Tukes on the Fly

Randall Sakai was in town last week for a graduation so we decided to grab our fly rods and relax for a few hours on Wahiawa Reservoir. The action was slow as we cursed along the shore line blind casting around brush piles for peacock bass. We caught a few small ones and had several more chase. Even the Red Devils were not very aggressive.

We were working only 20 or 30 feet from shore when I snagged a bush and had to go in close to retrieve my fly. That’s when we spotted 4 big peacocks guarding nests in one foot of clear water. I backed the boat out a ways, and Randall laid his fly just beyond the larger of the fish. As the fly (a weighted Crazy Charlie looking thing tied with white/red polar bear hair) dropped into the nest the fish attacked with a vengeance.
We went round and round for several minutes, I trying to position the boat and Randall trying to keep the fish from getting tangled in the underwater brush. The fish won. It had to have been over 6 pounds. (but then everyone knows that any fish that breaks the line is always “over 10”.

We decided right then to try another technique. Standing in the bow of the boat we used the electric trolling motor to move along the shore looking for the nests of spawning fish. It didn’t take long. I wonder how many fish we had bypassed earlier? So now the action picked up as we spotted a pair of spawners, repositioned the boat, and cast our flys to the male fish (the larger of the two fish guarding the nest.) It’s really fun to see the fish your casting to and watch it turn and grab the fly. It’s also not as easy as it sounds. You have to make an accurate cast and set the hook when the fish strikes. Lots of times a fish will just “blow” the fly out of the way. Other times it grabs the fly, moves a few feet from the nest, and spits it out. This happens so quickly you can’t even see it. I’ve seen people make 30 casts into a nest and never hook the fish. Fishing for peacock bass on a nest may not be that easy, but it sure is exciting.

Aloha,
Stan

Randall with a 4# Peacock Bass… Wahiawa Res., Hawaii.

How long was that fish?

We didn’t measure the fish, just weighed it on the BogaGrip. It was just slightly over 4 pounds.
What you must remember is that “what ever is closest to the camera shows up as the biggest”. Hold the fish with the BogaGrip and streach your arm out toward the camera.
By using the Boga Grip insted of holding the fish by the lip, you don’t have any visual reference (your hand) to give you an accurate idea of the size of the fish. That way you can make a 4 pounder look really big.

That’s what you get for trusting a Texan and a fisherman. LOL

Aloha,
Stan
BS Degree in Photography, Texas A&M

nice fish!


RRhyne56
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[url=http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/huntwild/wild/species/bgl/:db657]Good Ol? Lepomis Macrochirus[/url:db657]

Indeed a nice fish. However, shame on you. You work with the Boy Scouts and you “cursed along the shore line”? Oh the shame of it.

Larry Compton

God Bless Spellcheck!