WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Go on then, tell us how you went...

WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby Daveyak » Sat May 05, 2012 1:13 am

When I looked outside this morning I saw that the weather forecasters were wrong again, so sign of the rain of which they warned on the radio. So I quickly threw my kayak & gear onto the ute and headed for another session at Two Peoples Bay, about 30 kms east of town.

I launched a bit before 9:00am & paddled across to South Point where I found Pete, another Albany kayak fisher who's recently been fishing the bay a bit, on his Hobie PA. He'd had a few strikes but no hook-ups while trolling around the rocks & out around Drunken Sailor bombie. I did a few circuits of that area with my Smilin' Jack's lures out but, other than a few small herring, nothing big & hungry showed any interest.

I then paddled south to the rocks leading out to Point Gardner & trolled just back out of the back wash off the rocks. This section had been productive for me in previous years so I was hoping for action of some sort, salmon or even more tuna. I stopped and watched three seals lolling in the waves right up against the rocks & contemplated turning back, thinking that with some big predators like them around the fish might be scarce.

Once I decided to continue along that stretch I had only paddled about 30 metres when my medium weight rig started howling as line was being stripped from the reel. I reckoned on taking my chances with having the other line still out and luckily it didn't cause too many problems as I fought a fish that took off on some good runs before I was able to get it close. Once under the kayak I could see it was a solid little stripey (skipjack) tuna, being followed by a couple of good sized salmon, which were the only salmon seen this morning.

Image

Once I'd got it aboard, killed, bagged and stowed in the front hatch, I continued out towards the end of the point. I always like to at least get to where I can see Coffin Island around the corner before turning back and did just that again. Only about 25 metres into the return leg my heavier rig took off. This time I got the other line in while this fish was on its initial run. Another good battle and I had a bigger version of a stripey stashed aboard.

I kept my lures out of the water for the into-the-wind paddle back towards Little Beach & South Point as I reckoned my fridge was going to well stocked with the two I had. Once past Little Beach I cast out my smaller lure for the paddle back to where Pete was trolling around the South Point rocks, picking up a few smallish herring that I returned to grow bigger. There was quite a lot of baitfish activity in close but nothing appeared to be chasing 'em. I trolled through and cast into a few boils of mulies (pillies) & herring to no avail.

Pete had still had no luck finding something big & hungry enough to bother his lures so we both headed for the beach. We were packed up & heading for home by 12:30, with me being very satisfied with my few hours on the water & looking forward to some sashimi meals. The tuna measured at 71cm and 67 cm.

ImageImageImage
DaveW.
Kayak PBs
Australian Salmon 84cm, Bonito 58cm, Bream 31cm, Flathead 55cm, Mulloway 58cm, Snook 87cm, Squid 36cm (hood), Tuna (Bluefin) 63cm (Stripey) 71cm, Tailor 36cm, Trevally 36cm
User avatar
Daveyak
Elite Member
 
Posts: 1030
Joined: Fri Oct 07, 2005 1:00 am
Location: Albany, Western Australia
Kayak: Perception Swing

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby kayakone » Sat May 05, 2012 2:52 am

Brilliant Dave.

What a beautiful part of Oz you are yak fishing in - looks like a slice of heaven. No doubt those stripeys are typical tuna as far as powerful runs, and hopefully good chewing too.

Cheers
Trevor
trev

Whaler 1.5 m; Tailor 65 cm; Bream 43 cm; Snapper 85 cm; Flathead 98 cm; Estuary cod 55cm; Spotted mackeral 85 cm; Papuan trevally 100 cm & 20 kg; Barracuda 100 cm; Spanish 77 cm; Sting ray got me 175 cm



Life without any risks is not worth living. (quote 'goanywhere')
kayakone
Legendary Member
 
Posts: 5716
Joined: Tue Dec 07, 2010 4:55 pm
Location: Mitchelton, QLD
Kayak: Natureline Marlin + Mermaid + Stealth BFS + AI

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby Zed » Sat May 05, 2012 3:37 am

Skippies are tasty and go like a bullet. Good job on those. I've never been in a kayak in a place I could catch them, but have caught plenty from boats. First time I ever ate them a Japanese fellow on the boat had one cubed up fresh and he made a huge batch of poke for the boat. It was some of the best "raw fish salad" I've ever had. Most of the "chunk light tuna" in cans is skipjack, or at least here in the States.

