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You are here: Home / Archives for trident ultra

Why I bought a Trident Ultra 4.3 to fish offshore

March 22, 2019 By Scott 2 Comments

We’ve been fishing further away from shore, and my Scupper Pro felt tippy and overloaded with gear. I wanted a kayak that could handle wind and cross current if those conditions came up, would be efficient enough to propel (paddle or pedal) with the least amount of parts to break down, and have a center hatch large enough to store gear and fish. A transducer cavity under the hull, large enough for my Garmin EchoMap 44CV would close the deal.

I looked at a lot of offshore kayaks and narrowed my list down to the Hobie Revolution 13 (which Frank has), the South African fiberglass Stealth Profisha series and the Ocean Kayak Trident series. I realized that I probably would forget to take out the Revo 13 mirage drive when landing on the beach, or take it out while fishing and drop it over the side, and I’d gouge the fiberglass Profisha on rocks, or drop it in the parking lot. Those two kayaks are beautiful and pricey and even if I didn’t destroy them I’d be too worried about theft.

So instead I went to Go Bananas in Kapahulu to see what Trident models would work for my needs. John Enomoto explained that the discontinued Trident Ultra series was modeled after the hardcore New Zealand Trident series, sporting a much larger center hatch and huge tank well designed to carry loads of fish and even a bait tank. The new Trident 13 and 15 didn’t have as much storage and the rails were cluttered with track mounts that wouldn’t be strong enough to hold an offshore rod.

So for quite a bit less money than the Hobies and Stealths, I could get a very seaworthy, durable kayak that could carry a lot of gear and fish. I was sold.

John installed/improved the bow and stern handles, front rod holder, center hatch, seat and rudder, and my fishing buddy Frank fabricated a stainless steel mount for the transducer to fit high and tight in the transducer scupper hole.

In the 4 trips so far, I’ve felt much safer and have caught my PB uku and first pelagic. I really feel comfortable out deep on the Ultra 4.3.

In this video, I do a brief intro as to why I chose the Trident Ultra 4.3, and John of Go Bananas walks through the improvements he made. No laugh, I nevah like be in front da camera!

Red hot bottom bite on the kayaks!

March 18, 2019 By Scott 1 Comment

Fishing had been slow onshore and nearshore for the past two months due to the drop in water temps. It’s been warmer on land lately, so it was time to check for improved water conditions. My fishing partner Frank invited his friend Christine to fish off his Hobie Revo 13 for her inaugural kayak fishing outing, and Frank tied lines, rigged baits and provided safety support on his fishing SUP.

We couldn’t have picked a better day to take a rookie out to the deep. The waves were small and the wind stayed under 8 mph most of the day, and when the west wind did blow, it was countered by the east current that bumped the water but kept us from drifting much. There even was a small rising tide to stir the fishes’ appetites.

2nd, smaller shark. Photo by Frank, off his SUP.

My first 3 drops in 130 to 170ft of water resulting in instant shark hookups. Well, the first could have been a fish (wishful thinking) because it never stopped running and popped the uni to uni splice of my Sufix 832 about 75 yds in. The other two back breaking battles were confirmed sharks that I brought to color. The 3rd shark was bigger than the 2nd, and popped the line when it saw the kayak. I licked my wounds and paddled shallower, taking Frank and Christine with me.

Bait and small predators showed up on the fish finder at 80 ft so I put a 7 inch frozen opelu down. After some hard non-hage (triggerfish) tugs only the head came back. Next opelu resulted in a wahanui, my first at this spot but Frank has caught them on past trips. You can see why the Hawaiians named the fish wahanui, or big mouth. It’s a jobfish/snapper, related to the uku, or green jobfish, but can swallow much larger prey whole.

Photo by Frank, off his SUP

Frank changed Christine’s bait from oama to small opelu and the bite was on for her! She added a thick wahanui to the aha (needlefish) she had caught trolling. I dropped down another opelu and patiently waited as my rod tip went “tap, tap, yank, tap…yank” and the ratchet went off. The fish was shaking really spastically, and running but didn’t feel too big. I was thinking it was a small, angry aha but was stoked to see a small uku, hooked in its side, come to the surface. During the frenzy with the other bait stealers, it must have run into one of the hooks.

Meanwhile, Christine was hooking and landing more wahanui and a toau (blacktail snapper). I missed a few more fish that pulled line and missed the hooks. I even fed line in freespool to a fish that eventually was hooked but had swum into a cave. Soon we were out of bait and happily headed in with fish in our cooler bags.

A bunch of kayak fishermen had landed before us and I noticed one of them had an Ocean Kayak Trident 4.7, the big brother of my Trident Ultra 4.3. His name was Robert, and it was only his second outing on his Trident (was my 2nd outing also) but he did a lot better than I did. He caught a few live opelu and fished near the area I was doing shark isometrics, and caught an 8.8 lb uku, his PB. Robert also had a kawalea (deepwater cuda) and some aweoweo. All really good eating fish!

For her first kayak fishing outing, Christine really did well. She and Frank planned to share the catch with friends and family. I did brief Frank on the perceived concern of ciquatera poisoning regarding wahanui and toau, but those two species probably aren’t any “hotter” than papio and uku. The fish weren’t too big, and the consumers weren’t people who ate a lot of reef fish, so they should all be ok.

Sure looks like the Winter Doldrums are over and it’s time to get out and fish hard!

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