Black over purple, classic marlin lure colour. Turns out kingis like it too! |
Rolled up to spot 1 and got a good drift, nice amount of outgoing current against the NE gave me plenty of casting opportunities, first cast elicited the usual splashy chase but no hook-up, and as usual the fish went down straight away. So I moved over to a channel marker and set for a long drift. Third cast was perfect, fly would be pulling up against the current, the wind was holding me in place, what happened next was explosive to say the least. A relative monster kingi (a Rangi monster is 8kg+ in my books) shot out and hit the fly like a guided missile, I hit him and the leader absolutely cracked like a rifle going off. I’ve never busted a Perfection Loop before… just one more knot to avoid now…. I’ve already ditched Lefty’s Loop (Rapala knot) as being unreliable in big hit situations. While the adrenaline was pumping I also felt a bit deflated. Every sizable fish I’ve hit out there had eluded me, either tearing me to shreds and now knot failure. I almost packed it in, but decided I had enough time to re-rig for another shot. The new fly got hit immediately and after a lot of to-ing and fro-ing involving starting the motor and dragging him off the marker (with an audience of gin palace patrons) I got the net under him.
New purple over white version of Mega Mushy - gets bitten! |
Fishing single handed for marker kings is quite exciting at times, and downright dangerous at others (imagine rolling sea, wind pushing, big sea running, bearing down on collision course with the channel marker... no wonder there are dents in some of them). Got the fish back in the water after a photo, broke down the rod and scooted across the harbour to grab Tim. The wind had dropped to nothing and the ocean resembled a pancake. We headed down to Sargeants and on the way I asked Tim if he minded if I cast at various structures, glad he said “do it” because we hit the kingis big time. We had a solid session, during which the big ones on the sounder were noticeable for staying deep (I’m hatching a plan…), and during which Tim landed his first kings on fly.
Maintaining a deep smooth bend |
As the session went on, I asked Tim to throw his Nuke Chicken in – it was completely ignored, the kings wanted nothing of it, yet ate the fly every time.
We moved over to see if we could snag a snap…. No bottom sign whatsoever and tide was almost at low ebb. There was a small breeze so with wind against tide we were almost stationary. Out with the drogue and we crabbed across the channel, not cool. We moved a few times before I hit a fish mid water with the inkichu and brought up a decent snap. Little did I know that that would be it.
Our run back to Okahu was in perfect sea conditions, absolutely flat sea against the setting sun.
Waitemata perfection |
A gobfull |
'twas a magic evening on The Booger indeed.
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