’s edge from 70ft deep, drifting inward toward shallower water, without aid of a fish finder or GPS.

 

erik's moanoHe started feeling hits on his micro jig and brought up the brownish hage, and moana. I hadn’t felt a thing on my flat fall.  I kept trying to emulate the way Erik would pop his rod tip repeatedly when the lure reached the bottom, then lift and crank the lure back to the surface in an exaggerated pumping motion. When Erik saw that I was getting disillusioned, he pointed out that there were new scratches on my lure and that something had taken a swipe at the flat fall but missed the two assist hooks.  That must’ve happened as the lure free fell, and it gave me hope.

Then Erik’s rod bent over in an upside down “U” and line peeled off the spool.  Something larger than a hage had taken his jig midway up the water column and was surging for the bottom at an alarming rate.  Erik’s spinning rig consisted of a short, fairly light action Star spinning rod and Shimano Sahara 4000 reel, packed with 15lb braid and a 30lb fluoro leader.  He tightened his drag, cupped the spool and the fish surged again.  A veteran of many light tackle battles with large fish, Erik kept the combatant out of the rocks and enjoyed the scrap, wondering what could be pulling downward so intently.

After a few shorter runs we saw color. Electric blue fins, silvery body? Big omilu?  On closer examination Erik exclaimed “yellow dot papio!”, formally known as the Island Jack.  His previous fish had been released but not this one.

 

 

 

Erik's ydot

notice how the boat’s stern isn’t lining up with the horizon? we’re swinging back and forth!

Yellow dot papio are one of the tastiest papios. The 6lb beauty was destined for a starring role as sashimi and ceviche.

I was stoked to witness the fight but began to suspect my flat fall was too large for the area we were fishing.  On my next drop, it felt like my jig was being sucked down, and then it felt stuck.  Erik swung the boat up current and the “stuck” kept being pulled along, then suddenly popped free.  What the heck?  It happened again on the following drop and the jig didn’t have any new scratches.  Erik said it could be a tako grabbing on and eventually pulling free.  As much as I like tako poke, I wanted to catch something on the flat fall with teeth, fins and scales!  On the next drop I temporarily got stuck in a solid rock, and when Erik moved the boat to free my jig, I reeled up and hunted around for a smaller lure.

I was given Ahi Live Deception jigs as a promotion to try in our local waters, and happened to have a 1 oz Green Mackeral pattern in my tackle box.  (See top photo).  It was the only small jig I had.  The lure feels like a slender, flexible slab of lead and is laser printed with an actual fish photo. It looks very lifelike but lacks the fancy bevels and curves that the flat fall sports. I hadn’t read anything about its swimming action, nor seen any underwater videos about it.  How good could it be? But on the second drop I got a hit.  Yay, an actual fish caught on the small treble hook! A smallish, but legal moana.  I was feeling more and more queasy, so I tossed it back without a picture.

kawakawa

kawakawa

On the next drop something yanked, then let itself be retrieved a bit… then took a little line.  The skunk was definitely off my back, and this fish felt bigger. I was using the Shimano recommended shallow water jigging setup: Shimano Trevala F medium action rod and Curado 300EJ bait casting reel and while I could feel the twists and turns of the fish, I easily coaxed it to the surface. Turned out to be a small kawakawa, my first ever.  Erik held it for me and I snapped a quick pic with my phone’s camera. I could barely see through the glare, and focusing on Erik and the fish while the horizon gyrated back and forth was pushing me closer to urk-dom.

Two fish back-to-back on the unheralded Live Deception.  Erik brought up another brownish hage on his micro jig and I caught an orangey weke I had never seen before, followed by a small taape.  The taape was kept to rid the reef of invasives and was destined to become Erik’s crab bait.  I was really impressed with the Live Deception’s effectiveness and hook up ratio.  The treble was working too well actually, as it was hard to unhook the fish. I bent down each barb and threw the jig over the side. Halfway down I felt a tug and then … nothing.  Something had taken the lure down its gullet and cut the line.  My new magic lure… gone.

While I put the flat fall back on my leader, Erik hooked what was probably the offending lure-swallower.  A kawelea, or Heller’s Baracuda.  Not as fearsome looking as the kaku or Great Barracuda and supposedly better eating.  Erik tossed it back since his yellow dot papio would keep his family fed for awhile.  I threw my flat fall over the side and finally, felt something hit it.  A kawelea was hooked on the rear assist hook and was released also.  I looked at my watch and it was time to ride the swells in.

yellow dot and taape

6lb yellow dot papio and taape

Not bad for only 2 hrs of bottom fishing without GPS or a fish finder.  Erik’s micro jig and my Live Deception lure were probably closer to the size of bait the fish were feeding on, explaining why the larger flat fall wasn’t getting much attention except for those mystery dead-weight snags.  If not for Erik’s expert small skiff skills, I would’ve started another 15 yr boat-ban, but instead look forward to mining the bottom for more critters.

 

Tungsten Jigs

Most Recent Posts

  • Shore and Nearshore fishing is slow in the Spring. This may be why. May 8, 2025
  • Bolo headed on the kayak but got an assist for this shore caught big oio! April 18, 2025
  • Best way to eat moana / moano and not be bothered by the bones April 9, 2025
  • Tried a new spot for a new goatfish and struck out. But found juvie opakapaka, weke nono and moana kali and the underwater camera revealed why they were there. March 28, 2025

Categories of posts

Archives

Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2025 www.hawaiinearshorefishing.com