Today I was fishing with Elvis and Diana. They got married Thursday and are spending a week at Harker's Island. I felt honored and nervous. In the meantime, on Saturday Jennifer and I went out for a joyride on the Top Water Boat. I secretly wanted to catch a Crevalle Jack on fly and I wanted to scour the Shackleford Beach for Red Drum. Meanwhile, my wife thought we were out for a boat ride. Regardless of our intentions, as we rounded the corner at Lennoxville Point, we were smacked in the face by a suprizing NNW wind at 20-25 kts. All Fly Fishing, Red Drum hunting, and casual Boat riding immediately went "out the window". I was disappointed, my wife was mad, hell even Emma was giving me bad looks....... We settled on Wade Shore and anchored up for swimming and a hike to the Ocean. Nice time we had! I even went "Naked and Afraid" on a dare! Anyhow, back at the Boat, I turned on the VHF Radio and listened to the NOAA Marine Weather Forecast for the Sunday forecast for my Big Honeymoon Charter. It was a very disappointing "Small Craft Advisory" with 20 kt North Winds...... A nightmare scenario! Later, as I talked to Elvis I explained our plight and actually tried to talk him out of going fishing. Thankfully, Elvis persisted and I planned for a miserable day of "2 hook bottom rig fishing" and an avalanche of Pinfish, undersized Hogfish, Croakers, and Black Sea Bass. A "best case scenario" was an early Spot bite...... I rigged up some ultralight spin and was in the process of pulling most of my usual tackle off the boat, when I figured, why not leave a couple of King Rods in the upper rod holders. Thank Goodness........ Then I bought 2 pounds of shrimp and some fresh #5 hooks and went to bed with visions of blowing spray and Pinfish swimming around in my head..... Imagine my surprise at 2 of Mother Nature's boldest early AM weather hints when I arrived at the Top Water Boat at 6am. #1 was a HEAVY HEAVY DEW. That means the night before was very calm and cool nighttime temps. (Calm). #2 was a very suprizing HEAVY FOG. Nearly zero visibility for a while between 630am and 730am. (Again, calm). To get to the point, there was NOT ANY 20 kt winds this morning! All my fears were unfounded. Actually, as the day unfolded, it wasn't the prettiest day to run around in the Ocean, but it was a beautiful day and we found something exciting to do. I never touched the shrimp and I never saw the first Pinfish! Our first move was to try to catch some Menhaden. I drove out from under sunny skies and dove the Top Water Boat into a Fog Bank off Harkers Island. Seemed like a bonehead move. It was dark, damp, and eerily quiet. For 10 minutes we sat in stunned silence. Then our first mini-miracle occurred.... Right on cue, just as the Fog lifted, the Menhaden started popping and I literally mean a half mile of solid bait! One throw of the 10 foot Cast Net yielded us 30-36 prime King Mackerel baits. The "perfect" number. No need to throw again! Maybe we'd get a chance at a Big Fish after all...... We quickly loaded the Live Well and ran the inside passage to Cape Lookout and as we entered the Bight we saw a beautiful sight! A stud King Mackerel hurled itself upward through one of the many many immense schools of large finger and corn cob sized Mullets that were racing westward all over the entire area. I quickly deployed a couple of menhaden on livebait rigs amid millions of running mullets.....and it didn't take long! The rod in the port side T-Top Rod holder screamed! Diana took the rod as Elvis and I cleared the cockpit. Then it got interesting....... As I ordered Diana to the bow, I took the helm and prepared to pursue our runaway King Mackerel. I glanced left and saw trouble. BIG TROUBLE and there wasn't a damn thing I could do. With our fish stretching out 150 yards of line, the was a 35-40 foot Sailboat under sail that was "right on top" of where our line entered the water. I'm not sure what sort of keel that boat had, but looking back, I have NO IDEA how we didn't lose that fish. The Sailboat actually tacked hard to miss our fish and really all he did was successfully run over our fish twice. But, it was close quarters and there was nothing us or him could do to avoid it.... A stressful minute passed and the Sailboat finally passed. Amazingly we quickly became aware that our fish was still hooked up and moving in a manner not consistent with the motion of the passing Sailboat! We were still HOOKED UP and we were clear of all obstacles! Finally, our King made one play towards my outboard but Elvis grabbed the rod and quickly anticipated the King's move and countered it. As he handed the rod back to Diana, the King surfaced and I quickly sunk the gaff. Hallelujah! And since it was the ONLY BITE OF THE DAY, I'll quit right there! Three Things...... #1 Elvis and Diana were GREAT and I'm wishing them a great life together! #2 King Mackerel were putting on an aerial show today. We probably saw 18-20 SKY ROCKETING KINGS in 2 hours. In spectacular fashion. I know I saw 20-25 lb Kings flying 30 to 40 feet high today, with hundreds of Mullet showering all around. Very Exciting! #3 Finally, the King that we caught was an AMAZING SURVIVOR of one crazy accident. Evidently, sometime in the past, a fisherman somewhere had dropped or tossed a small coil of bright silver single strand wire, probably 60lb test or so, overboard and apparently this King Mackerel had mistaken it for a baitfish and swallowed it. A Coil of Wire! I am not sure if there was even a hook on it. Honestly, it could've had a Sea Witch and a Ballyhoo on it at one time! If so, it was never actually Trolled because the wire had never been uncoiled! All I could see was the coil of wire that had worked its way through the King's left side abdominal wall and had healed itself all around the wire. It had left a wide scar and it really didn't seem to be having much of a negative affect on this fish's life at all. It was amazing and a testament to the toughness and survivability of this species.... I'm sure Elvis can tell us more about it when he steaks up this otherwise healthy King Mackerel! Total Catch for the Day: 1 King Mackerel at 22 lbs
****Here are a couple of pictures that Elvis sent me. They clearly show that this was a ballyhoo rig that was rigged on single strand wire. A "Wahoo" rig. How it ended up in a King Mackerel's stomach before the wire was even uncoiled will forever be a mystery!
1 comment:
Nice work Capt Marty!
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