Winter Softbaiting for Trophy Snapper 24.07.18
Out of the corner of my left eye I saw Manuel strike and
set his Gulp 7" Firetiger Jerkshad on a 3/8oz Nitro jighead hard! I
snapped around immediately as I heard his Shimano Twinpower 4000 drag squeal
under a heavy load as the fish bullrushed its way into the shadows of the shallows.
It was a good fish!
And exactly what we were searching for in the spooky tiger country that
we were hunting them in. The bottom was
full of big boulders, with kelp, neptune necklace seaweed interspersed between
the odd clear patches where colonies of kina clung to the surface of these
boulders. Just impoverishing on terminal
tackle is this style of softbaiting as it is a risk or reward technique that
requires after the cast a measured guess-timate as to sink rates before
skimming the Gulp softbait close to the bottom and through the tangled lattice
work of trenches back towards the boat.
“Get on the helm Paul!”
Manuel yelled as I was already turning the key to start up the Yamaha 4
stroke 100HP outboard.
Engaging forward gear as smoothly as I can and not upset the
equilibrium of Manuel who was at this stage wrestling with a seriously bent Yeehaa
704 2 pce custom rod on the bow of his Extreme 540 centre console.
It was easy to drive up to the fish and cut it off as it was
fleeing through his underground backyard as the bright green Varivas Sea Bass
PE2 was silhouetted against the stealthy shadow of the land.
“I forgot the landing net, it’s still leaning against the
garage!” Manuel muttered in between
choice expletives.
“No problem, it’ll just make it interesting.” I replied as I was now reversing back hard as the fish started to charge back towards the boat.
After the initial 100m plus burst and subsequently shorter
runs the snapper appeared on the surface as Manuel worked it hard to keep its head up and soon we drove alongside it as it flopped over on its side.
1. It's Big!
This fish was big.
My first attempt to grab it by its tail was a failure. It felt; meaty, slippery and strangely warm to
the touch.
“Gill it!” Manuel
suggested while expertly keeping this behemoth alongside.
I managed to with reasonable gentle force shove my right
hand under and into its gill cavity. My
right hand disappeared and I was able to quickly lift this snapper aboard.
2. This is not a pannie!
After a quick weight check the thing clocked the digital
scale at 22.7 lbs. Well over the 20 lb
mark, and a subsequent length check on the measure mat saw it in at 82 cms. This is an impressive fish that after the photos
swam away strongly back to its hood.
3. Let's get it back in the
water!
4. Great to see it swim away strongly!
Obviously we were both delighted with this encounter and to
have so quickly fulfilled the objective of the day within the first hour!
However, like all fishing there was then a long period
between fish as we waded through our stocks of Gulp softbaits and
jigheads. Its character building stuff
and great practice for tying FG knots quickly in a rocking boat. I see it as an opportunity to improve the accuracy and distance of
my casts both port, starboard and left handed in my case.
This style of angling wouldn’t suit everyone as hunting for trophy fish using light tackle softbait rigs is not the same as meat fishing in a thousand gannet workup.
It requires skillful casting, placement of the softbaits, working out sink rates, patience and the acceptance that there will be losses in tackle to the gnarly bottom terrain and lots of softbait attrition from leatherjackets and banded wrasse attacks. It’s expedient to carry 2 softbait rod and reel sets to get back fast into the next cast after a break off.
However, the advantage are instead of focusing a bait and berley session on one zone off the stern through a single tide change. Softbaiting allows the angler to cover more ground on the silent drift and therefor more chances to encounter a trophy fish as you drift through each individual big fish territory. Before long you will note similarities in their choices of habitat. Availability of food, good shelter for hiding, ambushing prey and water quality.
The tactical choice for using Gulp is simply because they
work well in this environment when the angler needs every advantage from his/her
gear used. Gulp still has the most scent
dispersion being a water based product compared to others on the market. Plus they are nearly biodegradeable a
critical factor as our awareness for not leaving behind any plastic rubbish is mandatory. I also like the greater variety
of colour choices, sizes and shapes to try out in different scenarios. We only used 6.5 inch Grubs, 7" Jerkshads, and 10" Eels on #5 sized Nitro jigheads. The reasoning for the big sizes in softbait is that they will definitely notice a big juicy morsel gliding and twerking down, away or across their habitat.
It also helps enormously to quickly startup and drive after
the fleeing fish as the gear used is light tackle. And it does require team work and
synchronization between the angler and helms-person to chase and maintain pressure on the hook to even have a less then 30% chance of landing these shallow water trophy
fish.
My personal highlights came from using the Gulp 10 inch
Natural Eel in the mid afternoon as I worked out that even though they were
getting chewed up by the leather jackets and reef fish during their swim time. I was not having to change softbaits as frequently. A 10” eel reduced per cast to 7”, 6” and
finally 5” before I retired them.
The 2 fish that did hit the Gulp Natural Eel both initially felt like another snag up on the
bottom until they then headed into the shallows at ever increasing rate of
knots! The first one fell off at the start of its second run due to a blunt hook tip that failed to penetrate deeply. And the final one was "oh so close, but no cigar" as
alongside the boat it came off the 5/8oz jighead I was using at that stage to counter the
wind oppose tide situation. (As my friend
Joe would say, “Did you see it? And if you didn’t, it doesn’t count!” Well in this case, yes Joe I saw the second
one but it still doesn’t count as it’s still swimming out there!)
My final thought is the need to catch and release after bumping into these magnificent trophy fish. They need to be released asap unharmed to allow their genetic line to propagate
and continue. Manuel’s fish looked like
a fast growing fish. And even though it was dark in colour, it wasn’t a
battle scarred kelpie veteran of the shallows. We hope it's genetic propensity for growing big and fast continues. It does feel better to let it go then to chop it up for food.
(It's late nearly 1am and I can't figure out how to post photos on this forum as I've not visited this site since 2011. I'll figure it out once I get the files out of Dropbox. But they are in the format this forum requires. I'll call Grunta lateron. Please bear with me while I sort out the technical difficulties. However, if you can't wait you can get a preview of some of the photos in the Yeehaa Facebook page under the same heading as the above title.)
Cheers
Wee Tin
YeeHaa wrote: “Gill it!” Manuel
suggested while expertly keeping this behemoth alongside. I managed to with reasonable gentle force shove my right
hand under and into its gill cavity. My
right hand disappeared and I was able to quickly lift this snapper aboard. |
Well done on a great fish mate and congrats to the angler.
Shoving your hand into its gill cavity and then releasing doesn't bode well for the fish however.
Kinda like someone sticking their hands (gently or otherwise) into your lungs and then saying off you go.
I thought long and hard before posting this, but for the sake of enlightening others thought it necessary. Not taking anything away from you guys, but proper fish handling certainly helps.
Perhaps consider a net next time.
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