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Heartbreak corner on the outside of number 10 ribbon
reef was certainly living up to its name, at least as
far as I was concerned. It was coming up to 6:00pm and
I headed the Viking towards the top of number 10. I
had experienced enough frustration for one day watching
the other 5 boats working the corner having full blown
action, and catching some beautiful big fish. Big fish
is what heartbreak is famous for. Its name derived by
the early pioneers of the grounds off Lizard Island,
describing the feeling of some anglers after one of
those great fish were lost. On this particular day it
was firing for everyone, everyone that is except me.
As any sport fishing charter boat captain would know,
one of the most frustrating parts of the job can be
to have everyone around you hooking up and you cannot
even get a bite. We rafted up along side our mothership
and I climbed down from the tower totally depressed
and confused. That was and still is the worst day that
I have had the displeasure of experiencing in my history
as a captain. At dinner that night I talked about the
day to my client and good friend Tom. Tom has been with
me since I was a crewman, and we have had some exceptional
fishing together. He has seen the highs and the lows.
He knew we had a bad day but after I filled him in on
the other boats results we both started worrying whether
the boat had developed some problem. We all know the
story about certain boats raising more fish than others
with good harmonics, bad harmonics so on and so on.
It was the 1990 Giant Black Marlin Season out of Cairns
and back than I was a total believer in this philosophy.
That same year I purchased the Viking from my boss at
the time, re-powered her and gave her a total face-lift,
had something gone wrong.
I was up earlier than normal the next morning for a
few reasons, one was to figure out a game plan for the
day, and what would be our strategy for the Lizard island
tournament starting tomorrow, and for a swim to inspect
my underwater gear. I popped up from under the boat
just as Tom was climbing on board from the mothership,
pulled myself through the transom door and received
Toms normal welcome "Gdayaaa Billyeeeeee, what
did you find mate?" in a classic American fashion.
"All OK Tom" was my answer.
I was about to break the golden rule leaving fish to
find fish. I had to make a decision, go back to heartbreak
and hope that the day before I was zigging instead of
zagging or try and find my own honey hole. I chose the
later. In 1990 Viking won the 7 day Lizard Island Black
Marlin Classic by 5 fish to its closest competitor.
Continued...
So what is the moral to the story you may ask. Well
in my 15 years of driving sport fishing boats for a
living, I have observed some bazaar events and the example
above as being one of them. I have seen this situation
happen quite a number of times, but definitely more
with black marlin than the other two species. The shoe
has been on the other foot and I have had the pleasure
of being the hot boat in a group getting consistent
shots while the others are scratching for a bite. I
believe that the fish can get turned on to a boat as
well as get turned off a boat and this can happen at
certain levels. Sure there are always other factors
that could make one boat more successful than another
when fishing in a group and I will discuss these in
a future issue. If you are confident you are trolling
the freshest bait, the best lures and everything is
rigged to perfection, your marking fish regularly on
the sounder and everybody is hooking up all around you
and you can't see a damn thing you are doing wrong.
Before you start to pull your hair out because you can't
even raise a fish, time to break that golden rule, get
the hell out of there.
The biggest fish-attracting device is the boat itself;
all boats with engines transmit a signal of some frequency
under water. Some owners have even gone to the trouble
of trying to transmit the appropriate signal through
speakers in the hull. Multiple world record holders
Dick and Marg Love's, boat Sound Machine, was aptly
named and had some interesting results. If the boat
can be the biggest attracting device would it be fair
to say at certain times it can also be the biggest deterrent?
In my opinion yes. When a pod of fish is holding in
one area, it is possible for that body of fish to turn
onto a certain frequency. In most cases if you are the
first vessel to find a pod of fish, and they start feeding
while you are the only boat working the area, there
is a good chance you may become the hot boat. They are
relating that noise and that vibration to a place of
food source, or a place of activity where there is potential
of food. Other boats may move in when they realise your
getting bit, but if the fish have turned on to the action
that is behind your boat, the other boats may have to
be content with watching you get all the bites. That
pointy end of a billfish , that always does so much
damage to my boat, and has been called such scientific
names as hooter and snos, added with the lateral line
is the G.P.S, Radar, Sonar, and fish finder of all Billfish.
In my opinion they tune in to a particular frequency
and if you are fortunate enough to be that boat make
the most of it, believe it or not it does happen.
Continued...
On the other hand if there is a bite happening all
around you, and you cannot turn a reel, it is possible
that the frequency of your boat is far enough different
from the other boats around you, that the fish have
no reason to raise to your baits. Often I have seen
boats with outboards and sterndrives, use their speed
on exceptionally good days, to run up to a ground that
is producing a good small black marlin bite. The inboard
boats that arrived a little later had substantially
less action than the outboard boats on these days. As
you would be aware they both use under water exhausts.
