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dsafety
05-14-2010, 09:30 PM
We all know that there are NO FISH IN LA JOLLA, so I thought I would write a fictional account of what might have happened today if I had gone fishing. For the sake of realism, I will pull the names for the cast of fictional characters from the list of some of the regulars who visit this forum. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead is coincidental.

Since I am telling the story, the narrator will be me, sometimes known as Bob. The story needs a handsome Mediterranean guy so I will call him Yani. Other characters include Dave, sometimes known as Driftwood and a couple newbies I will call the Ryan Brothers.

Remember, this is a totally fictional tale but to make the reading interesting, I have included some photos that may have been enhanced with a few Photoshop techniques... maybe not.

So here is the story. I have not been very successful on my last few fishing adventures. My wife was having her book club over for lunch today and I was told to make myself scarce. Going fishing seemed like the appropriate thing to do so after I took care of the morning’s important business stuff, I headed to the launch.

I did not get on the water until after 9:00 and the place was empty. I saw one recently landed kayak that had blood on the deck but otherwise no evidence of fish. The owner was nowhere to be found so I geared up and headed out, looking forward to the day’s adventure. The launch was easy but I quickly noticed that the Red Tide had taken a firm hold on the area. As I peddled out, it got worse. It looked like I was traveling down the muddy Mississippi.

Most of the kelp had been swallowed up by the Red Tide so I kept peddling west. At about 85 feet, the water cleared and became that beautiful blue-green color that we know often holds some fish. I began to make bait. The bait was small and a mixture of greenbacks and Spanish but they looked healthy so I filled my tank.

Just as I unhooked my last bait and dropped it into the tank, the water around me exploded. Others have told me about this but I had never experienced it in person. I was in a football field size feeding frenzy. Dozens, probably hundreds of Yellowtail were crashing bait on all sides of me. I had not yet put bait in the water so I grabbed my jig stick and let the iron fly.
Within seconds, on my first cast, I was hooked up.

This was my first fish on a surface iron. The fish was pissed and immediately headed for the kelp. I tried to peddle out of range but the fish had other ideas. I fought the tough fight for about ten minutes but the fish made it to the kelp and got good and stuck.

My jig setup has mono. I could not hope to rely on the kelp cutting capability of Spectra so I tried something else. I pulled on the fish close to the breaking point of the line and then let up. When I did, the fish started to swim away. I reeled the slack back in only to be stuck again. I repeated this technique for about half an hour until suddenly I saw color. The fish was spent so I gently reeled him to my yak.

I know it was a dumb move but for some reason, I did not want to stick this beautiful tired fish with the gaff. I reached for the gills, planning to just lift the fish onboard. Bad decision. When the fish felt my touch he pulled away and the hook came free. As this beauty swam slowly away, I thought of how to spin this event so I would not look like a dufus. Catch and Release! That’s what I did. And when I got home, I hugged a tree.

Well, at least I had bait. I pinned one on and started trolling. Since I was supposed to be working, I decided to take a few minutes to check my messages and return some phone calls. I was about to leave a message for some customer who had called in when my reel started screaming. I mean really screaming… louder and faster than I had ever experienced before.

I hung up mid-message and started working the fish. This guy was really moving. I had a sleigh ride like never before. The good news was that I was far from the kelp and this fish was hooked on my 65 lb spectra setup. I could wait him out.

Eventually, I landed this fish without incident. Now what? My Revo does not have many places to store a fish. The best place is in the stern behind the bait tank but there is no way I could strap a fish down by myself without flipping the kayak. I scanned the horizon and saw a couple of guys about a half mile away.

I peddled over to one of the yaks and recognized Yani. With his help, my fish was securely bungeed to my yak. Yani and his fishing partner for the day Dave, had not had any luck so far. Maybe I was the good luck charm or maybe it was just time for these guys to get some love but within a few minutes of joining these guys, Dave hooked up. It was a nice YT, about the size of mine, (18 lbs).

As Yani and I congratulated Dave on his great fishing skills, Yani hooked up as well. It was another 18 pounder but according to Yani, it fought like something much bigger.

2285

2286


And so the day went. Nearly everyone I saw on the water this day had a fish.

It was getting late and my wife’s book club meeting was over so I prepared to head in. Just then I saw a couple of guys in a tandem hooked up. I peddled over to see what was going on and got there just as they gaffed another nice YT.

These were the Ryan brothers, whom I had not met before. One brother had caught a Yellowtail earlier in the day. This fish was caught by the other brother. Both fish were firsts for these guys from a kayak.

Now the story gets a bit weird. As I circled their yak snapping photos of their trophy, the boys were nearly overcome with joy, high fiving and snapping photos of their latest catch. It was a great moment. And then it happened.

2287

2288

I watched it happen and am still not quite sure what caused it. Within a few seconds of the last photo that I took, their kayak was upside down. Everyone and everything was in the water. I peddled over as quickly as I could and grabbed whatever I could find floating. Unfortunately, the only things floating, other than the brothers were some empty beer cans.

