I haven't been able to wipe the grin off my face all day. I took my 18 year old son out for his first real reef trip yesterday and the good Lord was smiling on us. We actually tried to get out on wednesday but a sudden bout of seasickness off Pt cartwright cut that day short. Kwells are hard to buy at 4am. We left Thursday at the gentlemen's hour of 8am and head down to Caloundra 9 mile on a 15-20 knot forecast. Arriving 35 mins later, due to only a 5 knot SW, we set about finding some fish for dinner.
Things started slowly but we did manage to get 3 keepers in the esky by 11 am. I told the son to take another kwell as we might be here for a while to get at least ten fish. The wind swung violently to the east at a steady 2kts and stayed like that for the rest of the day which kept our lines and boat in the one direction.
I moved to another spot x nearby and through out some snapback blue glimmer plastics and just put the rods in the holders. We started getting some big mauri cod and parrot on the bottom dongers then the plastics started going off. A double hookup on 3kg squire and we were starting to grin. Every time we put the plastics out they kept us worried as we continued to pull nice sweetlip and fingermark on the bottom. The big squire just kept hitting the plastics every ten minutes or so and we were fast approaching our bag limit.
All this action took place between 11.30am and 1.30pm, when things are usually dead quiet. We never saw another boat on the whole 12mile area and a large cargo ship sat still nearby all day without an anchor.
As we were doing a quick count and fin chop the three soft plastic rods all bent over together and we finished with three solid snapper. We didn't drop a fish all day and descided to finish while on top and gave each other a high five.
I let the young fellow know that it isn't always like this and this is as close to fishing heaven as it gets.
We finished with 25 fish, a new species - purple/grass tuskfish, and were home by 3pm in time to clean the fish and cook tea for mum.