Monday, September 20, 2010

19.09.10 surfcasting Midway Beach

On Sunday the northwest wind was forecast to be at gale strength and was so I left Gazebo at home and took my surfcaster down to midway beach for a look. I have a Kawahi surfcasting contest on the 2nd of October and I thought I would see what the fishing was like, the sea was flat and the wind was strong offshore so casting was easy as, but the water was very dirty from the rain we had last week coming down the big river. Fishing was slow with crabs taking the bait but I managed one small red cod and a conger eel, not much to show for 3 hours fishing but it was the first red cod I have caught at that beach.

Saturday, September 18, 2010

18.09.10 Prize giving

The Gisborne Tatapouri sports fishing clubs annual prize giving was held last night and Gazebo and I won the Ray Webb Trophy for the Bottom fish fisherperson of the year for the second year running and the Blue Spray cup for the Heaviest Kingfish on non-game gear for my 25.75kg Kingfish. Hopefully we will do ok this year when the competition season starts 30.10.10.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

12.09.10 Retrieving Gazebo at Tata ramp

Wok & Roll and Tzer waiting for their turn for the tractor
Gazebo being loaded on her trailer, a very low tide

Not the smoothest of ramps

Most of these rocks are just covered by water at low tide

We launch at high tide here

Tzer a 6.7 Surtees Gamefisher and Gazebo a 6.1 Surtees barcrusher
inside the reef in the channel waiting for the clubs tractor.
Everyone helps each other with the launching and retrieval of boats





Monday, September 13, 2010

12.09.10 Spring has sprung

Triple hook up of Hapuka (40kgs of fish)

The weekends forecast was good - darn good. Murray and I left at 6.30 and launched at Tata ramp. The sea was calm with a small swell, we were going to go to penguins for a snapper fish but the conditions were so good we kept on going to TR1A. A spot we had gone to before without much success. TR1A is about 35km out to sea, when we arrived there was a charter boat already on the spot. The rock had 6 metres of fish on it. Our first drift yielded a nice trumpeter, soon another one joined it in the bin. the charter boat was pulling them in one after the another, being a large commercial cray boat it was able to sit on top of the rock making it hard for us to drift over the hot spot. We had to drift along the sides of the reef, Murray hooked on to something large - it took him ages to wind it up from the bottom a 180 metres down, near the surface it looked like a large stingray then 3 Hapuka (Groper) broke the surface - 3 hooks = 3 puka (16, 13 and 11kg, 40 kg in all). We were jumping for joy as we had seen it on TV but never experience a triple hook up before, now our fish bin was full and we had to use a sack for 2 of them. We did one last drift and I hooked the bottom but I could feel fish biting and then one got hooked, mean while we were drifting away while I was letting out more line and trying to do everything I know to unsnag me. It took Murray an age to pull his gear in so he could start the boat and reverse back to the spot, the sinker finally broke off and I was able to wind my gear in to find I had caught 2 large Trumpeter, now the bin was full with 5 fish and 2 more overflowing into our sack, not being greedy it was time to head home. We manged to feed just about everyone we know so there wasn't anything wasted. Sunday was even better conditions but with the fridge full we decided to save money and not go out, hopefully the next weekend will be good.