Thanks for the report!
Ocean Kayak P13 - Con Limón
"What possessed a farmer like you to set foot in a boat, beats me."
--Kipling
Captains Courageous
Zed
Legendary Member
 
Posts: 2855
Joined: Tue Sep 19, 2006 12:36 am
Location: Gurgling maw of the Pacific ^v^v CA, USA
Kayak: OK P13

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby Dodge » Sat May 05, 2012 8:08 am

Dave a couple of nice stripeys and would have been fun to land on the yak mate.

In game fishing days they were our first target to get a fillet for fresh bait, and remember them as good fun when landing and great on the hook later.
Regards RICHO

member of Team Old Farts and Team GREEN GINGER

Kayaks ..... Perception Swing, yellow/lime "T IV" on UHF 26 ..... Pacer, pink ..... homemade timber Anon Lures

Accept that some days you're the pidgeon, and on other days you're the statue
User avatar
Dodge
Legend of AKFF
Legend of AKFF
 
Posts: 11811
Joined: Wed Oct 12, 2005 10:27 pm
Location: Gold Coast, Queensland
Kayak: Perception Swing on UHF29 - and Pacer

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby Junglefisher » Sat May 05, 2012 8:17 am

Great stuff.
That would to be about as flat / calm as I've ever seen that part of the world.
Cheers
Craig

Sooty 44cm Tarpon 80cm JP 42cm MJ 50cm Spanish Mackerel 75cm Coral trout 53cm Barra 88cm Longtom 80cm Cobbler 98cm Brown trout 50cm Atl. salmon 90cm Rainbow Trout 50cm Spangled emperor 48cm Estuary cod 44cm Flathead 65cm Snapper 44cm Murray Cod 1m Bream 36cm Yella 42cm
User avatar
Junglefisher
Legendary Member
 
Posts: 3664
Joined: Mon Jun 02, 2008 2:11 pm
Location: Alberta
Kayak: Revo Finn X-press Outfitter Superlite

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby Bertros » Sat May 05, 2012 9:52 am

Your catches just seem to continue surpassing the last one Dave. Two incredible fish there. Well done!
cheers,
matt
Yak PB's: Australian Salmon - 70cm; Bream - 40cm; Bonito - 51cm; Estuary Perch - 32.5cm; Flathead - 57cm; Flounder - 27cm; Kingfish - 68cm; Leather Jacket - 32cm; Snapper - 59.5cm; Squid - 34cm; Tailor - 50cm; Bigeye Trevally - 41cm; Silver Trevally - 34cm; Whiting - 31cm
User avatar
Bertros
Moderator
 
Posts: 1528
Joined: Fri Sep 19, 2008 7:51 pm
Location: waverton, sydney
Kayak: hobie revolution + adventure island

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby SharkNett » Sat May 05, 2012 10:41 am

Would love to get a stripey from the yak. only person i know of that gets them regularly over here goes out around 2k's to find the schools.
Never eaten one. Used to get plenty from the boat but were either cubed for snapper or bridled for marlin.
User avatar
SharkNett
Elite Member
 
Posts: 1063
Joined: Mon Feb 20, 2006 12:26 pm
Location: Enmore, NSW
Kayak: Yum yum yellow adventure

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby Daveyak » Sun May 06, 2012 12:51 am

kayakone wrote:Brilliant Dave.
What a beautiful part of Oz you are yak fishing in - looks like a slice of heaven. No doubt those stripeys are typical tuna as far as powerful runs, and hopefully good chewing too.

