Another weekend had rolled around and we were itching for a fish. Being based in Singapore I don’t get to fish the waters around Moreton Island as much as I would like, so over the years we have had to find good fishing that’s a bit closer to home than getting on a 7.5 hour flight….
So myself, Jeremy, Kiwi Steve (LittleBigRod) and the token Pom, Dog Jockey loaded the van and headed for the causeway that links Singapore to Malaysia.
Whilst not yet being the peak Sailfishing season of September/October, July/August is still a pretty good time of year to chase the Sails… This was confirmed again, when we met some blokes from Melbourne at our accommodation who informed us they had landed 8 the first day and 3 the second day, so our hopes were high.
Our time was split between catching livebait, fishing on the bottom for something for the table and of course, livebaiting for the Sailfish. After being cut off 3 or 4 times in the first half hour to either Spainish Mackerel or Barracuda we switched to wire traces under much protest from the Skipper, claiming it would decrease our chances of Sailfish strikes….
Well we disproved that theory with the following 5 Sailfish strikes all on wire traces.
We landed 4 Sails, including a double hookup and had a hook pull on a 5th one just as we were getting ready to swing him into the boat for a quick photo. The aerial displays were some of the best we had seen and one fish was tail walking so fast that he only stopped when he smacked into the boat! The sight of a billfish coming straight for you sent a few punters on the boat into a bit of a scurry!
Below are photos of the 4 Sails we landed and released and I couldn’t help but add a photo of Kiwi Steve in what you might agree has to be one of the most vulnerable positions a fisherman could get into!
He’s still hooked up to a Sailfish claiming he has “everything under control”
Thanks for reading.
Mark