Thursday, October 27, 2011
23.10.11 More of the same
Sunday was very like last weekend except it was the first long weekend of spring (Labour day), as usual Friday was our first real taste of summer and as you guessed it a southerly front came over early evening. Saturday was ruined with messy onshore conditions. Sunday there was a light Easterly leaving the sea sloppy - but we went out anyway, to the same spots as last week and ended up with one snapper and 24 Tarakihi. The forecast had Monday as freshening northerlies (not good for our coast) and with Rugby world cup victory to celebrate we decided to leave the rods at home and just pick up the crayfish pots we had set on Saturday, as per normal it was flat as and not a breathe of wind and so with only 2 legal crayfish we came home in a rather foul mood. I later heard that the northerly was howling out to sea and it wasn't that good, with most struggling to catch a feed. So a day at home wasn't that bad after all.
Monday, October 17, 2011
16.10.11 Bin full
The weekend had a good forecast which is great as the last 2 weekends it wasn't that good, I had decided to stay at home and do some of those "I'll get round to it" jobs around the house. Saturdays forecast looked good so I dragged Murray kicking and screaming out to sea (he was waiting by his gate at 6.30am to be picked up). The wind was a 8-10 knot offshore, making the sea a little sloppy, but it was supposed to drop off to nothing. We went to South rocks which is 20km's out to sea to try our luck as the next contest is an "inshore" one. As we don't have a "inshore" as such, the species that we are targeting are caught in the shallower water around the various reefs found off shore rather than the deeper water around the drop offs.
The rock we went to showed good sign so we dropped the pick and missed to spot we wanted by about 5 metres, but we dropped our lines and managed a couple of good snapper. Over the next hour or so we managed 6 nice snapper, we thought we would re anchor on the rock and did so only to find the rock was surrounded by school sharks. so we pulled the pick again and headed over to the rock we caught the snapper on in the last contest. The sounder showed 5 metres of fish, so down went the pick again and we were straight into Tarakihi, good sized ones and 2 at a time. In an hour we had 37 in the bin before the wind changed and we drifted off the fish. The limit is 20 each and with 3 short we decided we had enough, so at midday it was time to head home to do some serious filleting. Deb and Murray did the afternoon fish run dropping off fish to all our friends and families so there was no waste. It turned out to be a beautiful day out on the water.
The rock we went to showed good sign so we dropped the pick and missed to spot we wanted by about 5 metres, but we dropped our lines and managed a couple of good snapper. Over the next hour or so we managed 6 nice snapper, we thought we would re anchor on the rock and did so only to find the rock was surrounded by school sharks. so we pulled the pick again and headed over to the rock we caught the snapper on in the last contest. The sounder showed 5 metres of fish, so down went the pick again and we were straight into Tarakihi, good sized ones and 2 at a time. In an hour we had 37 in the bin before the wind changed and we drifted off the fish. The limit is 20 each and with 3 short we decided we had enough, so at midday it was time to head home to do some serious filleting. Deb and Murray did the afternoon fish run dropping off fish to all our friends and families so there was no waste. It turned out to be a beautiful day out on the water.
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
24/25.09.11 Tui contest
Well how time flies, the Tatapouri Sports Fishing Clubs 2011/12 contest season has started. I was up north for The Alice Cooper (very good) concert Thursday /Friday and drove up and back along the Bay of Plenty coast line and the sea was as flat as could be, as far as you can see and no swell at all both days. I got back Friday night and Saturday was the first day of the Tui (my favorite Beer) contest, so it was load the boat and try and get some sleep with a 4am start and with the rugby world cup being played in New Zealand that's not easy. The last time I looked at the weather (Wednesday) web site it looked real good for the weekend.
24.09.11 I pick up Murray at 4.30am and we head up to the Tata ramp and have to wait 30 minutes for enough light to launch the boat and notice there is a bit of swell breaking on the reef, a good metre, we launch and head out wide to our far Hapuka spot 50km away, by the time we get there the northerly wind is up making fishing uncomfortable. Catching nothing by 9am we move back to TR1A 10k's away and spend the next 3 hours getting punished by a building sea for one 8kg Hapuka and one Trumpeter(not in the contest), we decide to move 17k's down the coast to BR1A and start to do our first drift, by now the sea is just not nice and we manage to catch 4 small Bluenose in the 2-3kg range. By 4pm we call it a day and head home, the last 15 k's to the ramp the sea improves greatly with a northwesterly wind (offshore wind). We hear most of the fleet haven't done very well in the shitty conditions.
