Gents,
I've been chasing some deep water ooglies off the Tweed coast for about 12 months. Until Friday I'd only found Nanagai, snapper and a few strange species. No Bar cheek, Blue Eye or Hapuka had come aboard.
Conditions were ideal so pointed the tinny ESE and tried to get as comfortable as you can while getting chop spray on every wave for about an hour 15min. It got better the wider I got. The water was a beautiful blue and showing 22.8 degrees on my sounder. The last 10km I was sitting on 20knots with no spray. There was only just over one knot of current when I finally got there.
Pulled up at my 200m marks and put together a good feed of Nanagai, snapper and one little 2kg bar cod (I think). I decided it was time to poke around and search for the target fish. The sounder gives up at 300m so I was going off the contour lines on the GPS. After a few different drops with no success I went out to what I thought was the 500m line. The line counter on the reel said only 380m. Drifted for about 10mins and had about 480m of line out when I had the rod tip bounce pretty hard. I started the little Miya Epoch x4 which was doing it tough and not making much progress. I started backing up with the boat and finally got some line back on the reel and the fish off the bottom. Each time I went over a little wave the reel groaned and nearly stopped. With 168m to go the solanoid finally kicked in and she stopped because it got too hot. The last 15 minutes I hand cranked with the last 30m being the easiest as she blew up. I struggled to get her on board with the little gaff but eventually got there. I was rapped to finally get a target fish. It went 25kg weighed on the local butcher's scales.
I rebaited and went around again just to make sure it wasn't a fluke and this time about 5 mins into the drift the same rod tip bucks and I was on again. This time the little x4 made it until 48m before shutting down. The second fish went 9kg.
The esky was now full so I put out the trolling rods and within 5 mins spotted a large marlin sunning itself on the surface. Went around a few times but got no interest. Trolled for a few hours but had no hits at all.
In the end it was a great day finally blooding the tinny with a decent oogly. I spent all morning this morning filleting and have had every friend and neighbour call in to have a look and pick up some fish after word got around town.
Regards
Brett