Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Magical North Carolina 3/15/2013


North Carolina was magical, just the way it is suppose to be for this time of the year,
My second group also came in all the way from Russia excited like all the others with an exception that I cannot guarantee them a day out, all of a sudden Mother Nature start giving us a sign of break and things start to fall into places.

Igor, Dima, Oleg & Dima met me at the shop at 9:00am and we took the drive to Hatteras hoping that the road will be open, my concern was to cross Oregon Inlet bridge before 7:00pm as they were shutting down the road.
We made it safely to and started working on the tackle right away, by the time I was done the clock was pointing at 2:00AM,
Knowing our chances were slim, we still hoped that we might be able to get out, Captain Dan called me at 4:30AM to inform me that the trip is cancelled for the day,
The guys were disappointed and were sick from the long flight, everyone had flu symptoms and I think we infected each other.
We have a long day of rest and I personally took full advantage of it to catch up with emails and other stuff,
The day of the 15th arrived and we all jumped on the Tuna Duck with excitement, we all had that optimistic feeling and I know from the previous couple of days that the fishes are present and in great numbers.
After an hour and a half we made it to the “spot” and Captain Dan shouted from the bridge that he is marking fish,
I asked the guys to divide the group into half, 2 guys jigging and 2 popping but from what they heard and seen they all wanted that topwater explosion, they wanted to see it with their own eyes to believe it,
That didn’t take long.
They launched their lures in a different direction trying to cover different ground but their retrieve was too fast from the excitement,
Trying to slow them down took a shout and things started to get right when the fish start hammering their lures one after the others,
They’ve been taken by surprise and they had never experience the power of a Bluefin tuna,
So many hook up and losses that we forget to count them until Igor get a nice fish and he manage to set the hook properly, the fish wearied him out and signs of fatigue start to show up upon him especially when he is down with fever,
After 25 minutes and right at color the fish took off and his line touch the gunnel and he end up losing the fish, it was a nice fight and he did very well for an angler that never fought a tuna before,
We moved on and now come Dima’s turn, a big fish went airborne and inhaled his Gamma, did all he can but I was sure it is not going to last, his reaction to the strike came too late and I knew it is a matter of time before she will shave him,
We saw the brass of his spool on the Stella and all of a sudden he had slack on the line,
The expected happen.
With one guy down, I went to the bow paired with the new Stella 18000 and the Moutoukenmaru,
I had 1 cast and fish on! The Stella was screaming and I was making my way to the back,
I fought the fish for 10 minutes before the fish pulled the hook, it was a fair descent fight and the reel performed flawlessly, so happy just to get to feel the power of it and hear that drag screaming, Shimano had passed me the reel to push it to the extreme and resend it back for examination,
In the mean time the guys kept on casting and getting bitten with no solid hook up,
Went back again to the bow and made few cast with no taker till I heard Captain Dan shouting at me,
Hold on Sami, I have to make a quick run to put you on the fish, he turn the wheel and off we go, the image started to clear up from a distance.
The tuna are busting big time on topwater, as we approach I saw 6LB to 8Lb Bluefish getting hammered.
Believe it or not they have bruises on them,
The tuna were so occupied with the bluefish that I personally think they didn’t even notice us, we were 30 yards away from that feast,
I made a cast at the edge of the school in order not to spook them and it took 2 twitches,
While the other guys had blow after blow on their lures with no takers,

I set the hook and it came off and then another fish grabbed it and I was fighting right at the Bow, it was a beautiful take from the top and I will sure remembered for life,
Especially it was on the new Stella, the fish dumped my spool while I am still standing and fighting from the bow, Captain Dan kept me in good angle and in control with his maneuverability to the boat,
It took couple of rod shake to stop the fish from dumping more line.
I moved to the back fought it for 20 minutes and Mike the mate took the ultimate harpoon shout,
That is the first tuna landed in US on the new Shimano Stella, happy and proud.
A nice fatty 69 inch hit the deck.
We celebrated the victory and made it to dock and ended up in the kitchen preparing the food for the guys.
I will not give a full testimony on the reel as I still need more time to use it and abuse it,
A simple question comes to my mind, when Shimano failed to deliver.

