Tag Archives: fishing

210 hours into the passage to Marshall Islands

That fishing fleet owned the ocean and no one else should be out here.

This one boat was on his course and wasn’t going go change.. Our paths were to cross within 15 meters of each other.. No radio communication just standing his course we had the sails up, starboard at that. I luffed (slowed down) to give this guy room. And by room .15 nm or 150 meters. Then he tossed a FAD into the water, almost directly in front of us.

Where your canned tuna comes from

There were 6 more boats joining the fleet that coming straight at us, they all passed with reasonable separation. I think they were anxious to get fishing at the freshly set FAD. These boats follow the migrating schools of tuna, load the fish from the smaller (30 meter) boats into the larger ship, that takes the fish to a facility for processing and then on the Philippines for processing. I didn’t see a ‘starkiss’ logo, but could have been there.. Sorry Charlie.

Once past the ocean thieves, it’s off to the races and break out the mathematics again. Ugh, more numbers. Can we make the final push to make the pass, into a new location in the day light with the hours that are left. It seems to always come down to timing, short trips, long journeys, the final bits are the details that matter. The pass is charted, the chart shows marker, local knowledge says not all the markers are there. Then there is finding an anchor spot in the dark in a new location. All added up to we either needed to average 8 knots so arrive the pass around 3pm on Tuesday so there would still be sunlight by the time we reached the town on the inside of the lagoon. Oh, the winds in the forecast were 6-7 knots.. So not gonna happen.

Nice day, nice sailing after the dance party waves sorted themselves out.

The wind shift came late, and when it did the wind died.. Making the pass on Tuesday, is not gonna happen. Another night out, so we watch the penultimate sunset of the passage with a nice Chicken Curry, dreaming of an Ice cold “Anchor Down” beer. But the beer will have to stay cold for an extra day.

Less than 100 to go, Slow rolling, no reason to get there only to have to wait at the pass for daybreak.

Sorry Charlie

Sorry Charlie: Yellow Fin Tuna

It was time to leave Gambier after spending 5 glorious months in the Archipelago.  Leaving is bitter sweet. It has truly been an amazing experience hanging out with so many lovely people in this beautiful piece of paradise.  But we our season is over and we need to move on.  Right after Matt’s birthday a weather window opened up and we decided to take it.  We spent 5 May at Taravai celebrating Matt’s birthday for the 3rd year in a row and left the day after to head to Hao.  Five short hours later, we land a 60-kilo (130+ lbs) yellow fin tuna!  What? How did we do that?  Let’s start at the beginning.

Six boats were planning on leaving during the same weather window.  One left early on the 4th of May, four of us left on the 5th of May and one decided to wait until the 6th of May.  Two other boats will leave a week later.  Clearly, it’s a good weather window, right?  Ha!

Sea Rose left the day before us and was reporting large waves in long intervals which were comfortable.  Amaryllis left around 0700 on 6th of May, Grace left at 0900 and we left at 1000.  As soon as we left the pass, we realized the weather was not what was predicted which was N – NE.  The wind was actually NW which is exactly where we needed to go.  Hard to sail with wind on your nose.  We tacked our way back and forth hoping the wind would cooperate soon.  Within a few hours we passed Grace.  They too were having a hard time pointing in the direction they wanted to go.  They ended up turning back to Gambier late in the afternoon to try another time while we forged ahead.

Always a race when 2+ boats are heading in the same direction

Sugar Shack had full sails up (no engines) making 6.5kts and with three fishing poles trolling. We were “pinching” pretty close hauled and did not have much room to the wind (meaning we were as close to the wind as we could get while still being able to maintain speed). We were not on the rhumb line, but we were making forward progress.

Sorry Charlie…

Around 1500 the first zing went off.  Before I could get to the 2nd poll it went zing! Crapity crap crap!  Matt went after the first pole as it has the largest lure.  He used autopilot to try to slow the boat down. Unfortunately, he over corrected and we went into irons (dead into the wind and stopped the boat).  The two fish decided to swim under and in front of the starboard hull.  $hit!  Not good.  Ignoring the fish, we had to right the boat.  About 7-8 minutes later we addressed the fish.  I brought in the 3rd line that had no fish to avoid further entanglements.  Then started bringing in the 2nd line.  I quickly realized that the line was caught on the starboard rudder.  Oh, for fuck’s sake!  Matt paused his work on line 1 and came to help me only to rip the fishing line – fish and lure gone!