Yeah Trevor, bloody good fun with some strong runs. They're not a usual catch along this stretch of coast but the Leeuwin Current was strong this year so the water down here is warmer for later than normal. Tea tonight was some smoke Aus Salmon for entree followed by tuna sashimi with seasoned sushi rice accompanied by a local 2009 Sauv Blanc. Ahhh, life's tough sometimes.


Zed wrote:Skippies are tasty and go like a bullet. Good job on those. I've never been in a kayak in a place I could catch them, but have caught plenty from boats. First time I ever ate them a Japanese fellow on the boat had one cubed up fresh and he made a huge batch of poke for the boat. It was some of the best "raw fish salad" I've ever had. Most of the "chunk light tuna" in cans is skipjack, or at least here in the States.

Hey Zed, what is this 'poke' of which you speak? Now that I've got a fridge full of tuna I'm interested in different ways of preparing it.
There was a fish canning industry in this town some years ago & I believe these tuna were often caught for that purpose.


Dodge wrote:Dave a couple of nice stripeys and would have been fun to land on the yak mate.

They sure are. Almost the most fun I've had catching any fish, can only dream of what they'd (any tuna) be like when bigger


Junglefisher wrote:Great stuff.
That would to be about as flat / calm as I've ever seen that part of the world.

Craig, you saw the region at the wrong time of the year, conditions down here are often quite benign during winter months, seems like it's either stormy or calm at this time of year. One extreme to the other, it's blowing & raining here today.



Bertros wrote:Your catches just seem to continue surpassing the last one Dave. Two incredible fish there. Well done!

Yep, I'm somewhat pleased to have got through a phase of fishless trips. Even with some good fish recently I'm still on about a 50% successful trip rate, I just gotta keep telling myself that you have to be on the water to have a chance.


SharkNett wrote:Would love to get a stripey from the yak. only person i know of that gets them regularly over here goes out around 2k's to find the schools.
Never eaten one. Used to get plenty from the boat but were either cubed for snapper or bridled for marlin.

People here have been telling me that they're only good for bait, but that's what I was told about bonito too and I love them on the plate now. It just needs a bit of experimenting & thought about the best way to cook/prepare the fish. There are very few fish I would throw back as not worth eating.
DaveW.
Kayak PBs
Australian Salmon 84cm, Bonito 58cm, Bream 31cm, Flathead 55cm, Mulloway 58cm, Snook 87cm, Squid 36cm (hood), Tuna (Bluefin) 63cm (Stripey) 71cm, Tailor 36cm, Trevally 36cm
User avatar
Daveyak
Elite Member
 
Posts: 1030
Joined: Fri Oct 07, 2005 1:00 am
Location: Albany, Western Australia
Kayak: Perception Swing

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby SharkNett » Sun May 06, 2012 7:53 am

Dave,

I totally agree with you and I am sure there must be a way to prepare them. Used to think slimey mackeral were bait only but along with live squid, if they don't get eaten by something bigger, come off the hook and go onto the bbq. Susepct the stripies would benefit greatly from being well bled asap which, considering the amount of blood in them may be a bit dicey on the yak. Probably more so around your way.

Rob
User avatar
SharkNett
Elite Member
 
Posts: 1063
Joined: Mon Feb 20, 2006 12:26 pm
Location: Enmore, NSW
Kayak: Yum yum yellow adventure

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby Daveyak » Sun May 06, 2012 10:31 am

Yeah, tuna are real bleeders when you get aboard, often without even cutting 'em to bleed. I was leaving a fair blood trail through my scuppers after I caught one of those two on Friday, but some consolation that I had my shark shield operating.

