Friday, September 17, 2010

A True Mixed Bag

My good friend Chris (who is actually known as Fisherman Chris) runs a charter boat company called World Class Anglers (340-344-1155 and www.worldclassanglers.com) and every now and again he takes me on his charters as his mate. Usually I get to do this when he has a lot of trips booked in the week and towards the end he wants me to come along and do all the work running the lines, rigging bait, hauling coolers and so forth. This gives him what he calls a break even though he is still working as hard as the next charter boat trying to get his guests dinner. In any event, it is a good chance for me to go fishing and that is exactly what I got to do yesterday. We went to the North Drop about 20 miles north of St. John where the Puerto Rican trench begins. The drop goes from 150feet to about 2,000 and then as you go another 25 miles further it drastically falls off to over 6,000 and then 12,000. We hit our first bite before the edge at some high spots and a true smoker was hooked. The line came off the down rigger and stayed bent but was only just crawling off the reel as I grabbed it and checked the set. As the guest on board hardly knew the line had been knocked down I yelled to have him come get the rod. It is second nature to see lines go off and then have the rod in hand before the fish starts its run but it takes time to have that connection with a boat. Its sort of the same in your own car, there are noises that you are familiar with and once in a while you hear something new and it startles you the moment you hear or feel it. The guest came to get the rod and I plopped it in his belt just in time for him to feel exactly what he was paying to experience. Ten if not twelve solid seconds of screaming line going behind the boat giving evidence to one of two possible species we had just hooked up, Wahoo or Kingfish. If you have never been spooled like this before it is a frightening and antsy moment. You feel helpless and you don't know what to do, you know if that fish can keep up the endurance he will set himself free although he will have quite a long leash until the hook corrodes away or slips out after a week. In fact, there is one thing you must do in this situation. Enjoy the moment and do nothing. Seriously, you just smile and watch the reel spin because you know that as fast as that line is going out it is going to be spooled back much slower so save your breath now. You do nothing but smile because you know you have hooked a great fish, something strong enough to pull 50lbs of drag for over ten seconds. This fish turned out to be a 30 pound smoker, a Kingfish. Gaffed and on board we all got to feel that satisfying exuberance that comes from battling an adversary and winning. Lines back in the water and away we went only to have the same scenario happen twenty minutes later although a shorter initial run the smaller Kingfish was worked back to the boat with methodical patience and instruction to the guest, lean back and pull the rod up then drop it down and reel in the difference created, lean back and rod up, lean down and crank the line in. About 30 yards away we saw our first flashes of silvery blue color and knew it was another Kingfish and he was tired, having been worked over for the last ten minutes. 25 yards now and that is when my strategy changed abruptly, "crank, crank, crank, reel, reel, forget the up and down motion just get that fish in now!" A brown menace had appeared behind our target and was swaggering about 10 yards behind the king. It was making a serpentine right behind the king as we were still moving 2 or 3 knots through the water. Then it disappeared and I knew we were done with this battle with just 15 yards to go. "He's not fighting me anymore I'm getting it in Josh." "I know, we just got sharked." I gaffed the corpse and our king came on board surprisingly whole as the shark had only taken the tail off our fish! The brown machine stayed 10 yards behind the boat for about twenty seconds before deciding wisely that his meal was now ours. The bite was so clean, so perfect and so swift that the 18 pound king was still flopping around the deck. What an efficient creature the shark is to do such damage with such little effort. Later in the day we filled out the fish box with three nice blackfin tuna, a skipjack tuna, and two peanut 7 pound mahi!

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Big Boat Intro



I had the chance to go to the real world for a number of weeks recently and took it! With the sale of my powerboat charter business in July I suddenly had no job and a desire to spend some time with my family as well as my friends in the states. A big part of the enjoyment came from being able, for the first time in five years, to be home during a time of year when vegetable gardens were producing their crops! I ate corn on the cob every night for a month except for about three times I would bet. Among other favorites were tomatoes that did not taste like cardboard and my sisters creation of battered squash blossoms with a honey drizzle. Ok, enough about the food on to the fishing. Since I no longer have the Scout 282SF to take fishing periodically I should introduce you all to my newest battle wagon that is ready to take on the Virgin Islands South and North Drops. It is called "Factory Hookup" and she is a beautiful Scout 350 Abaco. On her own bottom she was run down from Charleston, SC for the owner and I am now taking care of her. She is powered with twin 350 yamaha outboards and cruises at about 30knots. I have found she is most comfortable at 28knots and it rough weather 18knots is the magic number to let her squat down and take the wavers off her broad and proud Carolina bow while giving us a gentle ride towards the back of the boat. If seas are flat she can run out at just under 50knots, if your wallet can handle it of course! The owner makes his way down every four or five weeks so I don't get a lot of opportunity to use it and as we all know using a boat is the best way to keep maintenance costs down so I just had to take it out the other day when some friends offered to pay for fuel. It was a good chance to put a little gas through the filters and clean the bottom up a little. We didn't do any fishing but we did catch a good time.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

The Honor in Retiring


Couldn't have asked for a better setup for the day. Well actually, there were a few things that could have been better but can you really have it all at once? I mean if it is flat calm and you can race around at 30 knots hunting for fish the water is so crystal clear you will have trouble getting them to take the bait anyway. If the live-bait are jumping behind your mooring or slip just before you head out then the fish might be so hungry a shiny piece of tinfoil and a hook will get the lines tight. Today I had a single throw for my live-bait (10ft cast net- Old Salt) and was sitting on the dock waiting for my brother and friend Scott at 7am. Winds North East at about 17knots meant it was fairly tight 4-5ft waves heading the 11 miles out to the South Drop off of St. John, USVI. We made 18knots ourselves and just before the edge I dropped my four lines. Down-rigger, first outrigger and looked up to see a flock of 30+ birds, Booby's, Frigate, and the Tuna birds dive bombing the water a mile off. I set the second outrigger with my tuna rig (no ballyhoo) and sped off at brisk 8-9 knots going after the birds. After 15 minutes I was barely making ground on them so I pulled the downrigger up and went ahead full speed. Ahhhhhh, thats why they were moving so fast. . . . .PORPOISE! I thought there was probably a tuna school ahead of them so I made my play, but it was to no advantage. Since we really only went out to the edge to see if anything was going one, not to spend the day searching we ran past the edge a couple times with the downrigger and outriggers before calling it a morning. We weren't out to search and destroy today, just stumble and get lucky. We pulled it all in and went to the beach on Jost van Dyke. What an awesome day, fishing in the morning and sitting in a palm tree hammock with a rum drink just slightly before noon. Sometimes a good day fishing doesn't mean catching fish.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

First Post


I really love fishing. I don't fish for a living. Each morning before going to work I find myself looking for articles on offshore fishing and blogs that have interesting daily stories and for lack of content I can't find too many. I decided that I could add a little content to the web and maybe someone else would enjoy it. This is my introduction, when I get time I'll add some of my, probably too infrequent, forays into fishing in and around St. John here in the Virgin Islands. These will include offshore fishing for Mahi, Wahoo, and Tuna as well as inshore for Tarpon, and Yellowtail Snapper. My best success will probably be snaring Lobsters as I tend to get to do that most often. Most of my fishing will be done on one of two boats. My boat is a 2007 Scout 282 SF. It primarily gets used for our day charter snorkeling business which is why I don't get to go fishing as often as I would love. The other boat is my friends custom 33' Avanti center console that he uses for fishing charters called World Class Anglers, we fish all the tournaments together and go out commercial fishing once in a while.