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Archive for the ‘Kona Sport Fishing’ Category

 

Noklby’s almost get one

Friday, December 30th, 2011

Tday Chip Van Mols and I took out the Noklby Family for a day fishing on the 40 foot Gamefisherman. We had a long day of trolling until we saw a really nice fish come to the short bait. It came up all over the lure and didn’t bite. It looked well over 500 but it was hard to tell how much over it was. Big bill and big dorsal all over the lure. We waited for a bit and nothing. We turned around on the fish and and I never could raise the fish again. We worked the area outside the grounds for awhile with no action. As our day came close to an end we trolled back south to the harbor where we had a fish about 300 blow up on the long corner. We had about 300 yards of line out at one point and got it all back after 40 jumps. It seemed the fish was ours at that point it simply came with no trouble when the hook pulled. Great afternoon and had one close but it came 3 minutes away from getting a tag in it. I guess we got the best part of that one.

Boat Work Begins- Let It Shine

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

 

 

Boat Work Begins- Ready for Stain

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

Here you see the wood stripped and some of the stain applied. It felt good to get to this stage. Once the stain goes on it is down hill from here. We use a filler stain that stains the mahogany and helps fill the grain. It is nice to get a good uniform color throughout the boat. I like when the wood matches.It looks newer and richer. When there are different colors throughout the boat due to stripping at different stages it is hard to get the uniform look. I like the mahogany and the stain for that reason. Teak is strong and holds up better to the abuse and raw new teak varnished is so beautiful. The challenge for me with teak is keeping everything uniform as the sun bleaches it blond. To keep the teak looking rich many times you have to sand the blond colored wood off the top to get to the rich wood below. This means taking a bunch of meat off of the wood to get there. The patches are harder on teak and you don’t have the stain to help match color when you have an accident and put a ding in the wood. The oils in the teak and the hard body don’t allow for even staining.One of the tricks that has been painful to learn after all these years of varnishing the boat is to sand down to 400 grit before any stain even goes on the stripped bare wood. It is so tempting late in the day after getting it down to 220grit that you just want to get the stain on. From what I have learned it is better to get the wood so smooth it is almost polished smooth before the stain goes on. The reason is that the coats of varnish to follow are fewer and it saves a ton of work later filling in the grain with varnish. With what we do with the staining if you have some stray sanding marks from stripping this sanding helps get rid of the last ones. At the 400 grit stage the grain is way less and mostly filled in by the stain. Many of my mentors and most captains of today feel the varnish is foolish and a movement towards painting the wood out is becoming the norm. At times I agree when a careless guest puts a big ding in it,but after working hard all week and it is shining in the sun it is beautiful and really makes the boat pop. It represents our commitment to our job.When we fish on custom boats with beautiful wood that is taken care of  it just feels good. The custom boats of the vintage age all had varnished toenails and cab arounds at the least, so we like to try to carry on the tradition by keeping our wood varnished. As busy as we get there is time to get it done it just takes hard work to keep up with it. Next we put on the varnish and make it shine.

Boat Work Begins-Stripping Varnish

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

 

A Halloween Birthday

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

The Bergstedt family fished with us today on Halloween. It was Sharon’s birthday and we had a good day at sea to celebrate. We trolled down to the dolphins and fished the tuna stick most of the day. It was poor timing for the traffic. There were a lot of boats there which made it more difficult to fish. After lunch the tuna came up all over the surface of the water. I was able to get a few shots as they slowly cruised around on the surface eating little fish off of the top. They are such a nice family and did so well on the boat because the fish were there and the boats left we stayed late and got one to bite. Great finish to a long day of watching tuna.

Day 5 and 6 of Spearfish Impossible

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

We had a nice couple of days of fishing focused on our goal. A spearfish. By this time word had spread of our quest. Everyone in the fleet was helping us try to find one but they weren’t  to be found. At 2:30 in the afternoon on our last day we hooked another nice Blue Marlin. It was over 600 pounds and jumped all over the ocean. We got 40 jumps out of her before she settled down. We got tight on the belly that collapsed after a 10 minute chase and it appeared the fish was tired and we would get an early shot. We just started gaining on the tight line and the hook pulled. After all of that jumping, unreal. After day 6 Sandra decided to keep traveling in search for a couple of the other billfish she needed.We wish her all the best in her quest for all nine billfish.Perhaps we can try again when they show up in better numbers this winter. Thanks to Brain Balancio, Boyd Decoito, and Chip Van Mols for helping me with Spearfish Impossible I know we gave it all we had and caught some nice blues on the way.

Team Hook And Bull Fish Kona

Tuesday, October 4th, 2011

We had the pleasure of fishing with the top notch fishing team from New Zealand.  The team fishes ultra light tackle for fish far about the ratio of the line. They had broken over 20 billfish records most of them in the last few years. Capt. John Batterton has been an old friend for years having fished many of the same hot spots all over the world. John’s anglers Guy and Erin stopped here on their way to fishing for the Blue fin tuna in Nova Scotia. They fished 2 days with us and we raised 2 fish. One we pitched the 2 pound test to and the fish fumbled the bait. The fish was about 120 pounds. Right when we were ready to get to work the fish dropped the bait. We worked the area and raised another fish around 300 pounds and we pitched the 8 pound test and it didn’t switch. I had a nice time with John catching up on the incredible catches they have been making.

Geza Gets the Tuna Again

Monday, October 3rd, 2011

Geza got the tuna on great timing on 2 great days. The fish have been in the dolphins and we were able to get on them pretty good. We had good action on the tuna stick and some luck live baiting for them. The fall can be hard fishing due to the small food fish the tuna find to eat. There are silver dollar looking bait and tiny squids that they eat. They sometimes drive us crazy because they won’t bite. The 2 days we spend fishing the dolphins were great. They saw what we had and they bit. 2 fun days and good to get Geza out finally after a busy summer of charters.

TART Day Two

Saturday, October 1st, 2011

Today we had Donny on board and caught a bait in the morning!!!! Finally. It was a good bait and found a spot down the hatch. The circle found a spot in the corner and we were on.We took the fish that was bigger than the 300 qualifying weight. It was a nice sized fish that was long a thin. It weighed 399. This is a crazy weight in a tournament. The significance was that the fish was 1 point short of being worth 2 tags. If it was 2 pounds heavier it would have been like having 3 tags. The weight was bittersweet. Good to have caught the fish that put us back in the hunt but didn’t help us catch up to the leaders. We would have to bring it to catch the 2 leaders if we want to have a chance. The fish put Donny out in front as the tournament leader.

Steve Cireco Day One

Friday, September 30th, 2011

Steve Cireco Came back to fish with us again this year and his timing on the new moon couldn’t have been better. We started off with a fish that bit and took off getting us in the dacron right away. It was evident that something was wrong when it went down and we could see his tail beat. Unfortunately it came up dead in about 10 minutes. Brysen Ball got in to help Mat and I out is pictured here trying to revive him. It just didn’t make it. Sometimes in fishing a full season this happens. We have 2 or 3 sometimes not make it due to bad hook position. Great for Steve bad for his first fish of the trip.