Tackle used:

Rod: Carpenter Monster Hunter 80H, Hot’s Tide Lez 77XH & Hot’s Tide Lez 77XXXH,
Race Point 250 & Race Point 300
Reel: Shimano STL18000SWBHG (2013), Stella SW18000 & Stella SW 20000
Line: Power Pro Hollow 130lb, Sunline PE8, Varivas SMP PE8 & PE10
Leader: Saltywater Twisted Leader
Lures: Moutoukenmaru, Hot’s Keiko, Carpenter Gamma

Tight lines
Sami





















Monday, February 25, 2013

Andaman's Island Port Blair, India Jan 2013


This trip was set up knowing we were going to have a shot at small to medium sized fish, well… we had an amazing shot and great opportunity to catch monster Dogtooth tuna on topwater,
Game Fishing India did not disappoint us and they delivered beyond my expectation!
My return to the Andamans was based on my fishing experience to the area when I fished it over 4 years ago with Sea Fishing India, I was surprised to know how quickly Darran and Ashkay learned and adapted to the area.
These guys had learned a lot in the past couples of years and their expertise came in handy and played a big role on when, where and how?
As we say…putting your time on the water will get you to understand and time your best shot of the day.

Igor from Moscow, Aneil from Texas had joined on this fantastic trip, we only missed Nick from Ocean Active as he couldn’t get his Visa on time, with all honestly the visa issue was a bit of problem, the Indian embassy request each person to submit his application 1 month prior to departure and they are very strict about it, we learned the hard way this time.

I met up the guys in Dubai and we took the same flight to Chennai, upon our arrival the cab driver was waiting for us and took us to the guest house and we sure took a good sleep that night, the 13 hours flight to Dubai followed by the 5 hours wait at Chennai adding another 5 hours flight to Chennai was a killer.
In the morning we transferred to the airport and took the 2 hours flight to Port Blair to be greeted by Shambu at the airport,
The excitement started to building up and the guys started assorting their tackle upon our arrival to the guest house,

The Guest House is located close to the harbor and has an amazing balcony that reminded me of my days back home when I lived in Lebanon,
My cup of coffee was priceless and peaceful in the morning watching the sun rise from the horizon made me think how beautiful and charming this place is,
I was happy to be back,

We took it easy on the first day and pushed South, the guys had an amazing shot on descent size fishes raging from 10kg up to 28kg, we ended the day 9/20 GT’s.
This was Aneil’s first GT Trip and I know they will be more to come in the future, he is hooked!
The guys couldn’t react quickly to the strikes, setting the hook on the first day was a learning experience but they sure learned a lot and they improved by the end of the trip.
Right before we call the day off Darren suggested a couple of drift to have a shot at Doggies,
All I have to say is, we get the shot but couldn’t keep them on the line, multiple hook up with lost jigs, Igor had a nice hook up twice but only to lose them, the fish cut through the Kevlar cord in a split of a second.
Not a bad day for a start and we called the day off.

On the second day we pushed farther south and start popping the deeper water, ranging from 50 meters to 60 meters, this reminded me by New Caledonia,
I strongly believe that if you want to raise a monster you need to call him up from the deep, big poppers from 170g to 200g started flying out and in no time we start getting our strikes, It was a nice early session and the guys were so exited to see those massive explosion on their poppers and stickbait, I believe we went 12/20 on the second day,
The jigging scenario continued to be the same with some bad luck to the landing part of it,
We called the day off and headed to the guest house, all sored and exhausted.

At night at the dinner table we discussed the possibility to fish invisible bank and maybe spend a night there, Darran suggest to wait till the mooring to get a better look at the weather,

While stepping my foot into the boat on the 3rd day,
Darran said; hurry up if you want to go to Invisible bank, I was so excited to hear that and then he said we will do 2 days overnight, I did not take him seriously and thought he was joking,
The man was serious and we ended up spending 2 nights sleeping on the deck, the stars and the moon were our companion for the next 2 night, I enjoyed every bit of it even when the rain came in hauling at us.

