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Hawaiian
Blues -- as in Marlin --close up, personal and nearshore - Cont.
I glanced off
the stern and the waving palms were barely 1/2-mile away, framing
the volcanic mountain backdrop of Mount Hualalai behind the town
of Kailua Kona, and behind that towered 13,677-foot-high Mauna Loa
Mountain, one of the largest single mountain masses in the world.
And here I
was, fishing some of the most famed blue marlin water in the world--only
10 minutes from port! This was my kind of fishing, and I loved it.
No multi-hour cruises just to get to the fishing grounds, no big
swells or rough seas. Here out of Kona, Hawaii, it's a simple 10-minute
cruise to the fishing grounds, you're never out of sight of land,
and you're fishing some of the most prolific blue marlin waters
in the world.
I had never
heard of such a thing until friend John Wilson of Placerville told
me about his experience out of Kona on the "Big Island"
of Hawaii just weeks before. A friend of his, Jeff Dickey out of
Houston, owns the Humdinger, a 37-foot Rybovich, and wanted John
to come over and experience the blue marlin fishing firsthand.
Their first
day of fishing was good, with two marlin of 167 and 172 pounds caught,
but the next day was the "real fun" one, Wilson related.
"Allison
was up for the first fish," said Wilson, "and at 9:30,
after the banana dance, we hooked up with something big and it sounded.
The fish never came back up, and Allison cranked and cranked and
cranked--close to an hour. It was a beautiful calm, flat day, and
then up came this 350-pound blue. We agged and released it."
The banana
dance, incidentally, is something that Dickey invented, and it involves
the consumption of a banana by everyone on board, and it's a requirement
before anyone catches a fish. It's an interesting concept, since
bananas are usually taboo on any vessel. Surprisingly, the "Banana
Dance" is almost a rite of passage on this boat, and seldom
are fish caught until after it's taken place.
The second
fish that day was a big, big blue marlin, and it was my friend John's
turn at the rod. The fish came up and took the bait and was hundreds
of yards behind the boat before the boat was in full reverse and
on its way backing down on the fish. Then the big fish went straight
down and Wilson began cranking.
After a long
battle, the huge blue marlin came straight out of the water entirely
on the opposite side of the boat from where Wilson was fighting
it! It cleared the water completely and threw spray everywhere when
it landed. They eventually brought the blue marlin alongside, tagged
it and released it. That fish was estimated to be 750 pounds and
about 12 feet long end to end, and 10 feet "short measurement."
"That
was one of best trips I've ever been on--four blue marlin in two
days with a little helicopter touring and some golf in between,"
he said. "You've got to be on the water for 3 or 4 days to
have a good chance of getting a blue, but you begin fishing only100
yards out of the dock in beautiful water that's calm and close to
shore."
Well, that
was enough to get me excited, so at Dickey's invitation I booked
a flight and flew over to Kona, where I stayed at the King Kamehameha
Motel in Kona. What a trip! Fishing each morning in calm, fish-filled
water and touring the island the rest of the time. And talk about
food! There's a huge array of things to eat on the boat, and evening
meals were to dream about.
We caught some
huge bull dorado, some tuna and saw half a dozen big blues caught
around us. It just wasn't my day for marlin, but we had a great
time with the dorado and tuna! 
All the boats
out of our "fleet" there at Kona did well the two days
we fished, weighing in marlin of 374, 246, 179, 229, 268, 162 and
a monster 718-pound blue marlin, as well as mahi-mahi (dorado) of
42, 28, 27, 28, 40, 21, 36, 18, 17, 22, 40 and 22 pounds. Also caught
was a 19-pound Ono and a 31-pound spearfish. The winter months are
best for spearfish out of Kona, and many fly fishing aficionados
head over here about now to try for a line-class spearfish world
record.
One of the
beautiful things about fishing over here is that no matter what
time you want to get away on a Hawaiian vacation you will find good
fishing out of Kona, and blue marlin are available year-round. On
Super bowl Sunday one vessel captured a 1,218-pound marlin, currently
the 6th largest fish on record and bumped captain Butch Chee of
the Humdinger from the number 6 to number 7 position with his 1195-pound
fish.
Captain Jeff
Fay and Captain Butch Chee man the Humdinger, and they have over
3 decades of experience fishing these waters. They're the only 3-time
winners of the Hawaiian International Billfish Tournament's Henry
Chee Award (yes, Chee's dad, guess where he learned to fish?) and
they have scored more total tournament points than anyone in the
history of the tournament.
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Us: GoFish@Humdinger-Online.com
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