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You are here: Home / Archives for oama

The papio want their oama lively or not at all

August 20, 2014 By Scott Leave a Comment

still small but getting bigger

still small but getting bigger

The papio are definitely coming onto the reef to dine on oama.  And this year there are so many oama around that the papio are discriminating.  I went to a deeper water reef area to troll oamas I had  caught yesterday.  3 lively ones resulted in 3 papio.  2 freshly dead ones weren’t touched at all.  Picky papio!

The first papio fell off my back hook as I was trying to measure it.  The top hook ended up stabbing my finger but luckily didn’t go barb deep.  Still sore though!

I was watching my orange floater behind me as I trolled over the spot I hooked the first papio and saw it go under. I thought I was seeing things until my ratchet went off.  I bagged the 10.5 inch (head to fork of tail) papio and put a fresh dead oama on.  Trolled all over for nada.  Then I put on the second to the last lively oama and within a minute the 12 inch (head to fork of tail) papio hit.

With two papio in the bag I set the last lively oama free.  The papio are hitting the oamas hard now.  The trick for me is to find where the larger ones are. My previous spots are loaded with 8 inch papio with small man complexes.

The papio are finally hitting oama with gusto

July 31, 2014 By Scott Leave a Comment

it's legal, barely

it’s legal, barely

With the August traditional start of oama season right around the corner, the papio are finally hitting the oama hard. I’ve been hearing reports of some large papio caught on the East and West Side of Oahu, and even the South Shore is lighting up.  My theory is that the water was warmer than normal in the spring and that caused the common white weke and less common red weke to produce eggs earlier and in greater numbers than expected.  The papio either were not on the same biological clock or were so stuffed with oama they were biting baits lightly until recently.

Bouyed by yesterday‘s moderate success, I trolled some live oamas on my board this afternoon. The line cutting kaku weren’t bothering the baits so the papio had them all to themselves.  This 11 inch (head to fork of tail) omilu hit the back of the bait hard enough to get hooked on the outside of its mouth.  It was small but of legal size so I bagged it.  The first official papio of the oama season.

My next strike was stronger but the fish pulled line and rubbed the hook off on the reef. It had been so long I wasn’t prepared for a line ripper like that.  Then the bite abruptly stopped. No papio, no kaku, no nibbles.  But I’ll take it.  Bolo head is officially over.  Now I can select the poll response “Avid fisherperson, using oama for bait. Had some success this season.”.

For those of you who have participated in the poll, thank you!  So far it looks like a large group of readers are just casual fisherfolks looking for ways to improve their fishing success.  The next biggest group are avid fisherfolks who aren’t using oama for bait.  Interesting, I’d love to know how these folks are fishing during this epic oama season.

The papio traditionally hit the oama best in August, then the oama get larger and become uncatchable in September.  So take your best shot now but only keep what you can eat/use. That applies to both papio and oama.  Good luck!

Does this end the bolo head?

July 29, 2014 By Scott 3 Comments

Well, I trolled some live oama on my surfboard again. The first couple got scratched up and the back hook bitten off.  I was retrieving a wounded oama to replace it and a silvery white, short but thick fish shot up to take a bite.  What do you think that was?

After paddling in a big circle I returned to that spot and finally stuck a fish.  Turns out it was the fattest 10 inch (head to fork of tail) omilu papio I’ve ever seen.  So that’s what the silvery white flash was.  The predators are gorging on the baby fish bloom and getting downright chubby.

The omilu was released after the picture was taken.  Does its capture end the bolo head or do I have to catch one I actually keep?

It’s bite pattern matches the parallel bite marks of the top oama in this picture.

 

10 inch fatty

10 inch fatty

 

Live bait: Oama, long live the King!

April 14, 2014 By Scott 3 Comments

raising oama

raising oama

If you google for “oama”, eventually you will come across hits for our current President (this is written in 2014).  But if you fish in HI, you would know that oama are juvenile “weke” or goatfish that arrive in the shallow sandy areas between early July and late September to flee their many predators.  You’ll also know that fishing with oama during this “season” is the best time of the year to fish for papio (jack crevalle).  Some people only fish during this period and pack their gear away the rest of the year.

There is much information on what beaches to find them and how to catch them.  Sometimes the catching is easy, sometimes it’s really hard.  The best way to catch them is to have an experienced person show you how it’s done.

Every oama you catch can potentially be converted into a papio.  While it’s an art to catching the oama, it’s a science to keep them alive long enough to use them for bait. Here’s what I learned the hard way, at the expense of the poor oama.

  • Oama are a schooling fish that are comforted by the company of their friends.  It’s ok to keep quite a few of them together.
  • It’s not enough to keep them in a bucket of salt water with an aerator going.  Heat and their own ammonia kills them.  Keep them in an aerated, cool place,  and change their water daily.  A large cooler in the shade will do, and to increase their chances of survival you can use an ammonia detoxifying agent like Ammo Lock to neutralize the bad chemicals in their water.  You can buy Ammo Lock in a pet fish store.  Keep their holding pen dark and the oama will be much less stressed.
  • A dying oama seems to give off strong toxins that kill the others. Remove dying or dead fish immediately and dose with the Ammo Lock.
  • If you have the luxury of a tank with filtration, you can actually keep oama alive for a long time.  Just don’t get too attached to the cuddly, whiskered cuties.  I did and couldn’t put a hook through them so I had to wait for them to die before I used them!
  • If you plan to use the oama for bait within a week you don’t have to worry about feeding them but if you really want to you can get some frozen Mysis shrimp from the pet store.  Start with very little because they won’t be feeding well initially.  If they don’t eat the shrimp you’ll have to remove them because it will cloud the water.  Some people use brine shrimp but I haven’t had good luck with that.  Just feed what you can see them completely eat in a minute or so.
  • Oama are fairly fragile and most of the initial ones will die.  After administering last rites, if you want to preserve them for future bait you can do the following.  Lay them out, salt their bodies with rock salt, and vacuum seal them in a bag if that’s available.  That’s the best way to freeze them.

I trolled my frozen, salted oamasickles from my surfboard last year and they worked almost as well as live oama.  They did spin as I pulled them through the water so I needed to connect my fluorocarbon leader to my main line with a ball bearing swivel, replacing the standard ball swivel.

For other bait and lure options please click here.

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