Invisible bank was a beauty by itself; you can see the break of the wave from a distance and the color of the water…breath taking,
We set up the first drift close to the shallows.
My lure got knocked off and I can see the doggy in the air after the lure, unfortunately he came undone.
Our lures were getting inhaled and the chaos started to show up on the boat, double and triple hook up on every drift and bait being pushed everywhere, we don’t even know where to cast!
All what I can see is that Aneil is in trouble and we rush to put him in a comfortable position, while screaming and yelling we saw the silver shine under the boat,
And we all shouted Doggie, Doggie.
Aneil get his first topwater doggie on the Craft Bait GT3 170g,
Excitement and joy filled the boat, took a quick shot and released the fish to fight another day,
We called invisible bank off and headed to one of the island for shelter before the sun goes down,
We had a shot at doggies and we manage couple of small one,
We anchored close to one of the island and fell a sleep around 7:30PM, it was pitch black followed by beautiful night, the scenery was from watching the moon to counting the star,
It was us and the sky above us, what a night!!

We woke up around 4:30 AM ad right away Darran said we better hurry up the tide and current is to our favor, I am going to take you guys to a special place, you guys will pop and jig the wall,
The place had a nice drop off  and we start marking fish right away , on the first drift we all get strikes and we landed small fishes but then we start to see the big mark getting shallower and shallower,
 I decided to give popping a shot,
And here it goes pop, pop, an explosion literally 5 feet from the boat followed by a big massive shadow…
Doggy! Doggy!
The massive shadow wins and put us all into shame,
On the second drift we can see 7 to 8 doggies chasing our poppers and stickbaits, we were using barbless hooks and we couldn’t keep them on the hook and at times they used the lures as a lever to their advantages and escapes.
I had not seen anything like that through my entire fishing career, a day to be remembered for a long time, when I thought I had it and I set the hooks over 3 times thinking there is no way out for the, my line slacken and my popper had the treble hook buried into the wooden body, I could not understand what happen and how it happen, the line was flying out of the Stella and the tension was about right, luck decided to take a day off!!!
Again a nice strike close to the boat and Aneil is on, the doggies are so active and they only wanted the topwater lures, Aneil failed to deliver just like the rest of us,
We could not stop casting and the action was still around us, finally a strike again on my lure and I look to see stripes, I don’t know why I thought it was a barracuda,
It ended up to be a massive wahoo, we had it under the boat,
The bites start to fade away and we headed to a different area,
Upon the arrival we saw bait schools and we casted to the perimeter and Igor got a strike followed by me,
My fish was screaming and I know right away I had a decent sized fish; Igor laded his GT while I am still struggling to keep the fish on the hook,
A flash of silver appeared and here we go another doggy on a popper took a quick shot and released the fish to fight another day,
Seconds after we got to see a Garfish on the run for their life, 1 cast to where the fish landed and a massive explosion followed, big GT hit my popper but did not commit,
We called the day off and spend the night anchored up.
Woke up around 9:00PM with the rain pouring on us, 6 guys struggling to keep dry under the T top, it took close to an hour for the rain to stop and we went back to sleep in no time.

Our last day was a little slow and the highlight was the strike that Aneil had, we marked bait and motored slowly in that direction, Aneil came in tight 15 feet away from the boat to a Marlin, unfortunately he lost the fish on the first run,
All in all we had an amazing trip in the Andamans and we booked 2 boats for next year,
The Andamans offered great variety of fish and I would like to make a trip every year. The potential is there and hope next year will be the year to land those big mama Doggies!

Tackle used:
Popping Rods: Carpenter EP82/38 custom, Carpenter Coral Viper CV 79/40 custom, Race Point 200,250 and 150 Prototype, Fisherman GT Game TRSH
Jigging rods: MC Works, OBX-5410XX,
Reels: Shimano Stella, Daiwa Dogfight.
Lured: Shell Shaping, Carpenter Gamma, Craft Bait, Bertox Poppers, Hammerhead,
Lines: Power Pro Hollow, Jerry Brown Hollow, Varivas SMP & Sunline
Leader: Saltywater Tackle system leader.