Another one of my own very obvious examples was again
during the Lizard Island Tournament some years ago.
I was working a spot that had produced well for me in
the past and was not as well known as some of the other
grounds. I had it all to myself which to me is the ideal
scenario. It was really starting to fire. As part of
the rules of the tournament you are required to radio
in each hook up, so it was not long before I had company.
At the peak of the action, I was in a circle similar
to the way we work a Spanish mackerel bite and getting
shots consistently. The fish were not large so our hook
up and capture rate, with the heavy terminal tackle
we were using was poor. We still managed to tag three
quick fish. The other boats that tried to move in on
the action were ignored, no matter how close they attempted
to get in on the action. After what I considered substantial
time without a bite, they reluctantly moved on.
The equation can change depending on the group of boats
working an area. Some boats may have identical frequency.
Lets take a situation like the N.S.W Interclub Tournament
held out of Port Stephens. With 260 boats with large
groups working certain areas, 35ft Bertrams and Rivieras
everwhere, many with the same power, a mixture of Volvos,
Cummins, and Caterpillar, and because of fuel prices
these days maybe one with the big petrol Mercruisers.
From my experience I would but my money on the petrol
powered Bertram.
Other examples that spring to mind I have given a name,
"the odd man out syndrome". It can happen
in two ways, a group of boats working a spot for some
time with no action, maybe having all the good signs
plenty of bait, marking a few fish on the sounder, great
water etc. Suddenly along comes a new contender into
the group, does one turn around the same area that the
other boats have been working for hours and gets bit.
Bugger! In a similar situation, one of the boats in
the group decides to do something different. This could
be go a bit faster or slower, change baits to lures
or lures to baits, or the captain may hold his tongue
on a different side of his face to the others (just
kidding). The point I'm making here is that the fish
have become accustomed to the boats that are working
in the area and have sensed their frequency as a whole
and have not been triggered to start feeding. The change
in either the new boat's arrival or someone in the group
doing something different can turn the switch.
Of course you always have to take the luck factor into
consideration. You may be zigging when you should be
zagging, or if your superstitious start looking for
those bananas, get that unlucky angler off strike, pull
out your favorite shirt or hat, and the one that works
every time, sew a gold Rolex into the belly of your
next bait.
Continued...
I imagine by now some of you out there may be a little
skeptical. Or on the other hand you may be starting
to remember some of those days that you really would
rather forget and have no explanation for, or the time
you thought you were the greatest marlin fishermen on
the planet. The benefit that a charter captain has over
the average privateer, is many of them have saltwater
flowing through their veins and even maybe through their
brains, but nether the less have acquired a wealth of
information from he or she's experiences. These are
my own personal observations, and also the observations
of a hand full of elite friends that I have had the
privilege of enjoying a gold beer with, that also have
that salty substance running out of their ears. Of course
these observations have never been scientifically proven,
but as we say in the tropics " works for me'.
I mentioned earlier that that day back in 1990 was
and still is the worst day that I have ever experienced.
You see since then my mentally has changed, and I will
not stay in a spot and watch everyone else catch them
except me, one experience like that was enough to last
me a life time.
Personally where possible during a tournament, or when
certain grounds look like the car park at Disneyland,
I prefer to be the loner when I am fishing. You don't
have to be a nuclear scientist to figure out, that if
you divide the number of possible fish holding on a
ground, by the amount of boats attempting to catch them,
that the possibility of a result can only be but in
the hands of the all mighty. By all means if you believe
that the Grand poo-bah of all things that are real and
unreal, is shining his perpetual light upon you while
competing with such fierce competition, dig in and make
the most of it. I prefer not to have the interference
or the distractions.
To be truly successful you have to take all things
into consideration. Countless articles have been written
on the importance of tackle preparation. The correct
way to rig this and that, a new way to rig this and
that. Angling techniques on heavy tackle, light tackle,
stand up tackle, and the elite fly fishing tackle. Of
course all this information is very important. Even
the greatest anglers and the best crew can not get a
result if the boat is not positioned over the fish that
are feeding. The decision on where to fish, when to
fish, how long to work an area, when to leave, and when
to stay, are the decisions if made correctly, will produce
the greatest result. Taking in all the information that
is available on the day using the tools that are available
to you, (my personal favourites are a good powerful
sounder and an accurate quality temp gauge set in Fahrenheit)
will always assist in your decision. Never assume that
with marlin that if they're catching them all around
you that that's the place for you to be.
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