Back to 1st line.  Matt continued to work the fish.  We did not know it was a yellow fin tuna for several hours as it never surfaced.  As he worked the fish, I worked the boat.  When you bring in a fish on sailboat you try to maintain forward motion not too fast, ideal is below 2kts.  You need the boat to continue a forward momentum but you don’t want it to go too fast as it will cause too much drag on the fish.  Which is hard under full sail with big seas.  The waves pushed us forward giving us a little bump in speed while the wind played havoc on us. We ended up going backwards and literally heading back the way we came for over 4 hours as we, well, Matt fought the yellow fin tuna!

We lose the light…

The sun had set around 1730 and we were using flash lights to follow the yellow fin tuna around the boat. He was a fighter that was for sure.  He would dash left or right each time he neared the boat.  We were constantly trying to keep him away from our rudders and props.  One good note is that the 2nd broken line with the leader and lure got caught on the 1st line so we were able to retrieve both of those items.  The lure was sans hook so that fish got away with our hook.

Matt prevailed after 4 hours of fighting the yellow fin tuna.  He brought this sea monster on board with a gaf and tied it to our wench to hoist it onto the sugar scoops.  The he took a well-deserved rest with a cold beer.  This yellow fin tuna is a good 60 kilos (130+lbs) and Matt struggled for a long time and then had to haul it onboard!

60 Kilo Yellow Fin Tuna

60 Kilo Yellow Fin Tuna

Cleaning the beast

Matt went back to work on the yellow fin tuna as it needed to be “cleaned.”  Poor thing had to sit uncomfortably on the sugar scoops, in high seas, and pitch black conditions while trying to clean this enormous yellow fin tuna.  We latched flash lights to the rails and used the wash down pump to keep all the blood off the boat.  Three hours later Matt called it good.   The fish head was huge – Matt could have easily put his head inside the yellow fin tuna’s mouth.

Who's head is bigger?

Who’s head is bigger?

The next morning, Matt decided to properly clean the fish.  He is usually very precise when cleaning his fish but the conditions were not good last night.  So, he cleaned it up and filled 4 very large zip lock bags (see above photo of one bag).

We will be feeding the entire anchorage and the village with yellow fin tuna when we arrive.

Day 2

It was a fabulous day to be sailing.  We had decent winds at 12-15kts, 1.5-meter seas in long intervals, and sunny skies.  The only problem was that we were not heading in the right direction.  Ugh.  We were knocking off our cross track, but it is clear we won’t make it in 3 days.

Amaryllis was 8.5nm ahead of us when we started and now, they are 33nm ahead of us.  Bummer…as you know it is always a race if 2 boats are heading in the same direction, even they leave before you and don’t stop for hours to fuss with a sea monster. Yellow fin tuna wins over arriving first.

We did not make good VMG (velocity made good toward your destination).  We only sailed about 31nm in 12 hours.  Pft!

Day 3

We kept searching for the trade winds but they eluded us.  We tried different sails (jib & main, jib only, main only, spinnaker) and just could not catch the wind.  So, we ended up motoring most of the night into day #3 and most of day #3.  Now, who is sorry, not Charlie.

I did a load of laundry as we had little wind and a sunny day.  I tried to sneak in a 2nd load but just as I was about to start, we finally found the wind.  Not complaining, I will take the wind and a steady sail over laundry any day.  It was perfect trade wind, just as predicted.  We finally found the predicted winds and we were rocking it!  We had a reef in each sail because we were seeing 20+ kts of wind and we still had 1-1.5-meter seas but they were in long intervals so not terribly uncomfortable.

This is what SOG (speed over ground) and TWS (true wind speed) should look like!  Compare to the photo above where SOG was above TWS. 

Once I was feeling better, I went through our first aid bag and ditch bag. They both needed review and removal of overly expired items.  I then updated the inventory list.  We only get these bags out of the bilge when we have a 2+ day passage.  I had not updated the inventory in a while and there are lots of things that need to be replaced and updated when I go back to the states.

Communications while underway

Matt sending an email on our satellite device – love that we can keep in touch with others while at sea. 

Matt at the Navigation Station

Matt at the Navigation Station

We certainly had a wonky passage.  This was probably one of our worst “sailing” passages in that we made horrible time.  A three-day passage turned into 4 days.  We had a lot of zig zagging and a curved track.

Day 4

We arrived at 2:30am which is not ideal, but what can you do?  An Amel 46, called Marie Alice, was also approaching the atoll. Marie Alice is a French boat but they speak a touch of English so we chatted about the pass.  We told them we had been here before and would lead the way in at slack tide.  Remember slack tide is when there is no incoming or outgoing tide from the lagoon to the Pacific.  In the Tuamotus you have atolls (a bunch of motus / islands that make a circle with a lagoon in the middle.  Several atolls have passes that allow sailboats to enter / exit but you have to watch the tides.

Slack tide was predicted by two sources to be at 5:15am.  Sunrise was supposed to be 5:25am.  Lucky for us the sky brightens up before sunrise.  We circled for 3 hours, in the dark choppy seas, waiting for slack tide.

