We continued fishing the ripples. Tuna and mackerel were smacking things out wide of us but our focus was firmly on the G bangers. I tried a big skipping pencil for something different and while I found it mush more tiring to crank than to pop, it raised quite a few keen fish but I pulled hooks on every hookup. Very unusual. One fish smashed it right on landing. We could have tried stickbaits in there but we had another spot to try, and it was as hot as hell
We pulled into a nearby beach for a quick swim to cool off. The conditions were magnificent.
We went to the second spot after some good advice from a mate who dives the area. Strangely, we didn't pull any fish off the usual current lines or points with wash bouncing off them. I made it a point to scour the area and Tye eventually had a big strike from a good fish in a very cosy little corner of a steep rock face. We have a general rule that the other person helps land the fish, and even though I have had no trouble landing good GTs by myself, it is a pretty handy rule to stick by.
However, this rule got pushed to the limit when I saw 5 other fish under the strike, 3 of them being black... oh, how I had to restrain myself from launching a popper straight in there. I want a black one so bad!
I resisted temptation and focussed on getting some video on my Canon 7D. I think the cursed Contour had run out of battery or something
Tye had another tough battle with a rod that we both knew was too stiff for him. Eventually he wore down the fish slightly more than his vertebrae, and upgraded his GT account with a larger specimen.
He was buggered, but stoked.
This was the start of a very hectic session. There must have been a convention of GTs sitting in this area, as we got hammered regularly for the next 2 hours. There was a point there where every cast was hit, it was mayhem. We didn't land many but had some great entertainment, and didn't bust any off, which was crazy. I had one fish hit the lure at a great rate of knots and almost pull me overboard. I am used to them hitting and then mucking around a bit before taking off, but not this one. He was already at full speed when he hit it and ran about 50m of line out over a shallow reef before somehow I turned him and persuaded him to come to the boat instead
Funny how the smaller fish can create the most problems!
It was so hot by this point that we were taking turns in using my Carpenter BLC83/40 - Tye fell in love with this thing when he put the first decent bend into it. It is just so easy to fight fish on. Thanks again Mr Seyrek
Lucky for me, I nailed the best fish of the day. It pulled like hell but the outfit controlled it well, and didn't render me too incapacitated afterwards
He had 4 sharks in hot pursuit but my tired arms worked very hard to avoid a repeat shark tax incident. Tye made a hell of a racket by stomping on the floor of the boat when the fish came close too - not sure what effect that had.
The poor old Dumbbell was starting to look a bit worse for wear, we had 2 of these pretty well trashed in short succession. I am keen to see how much they can take before breaking
Then I might move onto better quality lures. They pop very well though, in flat water like this and also in the rough stuff that we are more used to inshore. Just replace the rings, they are hopeless
As soon as the tide stopped, it went dead, which may have been a blessing for our arms and back. It was funny because there was bugger all run where we were - I had the electric on spot lock but it was only using 1.5 throttle (out of 10) to hold us there. When the tide up here is macking, that electric sits on 10/10 to hold us stationary
All of our action came from a 40m long area which didn't show many obvious signs of fish. Hardly any bait, nothing got eaten on the surface while we were there apart from our offerings.
We had a look around some other likely looking spots, but no more love was found. Great day though, even though we smashed 11L of water between us and Tye still managed to suffer some slight sunstroke by the end of it, we will be back very soon to see what other beasties live out here...