I going to try and find a heavy duty bag (a big dry bag?) that I can pop 'em into so can bleed the fish out & keep it contained for just one blood dump into the water. (& then paddle away :-o ). When filleting I trimmed out all the dark red blood meat, I still ended up with 5kg of bagged fillets in the fridge.
DaveW.
Kayak PBs
Australian Salmon 84cm, Bonito 58cm, Bream 31cm, Flathead 55cm, Mulloway 58cm, Snook 87cm, Squid 36cm (hood), Tuna (Bluefin) 63cm (Stripey) 71cm, Tailor 36cm, Trevally 36cm
User avatar
Daveyak
Elite Member
 
Posts: 1030
Joined: Fri Oct 07, 2005 1:00 am
Location: Albany, Western Australia
Kayak: Perception Swing

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby Zed » Tue May 08, 2012 3:18 am

Here's wiki's description of poke:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poke_%28Hawaii%29

I can't say if the man I mentioned had the same seaweed and nuts, but it was a very fresh and light dish, that would be tasty with fried wontons as a dipper. I tasted the soy and the wasabi and the sesame oil, plus there was a little heat from the chile. He brought a bento box along with all the ingredients and just whipped it up in the galley once he got the skippy.
He was a star for the trip.
Ocean Kayak P13 - Con Limón
"What possessed a farmer like you to set foot in a boat, beats me."
--Kipling
Captains Courageous
Zed
Legendary Member
 
Posts: 2855
Joined: Tue Sep 19, 2006 12:36 am
Location: Gurgling maw of the Pacific ^v^v CA, USA
Kayak: OK P13

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby Daveyak » Tue May 08, 2012 10:15 am

Thanks Zed. I'd never heard the term before, I'll look into it.
DaveW.
Kayak PBs
Australian Salmon 84cm, Bonito 58cm, Bream 31cm, Flathead 55cm, Mulloway 58cm, Snook 87cm, Squid 36cm (hood), Tuna (Bluefin) 63cm (Stripey) 71cm, Tailor 36cm, Trevally 36cm
User avatar
Daveyak
Elite Member
 
Posts: 1030
Joined: Fri Oct 07, 2005 1:00 am
Location: Albany, Western Australia
Kayak: Perception Swing

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby Bertros » Tue May 08, 2012 10:43 am

Two others i've got on file that are delicious. Tried the marlin one with kingfish and it absolutely rocked, but the Tuna variant is the favourite for bonito catches. I also use the pickled ginger that you can get in a jar in the Japanese seciton of the supermarket and it gives a very tsaty zing.
http://gourmettraveller.com.au/marlin_a ... d_rice.htm
cheers,
matt
Yak PB's: Australian Salmon - 70cm; Bream - 40cm; Bonito - 51cm; Estuary Perch - 32.5cm; Flathead - 57cm; Flounder - 27cm; Kingfish - 68cm; Leather Jacket - 32cm; Snapper - 59.5cm; Squid - 34cm; Tailor - 50cm; Bigeye Trevally - 41cm; Silver Trevally - 34cm; Whiting - 31cm
User avatar
Bertros
Moderator
 
Posts: 1528
Joined: Fri Sep 19, 2008 7:51 pm
Location: waverton, sydney
Kayak: hobie revolution + adventure island

Re: WA: Tuned up at the Bay

Postby keza » Tue May 08, 2012 12:15 pm

Great catch Dave.
They are also very yummy bottled in olive oil.
kerry

yak pb's
kingfish 90cm, flathead 65cm, snapper 56cm, oz salmon 60cm, trevally 56cm, barracouta 75cm, YFT 65cm, spanish mac 20cm (sharked), hairtail 152cm, bonito 68cm, spotty mac 85cm, tailor 55cm
User avatar
keza
Moderator/Legend of AKFF
Moderator/Legend of AKFF
 
Posts: 7478
Joined: Tue Mar 06, 2007 11:08 am
Location: sydney
Kayak: Barracuda SoT Ultralight + OK Scupper Pro


Return to Trip Reports

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot] and 7 guests