25.09.11 After little sleep. (Rugby world cup, NZ's All Blacks played France in a pool game and won and in rugby league, NZ's Warriors won and made to the grand final) as well as losing an hour to the start of daylight savings. We finally get to the ramp at 6am to find the swell is a bit bigger (a solid 1 - 1.5 metre) and a strong northwesterly. We head out to south rocks and half way out the wind drops and the sea smooths out so we change plans and head to BR1A again and in beautiful conditions catch another 8 Bluenose, but still no Hapuka. We decide to head back to South rocks to try and catch some of the other species in the contest. After trying several of our more productive rocks and finding nothing we tried a rock that had fished well in the past, we saw some sign and dropped the anchor in desperation. The sign looked like barracuda and the first drop I caught one....damn. So down I went again and straight away a double hook up of good prime snapper, Murray dropped down and again a double hook up, half an hour later we had 16 snapper in the bin before we dragged the anchor and lost the school of snapper. We managed to weigh in a couple of 2kg snappers - not big ones but at this time of year snapper are hard to find in our waters.
At prize giving Murray managed 1st place in the Hapuka section and 2nd place in the Snapper section and I managed 1st place in the Snapper section. So we managed to start our season with a good result.
24.09.11 I pick up Murray at 4.30am and we head up to the Tata ramp and have to wait 30 minutes for enough light to launch the boat and notice there is a bit of swell breaking on the reef, a good metre, we launch and head out wide to our far Hapuka spot 50km away, by the time we get there the northerly wind is up making fishing uncomfortable. Catching nothing by 9am we move back to TR1A 10k's away and spend the next 3 hours getting punished by a building sea for one 8kg Hapuka and one Trumpeter(not in the contest), we decide to move 17k's down the coast to BR1A and start to do our first drift, by now the sea is just not nice and we manage to catch 4 small Bluenose in the 2-3kg range. By 4pm we call it a day and head home, the last 15 k's to the ramp the sea improves greatly with a northwesterly wind (offshore wind). We hear most of the fleet haven't done very well in the shitty conditions.
25.09.11 After little sleep. (Rugby world cup, NZ's All Blacks played France in a pool game and won and in rugby league, NZ's Warriors won and made to the grand final) as well as losing an hour to the start of daylight savings. We finally get to the ramp at 6am to find the swell is a bit bigger (a solid 1 - 1.5 metre) and a strong northwesterly. We head out to south rocks and half way out the wind drops and the sea smooths out so we change plans and head to BR1A again and in beautiful conditions catch another 8 Bluenose, but still no Hapuka. We decide to head back to South rocks to try and catch some of the other species in the contest. After trying several of our more productive rocks and finding nothing we tried a rock that had fished well in the past, we saw some sign and dropped the anchor in desperation. The sign looked like barracuda and the first drop I caught one....damn. So down I went again and straight away a double hook up of good prime snapper, Murray dropped down and again a double hook up, half an hour later we had 16 snapper in the bin before we dragged the anchor and lost the school of snapper. We managed to weigh in a couple of 2kg snappers - not big ones but at this time of year snapper are hard to find in our waters.
At prize giving Murray managed 1st place in the Hapuka section and 2nd place in the Snapper section and I managed 1st place in the Snapper section. So we managed to start our season with a good result.
