Familly fishing
Moderators: CaptPatrick, mike ohlstein, Bruce
Familly fishing
8 to 10 miles off the NorthEast Shore of Puerto Rico.........this was last Saturday.......nephew, brother, brother in law........there is nothing like family fishing......4 skip jacks and a big dorado female.......Tony enjoy!
female dolphin
Excuse my ignorance as I have very little offshore fishing experience (but tons of Chesapeake experience). Are most large Dorado females? Can you tell the sex externally, without cleaning them?
-Joe
-Joe
Gracias Hueso. Duh...bulls. Didn't know about the shape of the head. Does the "rule" that males generally grow bigger and stronger apply to most pelagics? This seems to be the opposite of striped bass (obviously much different families/fish). Most all really large stripers (rockfish here) are females. In my experience I've seen very few male stripers over 40".
-Joe
-Joe
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 7036
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 21:24
- Location: Hillsdale, New Jersey
- Contact:
- In Memory Walter K
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2912
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:25
- Location: East Hampton LI, NY
- Contact:
- Brewster Minton
- Senior Member
- Posts: 1795
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 07:44
- Location: Hampton Bays NY
- Contact:
- Brewster Minton
- Senior Member
- Posts: 1795
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 07:44
- Location: Hampton Bays NY
- Contact:
Three questions....Okay, so how about the sex vs. size of different tuna?
Secondly, do any of you guys use dolphin for bait? Bailer size? Seems to me it would be a great swordfish bait. Again, my offshore fishing experience is limited.
Lastly, has anyone used small lobsters for striper bait? I know they will eat hard crabs, but there are much better baits/methods than that. If anyone on here is interested in fishing the Chesapeake, methods, etc, I'm willing to help and an experienced mate.
Secondly, do any of you guys use dolphin for bait? Bailer size? Seems to me it would be a great swordfish bait. Again, my offshore fishing experience is limited.
Lastly, has anyone used small lobsters for striper bait? I know they will eat hard crabs, but there are much better baits/methods than that. If anyone on here is interested in fishing the Chesapeake, methods, etc, I'm willing to help and an experienced mate.
- mike ohlstein
- Site Admin
- Posts: 2394
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 11:39
- Location: So many things seem like no-brainers until you run into someone with no brain.
- Contact:
- Brewster Minton
- Senior Member
- Posts: 1795
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 07:44
- Location: Hampton Bays NY
- Contact:
- In Memory of Vicroy
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2340
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:19
- Location: Baton Rouge, LA
[quote="mike ohlstein"]Uncle Vic wrangles a good size male mahi (that I caught...) at UVI II
....finally I get to see Uncle Vic's silver Penn Internationals.......nice!
to good to give it to marlins............we used to use small to medium size Tarpoon and Robalo to fish Marlin........In a kind of funny/serious note, I've been thinking of rigging a live "iguana gallina de palo" (which have become a pest in Puerto Rico)......I know it will be a killer for shark fishing......just think of that long tail swirling around 15 miles from shore.....if the iguana survives (as they can swim)...then I will bring her back into the wild....
....finally I get to see Uncle Vic's silver Penn Internationals.......nice!
to good to give it to marlins............we used to use small to medium size Tarpoon and Robalo to fish Marlin........In a kind of funny/serious note, I've been thinking of rigging a live "iguana gallina de palo" (which have become a pest in Puerto Rico)......I know it will be a killer for shark fishing......just think of that long tail swirling around 15 miles from shore.....if the iguana survives (as they can swim)...then I will bring her back into the wild....
Hueso,
Funny that you would rather use Robalo for bait than Dolphin. I think Robalo (Snook) are a far better tasting fish than Dolphin... I mean, Dolphin is OK, but Snook is right up there with Tripletail and Hogfish in my book...
You guys still use Bonefish as Marlin bait down there, or is that becoming frowned upon?
We've got an exploding Green Iguana population here as well... Kevin, what's the FWC's current stance on Iguana's- invasived feral pest? Shoot to kill? They sure have been causing some landscaping nightmares, eating everyones hibiscus, etc..
Funny that you would rather use Robalo for bait than Dolphin. I think Robalo (Snook) are a far better tasting fish than Dolphin... I mean, Dolphin is OK, but Snook is right up there with Tripletail and Hogfish in my book...
You guys still use Bonefish as Marlin bait down there, or is that becoming frowned upon?
We've got an exploding Green Iguana population here as well... Kevin, what's the FWC's current stance on Iguana's- invasived feral pest? Shoot to kill? They sure have been causing some landscaping nightmares, eating everyones hibiscus, etc..
