Saturday, March 27, 2010

TSFC Ladies Day 27.03.10

Deb with her winning 5.90kg Snapper

The girls haul


The bin is full

Trish waiting for the big one

Deb in the I'm ready position
The Ladies competition was postponed twice due to bad weather. So finally we have a green light, we are down one of the team due to work commitments (Lianne) so we get up at 5.30am so we can make the 15 minute trip to the ramp, we arrive at 6.40am, Girls just don't get up and go (have coffee in bed, hair, lippy, go to toilet, get dressed, make lunch [I made mine the night before] go to toilet, put out washing, go to toilet). We head off to the spot where I caught last weeks winning snapper, the sea is a little lumpy from yesterdays sea breeze and the moans from the girls have already started - like "can't we fish a couple of metres from the shore where it is calm" (we are heading out 16km's)
I anchor up and set the berley sack to ever increasing moaning, after a 15 minute soak we have our first hit and it's Deb first up, It's a beaut I have to hold on to the back of her gimble belt and the rod while she reels it in and it is a 5.95kg snapper, as we bin the snapper the second rod is hit and Trish lands a pan size snapper, soon it is all on, over the next couple of hours we bin 9 snapper and release a couple, Trish lands a nice 3.76kg snapper, strange how the moaning has been replaced by shreiks of delight. By lunch the current and wind is opposite to each other and is no good for straylining, we pull the pick and head over to South rocks to catch some Tarakihi and to let the girls fish in deep water (45metres), They bin 12 Tarakihi's. The wind has disappeared and the sea is smooth as, I suggest shall we head back Trish said " God yes I'm buggered" we have a nice ride back and the girls are all smiles, Deb manages to win the snapper section and Trish was just beaten for 3rd place.



Monday, March 22, 2010

Hunting & Fishing 2 day contest

Perfect day - looking for skippies
Gisborne's east coast 16km away

25.30kg Kingfish


Day one's catch



Day one;

Murray and I leave the Tata ramp at 6.30am there is a small half metre swell and little wind, we head out to our spot BS1A to look for Hapuka, it is 32 km's to the spot and there is already a light sea breeze, we set up our first drift in 225 metres of water and Murray catches a 3 - 4 kg Bluenose, it takes another 3 hours for us to realise there isn't much down there as we catch nothing else, the only other boat out here is Men at Work (the boat I was on in the Tuna Hunt). We move off to the South Rocks towing lures, we get to the South Rocks and nothing has changed, still one fish in the bin, we check out a few of our spots and there isn't much sign, we find one rock that looks ok and we drop the anchor, one Tarakihi and a lot of rubbish fish returned. We pull anchor and head to Ariel reef and drop the anchor in the middle of the shallows and put out a sack of berlie, it takes half an hour to catch our first snapper, we bin 6 nice size snapper, 2 good Trevally and like all good fishing stories loose a couple of good fish, with fishing time nearly up, I see a large fish lunge at my bait as I was reeling the bait in to change it. What we thought first up was a large Marco Shark turns into a large Kingfish, it strikes and takes off, taking half of my line in its first run, its next two runs takes me down to the last 10 metres of line, I screw the tension down and start trying to turn the fish, slowly metre by metre I get the fish to turn and head to the boat. It takes another couple of smaller runs before it tires and we get it to the boat and Murray sinks the gaff into it, What a beaut. We check the time and we have 30 minutes to get the fish to the weigh station, with the boat running at 34 kph in a choppy sea it will take us 27 minutes to cover the 16 km's. After what seems like a power boat race we make it with 4 minutes to spare and weigh the Kingfish in at 25.63kg.


Day two;


We change plans and make the day a stay lining day for snapper, I have the feeling there is a big one in the area we were in yesterday. The biggest snapper weighed in so far was only just over 3kg's and one of ours is in third place at 1.99kg. We arrive at the Ariel Reef to find the sea is flat calm (at last a great day), we put a sack of berlie in the water, after half an hour of soaking Murray catches our first snapper around the 2kg mark, he soon has 4 more in the bin before I catch my first one, my second one is a good strike and I get a good fish to the boat where Murray gaff's it and we have a 7 plus kg snapper in the bin, over the next 3 hours the fishing slows and we have 10 snapper on board and the sea is still perfect. We pull the anchor and start to head to the Penguin reef about 6km away, the area seems alive with Skipjack tuna so out go the lures. With the sea so flat it is really hard to catch any, I manage to boat one and lose 2, we cruise round for a while but nothing will get the skippies to take our lures, we head home and weigh our snapper in at 7.60kg's.


At prize giving we take out first in the Snapper and Kingfish classes.



A lesson I still haven't learnt - weigh all your fish, with hardly any tuna caught the skippy would have taken 2nd place and would have gone close to taking first in the tuna class.


Finally the Snapper have arrived back at their usual haunts, where they have been no one knows.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Gisborne Surf Fishing Competition

We had the ladies boat competition set for yesterday, with the weather forecast and a large SW swell and winds the ladies comp is postponed till the 27th, and we have the Discount fishing Gisborne surf fishing comp set for today.
The surf casting comp is still on, we get down to the beach to the spot I've been checking out at 6.30am and the swell is a solid metre, to big for us to wade out and cast over the last wave so we head up to the western end of the beach where the swell is smaller to our reserve spot, we are fishing high tide going out, Murray and I cast out at 8.ooam (start time) and wait, we get a few small bites resulting in our baits being taken a good sign. Around 10.00am I'm casting one of my two rods and my other one has a large bite, I have to rush in from the sea to grab the rod and play in a 1.63kg Kahawai - good least one fish to weigh in. About an hour later Murray pulls in a 32cm snapper the target spieces, even better. Half hour later I pull in a 3.6kg Dogfish (shark), for the rest of the contest I catch a few small trevally and Kahawai's which are under sized and are released, The day is fine and calm and I'm a bit sun burnt, we go to the prize giving an find out there is over 140 rods fishing and only 6 fish weighted in, Murray manages 2nd place with his snapper, my Kahawai ends up in 2nd place and the shark is in 1st place, not a bad days work at the office for team Gazebo.