Saturday, September 10, 2011
10.09.11 Mixed bag
All week a large high has covered New Zealand giving beautiful settled weather, as per usual the weeknd it all starts turning to custard. Saturday gave us to only window of fine weather before the rain arrives Sunday, So with that in mind we head out at 6am which is not bad seeing I have been laid low all week with the worse case of man flu you can imagine, haven't had a real sick day off work in years and as the weather starts to warm up I get sick...great, hopefully that's it for another 5 years. Anyway getting back to real stuff, the sea is looking good so we head out to the puka fields 40km out to sea, The sea has a light sea breeze on it already but conditions are still good. I drop a 3 hook puka (Groper) rig down, 2 large circle hooks and 1 smaller one, straight away good bites and a nice fat Terakihi in the bin, 2 drops later and with 3 Terakihi in the bin that's my wife's dinner looked after. I change rigs to 1 large circle hook and one medium sized circle hook and straight away again and large 6.6kg Trumpeter is in the bin soon followed by 2 smaller ones. Murray catches the 3rd Trumpeter and finally gets on the board and unbeknown to me is where he takes over and I stop catching. Around lunch time he catches a nice 15kg Kingfish down in 180 metres of water, followed by a small Hapuka. With the fishing or lack of - we decide to head south to look at new areas around Baistow's (17 km away) but on the way home (well sort of). Between the 2 areas, both are at 180-200metres deep is a trench that goes down to 550 metres, there are a couple of good sea walls to look at that rise up from 400 metres to 260 metres that should hold good fish. One of these we stop at and drop our gear down. Murray doesn't muck about a hauls up a nice 5kg Bluenose (excellent eating) and tops it with a double hook up of 2 more, meanwhile I'm just winching bait and empty hooks up and down but that's fishing.
All in all a good day on the sea.
All in all a good day on the sea.
Saturday, September 3, 2011
03.09.11 Tatapouri Sports Fishing Club prize giving
This year it was Murray's turn to collect the silver ware. The RA Lane Snapper Cup (12.380kg Snapper - Pinfish). The Silver Tray for Heaviest Hapuku (71kg Bass - Pinfish). The Ole Tuck Trophy foe Heaviest Hapuku over the Tata ramp. The Ray Webb Trophy for the Bottom Fish Fisherperson of the year - 3rd year in a row Team Gazebo has won this trophy, so all in all not a bad year competition wise hopefully we can do just as well this season if not better.
Sunday, August 28, 2011
28.08.11 Sea of glass
A week ago the country was in the grips of a icy polar blast, with snow down to sea level in the south. A week later spring is here with the night time temp around 5-8 degrees and the day time temp up to 20 degrees, what a difference over 7 days. We missed out fishing Saturday due to work and family stuff and hear it was a perfect day on the water, so Sunday we were keen as. We headed out to Kell's for a Terakihi fish (10k's out), we found plenty of sign but couldn't catch a thing, we re anchored 3 times and still nothing. we then headed out to the back of Penguins another 8 k's out to sea, we found 4 metres of fish over the reef in 50 metres of water, dropped the anchor and sat on a flat glassy sea with a lazy half metre swell and not a breath of wind - absolute perfection. over a couple of hours we managed to catch 30 Terakihi between 800gm - 1 kilo, enough to feed everyone and headed home. The air temp was warm and the sea was one of those days we dream about - as we fish in the open ocean, no islands or land masses, the next stop from Gisborne is Chilie, 5000 miles away over the Pacific Ocean, so to get a day like we did is very rare.
Saturday, August 13, 2011
13.08.2011 Finally a calm Saturday



The weather forecast had New Zealand surrounded by 4 Lows and a storm warning that has a polar blast coming direct from Antarctica racing up the East coast over the weekend. BUT Gisborne was right in the middle and we were forecast for calm weather Saturday with no wind turning to crap Sunday.
So Gazebo was loaded up and by 8am Saturday morning we were heading out to sea, we decided to go where we fished last time, straight to Thunder rock 38k's out to sea. The sea was glass with a metre swell, we set up for our first drift over the rock, Murray managed a nice Trumpeter around 4 - 5 kgs. With a full moon at the time and the lack of much current tends to make fishing hard, over the next hour we had a lot of small bites before I managed a nice Hapuka (Groper). Around mid-day was bite time and we managed another couple of Hapuka and then things slowed right down and we started to pull up sharks (which isn't fun in 187 metres of water, no electric reels on Gazebo). 3pm was another bite time and we managed another 3 Hapuka. With the day light going just after 5pm and an hour to drive back to to ramp it was time to go. It is good to see the weather people are getting the forecasting right.
Sunday - the bad weather is starting to arrive.
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