Buju:
Bonefish to difficult to catch, why bother.....the problem with Robalo is where you catch them....usually polluted or in the process of....therefore, I tried to avoid them........I read in some magazine that Capt. Barta tried a salami to catch some Tuna and he did.......is pretty amazing what people can use to fish
Bonefish to difficult to catch, why bother.....the problem with Robalo is where you catch them....usually polluted or in the process of....therefore, I tried to avoid them........I read in some magazine that Capt. Barta tried a salami to catch some Tuna and he did.......is pretty amazing what people can use to fish
Last edited by Hueso on Mar 19th, '08, 15:55, edited 1 time in total.
Thanks for the info. Hueso and others. I know I can read about this elsewhere but this board is much more interesting than wiki,etc. On the topic of strange baits...a captain friend of mine out of Wanchese, NC caught an amberjack on a chicken wing (so he claims). I think just about anything would work for bait (for ambers) when they first start showing up at the towers and wrecks. After a few days of pressure, artificials go from just fine to we need some live bluefish.
mahi dont make it back to the dock intact....30 seconds after this was shot the mate started carving em up on the transom.....of course as luck would have it we hit a double sail hook up and in the captains enthusiasm backing up i got most of the inside of this fish splayed across my outside.....but i didnt care as we got em both....fillets in the cooler a minute late
interesting bait
interesting bait
- mike ohlstein
- Site Admin
- Posts: 2394
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 11:39
- Location: So many things seem like no-brainers until you run into someone with no brain.
- Contact:
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 7036
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 21:24
- Location: Hillsdale, New Jersey
- Contact:
- In Memory of Vicroy
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2340
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:19
- Location: Baton Rouge, LA
Tony - Tom Testa who started Reel Colors in Mass. years ago....Tom was a machinist with one of the aerospace outfits and was doing reels on the side. I had 7 or 8 old 80Ws that were near basket cases and saw an article about Tom in some mag....called him and he was just getting started. Quoted me $150 a reel to totally re-machine them, strip the original gold and re-anodize them platinum. So I sent the reels up to him and he was almost done and called me, "UV, you want these reels engraved?" "Huh, you can do that?" Yep he can, so this was pre-email so I drew the sketch of the sie plate and faxed it to him. He said he would put it in the computer cutting machine and send me a fax of how it came out.....well, back in my working days I was on the road for a week, get back to the office and there is this fax of the side plate engraving layout.....looked great until I looked closer...he had spelled Another Joy "Aother Joy"....Holy Crap!!! I called him and he answered on his cell phone pulling into the parking lot of the place that was gonna cut the engraving and anodize them with my reels in the back of his truck.....got it fixed in the nick of time. Still have his fax of the faux pas taped to my office door along with a number of unrelated other screw ups, both legal and boating. People at my office call it the "Door of Shame".
Tom does fantastic work, his web site is www.reelcolors.com but he's way more than cosmetics. He took my old 80Ws down to the frames, machined out all the corrosion pits, took the tolerances dwon to 1/10,000 ths, you can see in the Prof's pix that he "releived" the countersink holes where the side plate screws go, a big deal to keep salt from building up around the heads of the screws. The reels came back to me 10 times better than new. He also makes some really nice flex handles for reels. I later sent him a 12/0 Finor that someone had anodized a crappy red and he took it down and did the platinum on it too, plus a custom "Another Joy" side plate. Tom says in his view the Internationals are way better than the Finors, mine was the first he had worked over...says all the parts are pretty much hand made, a pain to duplicate.
I'm real proud of them. A very good alternative to throwing out good but shabby reels and buying new. Plus, keep CX on them and the roller guides of your rods and they will last a few lifetimes.
UV
Tom does fantastic work, his web site is www.reelcolors.com but he's way more than cosmetics. He took my old 80Ws down to the frames, machined out all the corrosion pits, took the tolerances dwon to 1/10,000 ths, you can see in the Prof's pix that he "releived" the countersink holes where the side plate screws go, a big deal to keep salt from building up around the heads of the screws. The reels came back to me 10 times better than new. He also makes some really nice flex handles for reels. I later sent him a 12/0 Finor that someone had anodized a crappy red and he took it down and did the platinum on it too, plus a custom "Another Joy" side plate. Tom says in his view the Internationals are way better than the Finors, mine was the first he had worked over...says all the parts are pretty much hand made, a pain to duplicate.
I'm real proud of them. A very good alternative to throwing out good but shabby reels and buying new. Plus, keep CX on them and the roller guides of your rods and they will last a few lifetimes.