When I met the guys on the beach they told me that they had tallied up their equipment losses for the day. Five rods and reels, a bunch of tackle a camera and who knows what else. The total came to about $2000. They even lost the beautiful fish that they were celebrating. All that remains are the photos that I took.

Thus ends this probably fictional tale of a day on the water off La Jolla. It could have happened just as I told it but then everyone knows that there are no fish in La Jolla.

Bob

GunWall Flint
05-14-2010, 09:39 PM
seems like today was the day to be on the water.!

New moon=FISH
New moon=FISH
New moon=FISH

dsafety
05-14-2010, 09:42 PM
Alleged Fish!

Bob

The Kid
05-14-2010, 09:44 PM
now that was a good tail. good stuff but i thought every fairy tale ended with a happy ending jeez that story made me cry. sry bros better luck next time
see you all out there

Dan
05-14-2010, 10:51 PM
sad sad sad. they look so stoked in the photos.

cowboybill
05-15-2010, 05:30 AM
Congrats, and nice story! I really enjoyed the read!

toby
05-15-2010, 06:36 AM
Wow Bob! Not only are you a great inventor-engineer, your a John Steinbeck. That was a good read.

roadx
05-15-2010, 07:00 AM
great read, terrible ending


Yani if that's your real name LOL ;) what size yak do you have?, i just picked up an old cobra xl 11'7 and now that i see you out there at LJ in your littler yak im not so scared to go out on a calm day. will the old xl do ok? and at what swell would you say is to big for a rookie?

Hunters Pa
05-15-2010, 07:05 AM
Great photoshop of the fictional characters to support the completely made up story. I bet the flippers wish it was even more fictional.

dfroggy54
05-15-2010, 07:46 AM
man... that was a twist ending. Great read! Nice YT even though they were photoshopped HAHA:rolleyes:

T Bone
05-15-2010, 07:54 AM
I am working on a fictional tale (TAIL!)for next week after work...

Good story writing....:)

tacmik
05-15-2010, 08:37 PM
Wow Bob! Not only are you a great inventor-engineer, your a John Steinbeck. That was a good read.


Steinbeck no. Hemminway, now their was a great fisherm ummm writer

Whizz Bang
05-15-2010, 11:53 PM
Great write up. The place is gonna be a parking lot tomorrow.

driftwood
05-16-2010, 05:37 AM
That was a fun day Bob. Thanks for reminding me.

Gabe.


2290

toby
05-16-2010, 06:02 AM
Steinbeck no. Hemminway, now their was a great fisherm ummm writer


I was wondering if I got that right. Thanks tacmik!

blitzburgh
05-16-2010, 06:15 AM
Great post Bob!

theluckypig
05-16-2010, 03:06 PM
am i the only evil dude that wants to see the itw pics... hehe... maybe it's the crowd i fish with, but they/i would have taken the pics... great story, sorry about the gear :)

yani
05-16-2010, 03:24 PM
Bob,

You saved my day.:notworthy::notworthy::notworthy:

driftwood
05-16-2010, 03:37 PM
am i the only evil dude that wants to see the itw pics... hehe... maybe it's the crowd i fish with, but they/i would have taken the pics... great story, sorry about the gear :)\

All I saw was an upside down tandum gray kayak with a bunch of empty budwiser beers cans floating all aournd. 10 seconds later, two heads come popping-up out of the water.

both guys had a good attitude about it and told me they had a little too much to drink. They thanked me for not taking any pictures.

I felt real bad for them cause i had met them 15 minutes before they flipped and they were stoked about their 2nd Y.T. hook up.

These two are the nicest guys you could ever meet and I am sorry they lost all their gear and a large Y.T.

kayakflipper
05-16-2010, 07:05 PM
I don't know how it happened!

Was it that we pushed our luck with 2 full grown men + 2 fat YT in one tiny boat- no way...

Was it the 12 pack we polished off before noon?- yeah right...

A possibly foolish move to think I could turn completely around in that boat with that fish for the perfect picture?- could do it in my sleep...

Anyone going to back me up on the rogue wave that passed through Friday?

Oh well, crappy ending to an absolutely amazing day- had 3 YT on, 2 in the boat, 1 home... Bob is a kind soul to have kept that story as tame as he did (and to not have taken the ITW pics- still can't believe he resisted...)

Down, but definitely not out-

Mike

bellcon
05-16-2010, 07:22 PM
Great story
love all them Yellow fish!

theluckypig: am i the only evil dude that wants to see the itw pics... hehe... maybe it's the crowd i fish with, but they/i would have taken the pics... great story, sorry about the gear :)here you go Lucky:
does this feed your need for a kayak blooper::D
http://i239.photobucket.com/albums/ff159/bell6pac/MDR%2011%2022%2009/luckypig.jpg

http://i239.photobucket.com/albums/ff159/bell6pac/MDR%2011%2022%2009/luckypig2.jpg

(guess who that is in the red yak...or should I say... trying to get back in the red yak?:biggrinjester:)

theluckypig
05-16-2010, 07:32 PM
Hehe... yup, these are the guys i fish with... thanks again don...