Trip Details

  • Miles to Hao:                     460nm
  • Total Miles Sailed:            515nm
  • Max Speed:                        15.1 (ridiculous but it was over a wave)
  • Average Speed:                5.8
  • Departure:                          10:00am on 6 May
  • Arrival:                                  2:30am
  • Total time traveled:        3 days 18 hours

Be sure to check in next time when we encounter massive issues including aborting the Hao pass and have water inside the boat!

The events from this blog post took place in early May.  Our blog posts run 10-12 weeks behind our adventures.

Nounou at the helm, our captain

Maupiti Fishing with Marlin Star

One of the locals, Nounou, offered to take Matt and I offshore fishing. We were told that the locals harpoon mahi, and catch wahoo, tuna, and marlin between Maupiti and Bora Bora.   We met Nounou a few weeks ago, got his number, and scheduled our outing.  Nounou catches a lot of mahi – check out his Marlin Star Facebook page.

Nounou and his mate picked us up at 0900 with our packed lunch, beverages, and smiles.  He did not waste anytime putting the pedal to the metal.  We sped across the lagoon covering the 2.5 miles in 7-8 minutes.  Gesh this is a rocket on water!

We said a prayer before leaving the pass.  I prayed for safety and no sea sickness but I am sure the boys prayed for fish.  It is a fishing trip after all.  We exited the pass at 30-35kts with little effort – ridiculous.  Then we started the bash toward Bora Bora.

The Boat

Nounou came to pick us up in his superfast 35’ speed boat called Lady Kea.  He has one turbo diesel engine with 340 horse power and a top speed of 40kts!  He fishes daily during the week in this boat and takes his family out on this “faster” boat on the weekends.  Lady Kea is a beautiful orange and yellow boat with logos on the side.

Lady Kea

Lady Kea

The Captain

The captain / driver sits inside a well and moves a metal pipe or pvc tube right and left to steer.  The throttle is where is right hand is and his left hand is on the steering mechanism.

Nounou at the helm, our captain

Nounou at the helm, our captain

Shots of our fearless captain, Nounou.

Nounou, our fearless captain

Nounou, our fearless captain

The Equipment

The boat is outfitted with (2) fishing rods each with 130 reels.  These reels are monstrous.  To put it into perspective, we have a 50 reel on our boat and that is huge for us.

There is a large assortment of lures on either side of the boat.  They put the port line out really far and the starboard line closer.

To catch Mahi Mahi they search out the birds.  We found several flocks of birds during the course of our trip.  Our captain and crew would spot the birds several miles out and we would race toward them.  Nounou would circle the mahi which swim near the surface while feeding. Then he would expertly throw the harpoon at the Mahi hoping for a catch.  We unfortunately only had one opportunity to do this and he got away.  Photo of harpoon.

Mahi harpoon

Mahi harpoon

Heading out to sea

We zoomed out about 18-29 miles toward Bora Bora which was into the wind, waves, and sea.  Not a pleasant experience.  Going 35-40kts, top speed, bashing hard while trying to hold on was difficult.  I literally had a volcan death grip with both hands and both feet wedged wherever I could stick them.  After about an hour of holding on we turned and went side to the waves.  Slightly better.

The little bonito (tuna)

The first fish to catch our lure was a small bonito tuna.  It was a relief to catch him as we had been trolling for over an hour and a half with nothing.  He’s small, but will be tasty.

Fishing: Bonito tuna

Fishing: Bonito tuna

We would switch between looking for mahi and fishing for marlin and wahoo.  They used the lures for the marlin and wahoo.  They used the harpoon for the mahi.

The Marlin

After another several hours we landed a beautiful, fat marlin!  With two people, a fast boat, and the perfect execution, they reeled in a 60 kilo (135lb) marlin!

Nounou will clean and cut the fish and give it to the local school to feed the kids!  This baby will feed lots of kids for awhile.

Marlin! Now that is fishing

Marlin! Now that is fishing

We headed back to the boat around 1500. 6 hours later.  Every inch of my body ached.  Holding on, clenching every muscle, falling a time or two and being tossed around the fiberglass boat did a number to my body.  With several bruises, bumps, scrapes and blisters we climbed back onto Sugar Shack.

A quick rinse in the lagoon to get the 20 layers of salt off us and then a fresh water rinse.  Matt cleaned the bonito which Nounou graciously gifted us.  We called it a day, took some advil, made a drink and crashed on the bean bags.

By the way, we never took a sip of our drinks or a nibble of food.  We were too busy holding on, fishing, and looking for fish.

This fishing excursion happened on 31 August.  Our blog posts run 6/8 weeks behind our adventures.