UV
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 7036
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 21:24
- Location: Hillsdale, New Jersey
- Contact:
- CaptPatrick
- Founder/Admin
- Posts: 4161
- Joined: Jun 7th, '06, 14:25
- Location: 834 Scott Dr., LLANO, TX 78643 - 325.248.0809 bertram31@bertram31.com
Tony,I was talked out of it by a friend who said, if something goes wrong, who is going to work on them for you.
Your friend needs a reality check... The reels would be just as serviceable as if they were factory rebuilt. If Tom did the work, they'd be better than factory rebuilt. Besides, Penn reels are dead simple to service & proper care and routine maintenance will pretty much keep them bullet proof.
Br,
Patrick
Hueso,
Sad about the inshore lagoons being that polluted. Are there good numbers of fish in there anyways, plenty of sabalo & robalo? Oh, and bonefish aren't any harder to catch than any other species, all you've got to do is get your hook into their mouth :)
Randall,
Love the Coca-Cola chugger. You come up with that one?
UV,
Very cool Internationals. And the personalization makes it difficult for them to disappear, and show up in a local flea market a few weeks later like several of my Shimano Calcutta 400's did several months back... bastards. If I would have kept track of the serial#'s, I could have got 'em back.. but I'm not that organized, or intelligent.
What does everyone think of Avet reels? THinking about picking a few of the smaller models up when I'm able to afford my next real reel purchase. Pro's / con's ?
Sad about the inshore lagoons being that polluted. Are there good numbers of fish in there anyways, plenty of sabalo & robalo? Oh, and bonefish aren't any harder to catch than any other species, all you've got to do is get your hook into their mouth :)
Randall,
Love the Coca-Cola chugger. You come up with that one?
UV,
Very cool Internationals. And the personalization makes it difficult for them to disappear, and show up in a local flea market a few weeks later like several of my Shimano Calcutta 400's did several months back... bastards. If I would have kept track of the serial#'s, I could have got 'em back.. but I'm not that organized, or intelligent.
What does everyone think of Avet reels? THinking about picking a few of the smaller models up when I'm able to afford my next real reel purchase. Pro's / con's ?
- In Memory Walter K
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2912
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:25
- Location: East Hampton LI, NY
- Contact:
Buju- Nice Bonefish on a nice reel! Used a Billy Pate Marlin and an International #4 on 14-15 wt fly rods to catch Pacific Sailfish in Guatemala this February. If you like fly fishing, it's an incredible experience to cast to, hook, fight and land a 100+ Sail. Almost a no-brainer when the fish is teased to the stern of the boat! Rarely a refusal and they take it going away like a freight train! Walter
Randall,
Damn photoshop.... I'm sure it'd work though, concave area on the bottom of the bottle would give off a nice bubble trail.
Walter,
Thanks. I've found some incredible bonefish flats right in my 'backyard' here in Key Largo. I regularly take my 16' canoe out, and stand on top of the gunnels (on that teak the fish is on in the pic) and pole the canoe with an old broken pushpole from my flats skiff... Not uncommon to have several schools with 50 to 80 fish per school come through, all in the 6 to 10 lb range. But it still aint easy by any means. My best has been two in one morning.
Sails on fly... whole different story. I've done it here in the keys with my heavy tarpon rod (13wt)... just like you said. Get 'em fired up on the teaser ( live teasers here ) pull the teaser, and give 'em the fly, and hold on! Gets pretty exciting. Haven't actually landed one, but I've hooked up twice. Takes alotta teamwork, well choreographed teamwork.
Damn photoshop.... I'm sure it'd work though, concave area on the bottom of the bottle would give off a nice bubble trail.
Walter,
Thanks. I've found some incredible bonefish flats right in my 'backyard' here in Key Largo. I regularly take my 16' canoe out, and stand on top of the gunnels (on that teak the fish is on in the pic) and pole the canoe with an old broken pushpole from my flats skiff... Not uncommon to have several schools with 50 to 80 fish per school come through, all in the 6 to 10 lb range. But it still aint easy by any means. My best has been two in one morning.
Sails on fly... whole different story. I've done it here in the keys with my heavy tarpon rod (13wt)... just like you said. Get 'em fired up on the teaser ( live teasers here ) pull the teaser, and give 'em the fly, and hold on! Gets pretty exciting. Haven't actually landed one, but I've hooked up twice. Takes alotta teamwork, well choreographed teamwork.
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 7036
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 21:24
- Location: Hillsdale, New Jersey
- Contact:
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot] and 102 guests