Adam12
05-16-2010, 07:50 PM
Great story
love all them Yellow fish!

here you go Lucky:
does this feed your need for a kayak blooper::D
http://i239.photobucket.com/albums/ff159/bell6pac/MDR%2011%2022%2009/luckypig.jpg

http://i239.photobucket.com/albums/ff159/bell6pac/MDR%2011%2022%2009/luckypig2.jpg

(guess who that is in the red yak...or should I say... trying to get back in the red yak?:biggrinjester:)

I remember that. As I was paddling away from the bait dock, I hear splash!

You did stick it out James and fished all day.

dsafety
05-16-2010, 08:26 PM
Mike, if this event had actually happened, I would have been happy that you and your brother made it through the incident without losing more than just some gear. Just by telling the story, there will be some good that comes of this. Whenever something like this happens, dozens of other yakfishers take notice.

Some, after hearing your story, will be more careful the next time they are out on the water. Others may offer to help you replace some of the lost gear. Still others will offer useful advice to you and others which will help reduce the pain for the next guy who has a problem like yours.

Probably the best thing that has come from last Friday's adventure is that you and your brother have discovered BWE. Welcome to the family.

Bob

THE DARKHORSE
05-16-2010, 10:18 PM
There's no fish in la Jolla! :doh:

kayakflipper
05-17-2010, 08:08 AM
Hey Bob-

Funny how my wife doesn't see the same humor in the story. For some reason, $2K gets brought up a lot more than the fish lost or our near death experience on the water... Definitely not getting a lot of luv to go get a bunch of brand new gear. Thinking used is likely the way to go.

Looking for good deals on the following-

- Rods + Reels for YT
- Sabiki rig
- Malibu Kayak 6 pt hatch
- Leatherman
- Surface and yoyo irons
- Gaff is taken care of- buddy at work heard the story, laughed his asssss off, then started the official Ryan Bros charitable donation...
- TIE DOWNS!!!

Mike

theluckypig
05-17-2010, 12:02 PM
i think you could get don to dredge up some of the gear...

batty1of3
05-17-2010, 12:34 PM
ceviche rig ?

kayakflipper
05-17-2010, 12:53 PM
ceviche rig ?

Just adding to my already kooky reputation.

That should have been "sabiki" rig...

dsafety
05-17-2010, 01:34 PM
Mike, I would think that finding a way to tie things down to your yak would be near the top of your list. Here is the best rod leashing solution I have found so far.

I have to thank Fongman for this great rod leash idea. I modified his idea a bit so it works best for me. Go to Home Depot, Walmart, Lowe's or just about anywhere and pick up some tarp tie-downs. You can use them right out of the package or modify them as I did by adding a rubber sleeve which makes them rigid.

Attach them to every rod holder. When you have a rod in the holder, simply stretch the bungee over the reel handle and your gear will stay on board during just about any disaster. Here are some photos.

Bob

2296

2297

lamb
05-17-2010, 06:31 PM
awesome read, thanks Bob!

Sorry about the mishap guys. :( It happens. Jasmin ate it the other day, pulled too hard on a kelp, on a side of the kayak. Got too comfortable on a new kayak. Broke off, got ejected on another side of the yak. Lost some gear. It sucks.

When it happens, we need to be there for each other and help out. Wear a life jacket!!!
You all had a great day, and no one was hurt. :cheers1:

Geoffkoop
05-18-2010, 08:14 AM
Mike, I would think that finding a way to tie things down to your yak would be near the top of your list. Here is the best rod leashing solution I have found so far.

I have to thank Fongman for this great rod leash idea. I modified his idea a bit so it works best for me. Go to Home Depot, Walmart, Lowe's or just about anywhere and pick up some tarp tie-downs. You can use them right out of the package or modify them as I did by adding a rubber sleeve which makes them rigid.

Attach them to every rod holder. When you have a rod in the holder, simply stretch the bungee over the reel handle and your gear will stay on board during just about any disaster. Here are some photos.

Bob

2296

2297


Great Idea.

1Flatfish
05-18-2010, 09:55 AM
The only reason you had this great experience is because I cancelled our Oceanside trip. You owe me! No pictures of your fish? Way to go Bob!

Wayne

dsafety
05-18-2010, 11:32 AM
Wayne, if this were a true story, you would have missed out on a really fun day, (the Ryan brothers might have a different perspective). As for not having photos, sorry, but no one was around when I allegedly caught my fish.

You will just have to trust me on this one. Of course there is a chance that I made up the entire story... maybe not.

Bob

cjthomas
05-18-2010, 04:10 PM
awesomeness!... except for the lost gear