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You are here: Home / Archives for kayak damashi fishing

Fished the New Moon with damashi and underwater camera and brought home fish to share with neighbors

March 5, 2025 By Scott 5 Comments

The New Moon, light wind and small swell was looking epic last week for the Windward side so I had high hopes of finding some really good fish. Well, there ended up being a strong South wind that chopped up the water and the bite wasn’t as good as previous New Moon days.

But I was able to drop the CanFish CamX camera down on the spots that had yielded fish before, and was surprised at what I saw. I launched at 8:30am and landed at 4pm, my longest trip ever, just to bring home enough fish to share.

The camera rig with just one hook below the camera, spooks the wary fish so I made sure I caught a couple opelu, a good size moano (manybar goatfish) and a 1lb 2oz malu (side spot goatfish) on my regular damashi rig before deploying it. Check out the above and underwater views of the malu in the video at the bottom of this post.

Two juvenile omilu circle the camera rig on slightly raised hard bottom

The fish finder marks were not that pronounced, and the bite was relatively slow, so there weren’t a lot of fish recorded but seeing what kind of bottom was holding fish was very interesting to me. In 100ft to 130ft, it was mostly barren, hard packed sand and the areas that had slightly raised rock and coral were holding fish.

An opelu school was over one of the hard bottom spots and I thought they ignored the camera rig’s lure but it turns out they missed the hook!

On the way in, at 3pm, after the solunar period ended, the bite turned on for more large moana and a nabeta, so I was able to fill the catch bag a bit.

Steamed malu
(top to bottom) Moana, nabeta

My neighbor Brian, who is a great cook and provides really detailed descriptions of how the fish turned out, said the malu had good, tasty meat but had smaller pin bones than the moana kali and did dry out a bit when steamed.

He left the scales on the nabeta and scored the flesh in a diamond pattern to enure that the inner meat cooked crispy. The moana had its pin bones removed and the fillets were fried separately from the body. Both fish were very good deep fried, but of course the nabeta was better.

I gave the two remaining moana to another neighbor and his wife who had never eaten moana before. They pan fried it and found it “very good eating” despite having to avoid the small bones.

opelu poke

Lastly, I removed the fillets from the medium and small opelu for a friend. It made less than a fist sized pile of meat but my friend seasoned with shoyu, Hawaiian salt, minced Hawaiian chili pepper and sesame oil and said it had a good taste with good consistency, and wasn’t fishy at all.

The bottom terrain views of this area confirmed why I’m not catching big uku there. Not enough rocks and structure to hold the food they need. Maybe I have to check the actual coral reef that’s in 50ft of water?

Here’s the above and underwater video of the malu.

Damashi action for kau kau fish!

April 12, 2021 By Scott Leave a Comment

Winds were projected to be about 8 mph on the Windward side, and a few mph higher on the South side, so Guy and I hit a Windward spot that held a lot of smaller fish in the past. Winds remained light through the morning so we went all the way out to 200ft looking for nabeta and opakapaka. Guy found a lone, big nabeta, and I ran into some very small opakapaka, and then a 9 incher; still too small to target. With that deep water check out of the way we headed into the shallow reef drop off .

On the high side of the drop off our damashi got hit by 9 to 10 inch moana, and as we drifted shallower, smaller moana and taape bit. Guy was using a damashi rig he tied himself. Lai skin, thread and beads on a #6 Maruto hook the guys at Waipahu Bicycle (Buster’s) recommended. It worked so well he didn’t need to add anything to it, and just jigged it enthusiastically off the bottom. Guy drifted further in and added two species of hagi and a nunu (trumpetfish) to his catch.

I was using an Ahi USA damashi with CHL Minnows pinned on, and caught a beautiful moana kali but it was too small to keep.

When my rig got stuck on the reef I changed to a damashi Guy had given me and added the CHL Minnows. I caught my last two moana on that and we headed in because the wind swell was getting a little dicey.

Guy’s mixed bag of fish

Guy solved the problem of the pesky moana bones by frying the fish crispy. His wife ate the deep fried nabeta before a photo could be taken.

The hagi and 1 moana were given to a friend who loves hagi. We’re gonna have to feature some hagi recipes soon!

I gave my moana to a church friend who hadn’t eaten that fish before. She cooked it “Japanese style” in a pan of water with shoyu and sugar, and found the fish tasty but tricky to eat because of the small bones. Her husband is waiting for a boneless filet of some non-fishy fish. 🙂

We were in the saddle for 6 hrs but it was a safe, fun day and Guy’s Bixpy motor on his Hobie Compass’ DIY aluminum rudder took the strain off his legs and ensured he could push in as the winds turned off shore. The bite was slow because the water was still a chilly 74 degrees but at least some fish did bite. We’re hoping the early Summer bite turns on soon.

Tungsten Jigs

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