Bursting with eager anticipation, I watched as the 250g chartreuse
Butterfly Jig fluttered and flicked its way down into the inky blue depths, the
single ‘assist hook' trailing behind in its wake. Always I find the first drop
or cast on any fishing trip exciting, especially so when fishing a new venue or
country, but even in my wildest imagination I wasn't prepared for what on this
particular occasion happened next.
When finally the little jig tapped bottom some 60m below the surface I
eased the lever drag forward to the strike position, took a couple of quick
turns of the handle, jigged the rod a few times, wound some more, jigged again,
and I was just about to take a few more swift turns of the reel handle when
wham, the rod was all but ripped out of my hands! In an instant the flimsy
blank was bent sharply downwards at what seemed an impossible angle as yard
upon yard of braid was ripped off the spool. At this point I realised, in a
surreal moment, that just a few minutes before I'd been silently wondering to
myself whether or not I'd set the drag too heavy!
For maybe five minutes I slogged it out with that fish, which
alternated between reel scorching runs and ‘down n' dirty' head thumping,
during which time I made absolutely no headway whatsoever; basically I was
getting my backside well and truly kicked! Then, just as I was beginning to
think I was on a hiding to nothing, I sensed a momentary reduction in pressure
at the other end and actually managed to regain a few yards of line, then a few
more, and slowly I started to believe that I might eventually get to see the
fish I'd hooked.
Ten minutes later she was hoisted aboard, and I was truly staggered by
the size of what I'd caught, not how big it was mind you, rather by how ‘small'
it was! At barely 20lb in weight it was a fraction of the size I'd first
imagined, and I'd never have thought such a ‘small' fish would have been
capable of dishing out so much punishment. I'd caught a Napoleon Wrasse, an
exquisitely coloured tropical beauty that inhabits the fringes and drop off's
of coral reefs around the Indo-Pacific region. A real brute of a fish with
‘botox lips', an impressive set of canine teeth and a face painted in the most
intricate spiders web pattern of lilac blue set off with a fire orange eye. She
might not have been big, but she was impressive!
During the rest of that first mornings fishing I personally caught
somewhere in the region of a dozen different species, most of which were new to
me. I caught my first yellow finned grouper, my first rose jobfish, a coral
trout and an orange finned emperor, a tomato rock cod and at least three
species of both grouper and snapper I was unable to identify. And these were in
addition to the giant trevally, blue finned trevally, black jacks, amberjacks
and others still that my fellow anglers and I were catching; quite clearly we
were fishing somewhere very special indeed.
The trip had begun on a wet and windy February morning at Heathrow,
when we boarded an Emirates Boeing bound for Dubai. There we switched planes
for a second four hour flight further south to Male, capital of The Maldives
where we boarded a third plane for a final 50 minute hop down to remote South
Huvadhoo Atoll, located just a few miles north of the equator at the bottom of
this idyllic island chain. There we boarded a boat that took us offshore to
join ‘The Sultan of Madivaru' the luxury mother ship that was to be our home
for the next eight days.
The plan was thus. We would sail to various locations around the atoll
chain and anchor in the calm lagoons within the lee of the countless
uninhabited islands that fringe the atoll. Next we would board either the large
purpose built fishing ‘Dhoni' and venture outside of the protection of the
coral reef to jig or cast surface lures in the deep blue water, or
alternatively one of two small skiffs in which we would fish mostly within the
lagoons and inner fringes of the reef casting spinners of plugs. Another option
was to be dropped off and wade mile upon mile of virgin flats with either a fly
or spinning rod, or perhaps troll lures for billfish offshore? Yet another
option was fishing cut baits from any of the boats...was just eight days going to
be enough I wondered?
Jigging and casting ‘industrial size surface poppers' are the key
techniques the mainly French, Spanish and Italian anglers who up until now have
fished this area employ, and despite a veritable smorgasbord of species to
catch, including billfish, just three reign supreme. These are yellowfin tuna,
giant trevally and dogtooth tuna, all of which are available in substantial
numbers here, with the potential for each and every cast giving the angler the
very real possibility of hooking a record breaking fish; landing them, on the
other hand, is an entirely different issue. Never during one trip have I seen
so many anglers get spooled, smashed to smithereens and basically stuffed by
fish as I did during this trip!
Dogtooth tuna are a species I had been looking to add to my life list
for some years, and I knew that this was the trip on which to achieve that
particular tick. And sure enough I got my first the very first day, at less
than 10lb a baby, which I followed up the next day with my second, albeit of a
similar size, but I had got the ‘tick'.
A couple of days into the trip a took part in a truly golden session
during which we really got amongst the ‘doggies' with our jigs, and I managed
to raise the bar with a respectable fish of around 30lb; boy was I chuffed! But
no sooner had I finished photographing my new PB dogtooth, when one of the
skiffs idled up to us and I was presented with a positively huge fish of 60lb
plus caught be Frenchman Brice Ferrawdo, who had hooked the monster casting a
popper at the reef edge. I was told that the 40 minute fight that ensued was
really something to see.
I got my biggest dogtooth tuna of the trip the next day, a beauty that
weighed close on 50lb. that fish all but ripped my arms out of their sockets as
I desperately held on while I tried to withstand its unbelievably powerful runs
against what had seemed a seemingly ridiculous drag setting. Trust me, jigging
over reefs in the tropical seas around the world is one of anglings great
experiences: I'm hooked on it!
Casting surface poppers in these wonderfully rich seas is not for the
faint hearted. Cast up to 12in of shaped timber or plastic into the white water
fringe that invariably is breaking over the outer reef edge, start to retrieve,
and I challenge you to prevent your jaw from dropping wide open when you watch
a 50lb Giant Trevally appear behind the lure and then demolish it. The take, if
you can call it that, is an explosion of white water that has to be experienced
to be appreciated. Imagine you are sat by a hotel swimming pool and someone
throws a TV set out of a top floor window into the pool and you'll start to get
the picture.
The fight, on the other hand, can only be described as awesome. It
isn't pretty and it certainly isn't subtle as the fish rips line at ease from a
drag that is barely possible to pull line against by hand. In many cases the
fish succeeds in smashing your 80lbBS braid and 200lb mono leader to bits, but
when you do successfully boat your fish, the sense of achievement can be
positively overwhelming.
Casting surface poppers at schooling yellowfin tuna is even more hard
core, some might say bordering on stupidity. This is what the Americans call
‘run n' gun' fishing. First you locate the huge flocks of feeding birds, which
usually doesn't take long, then quickly motor into position to intercept the
fast swim shoals of tunny that are attacking the melee of panicked bait fish
from below
As soon as you can you launch the plug at the frenzy and instantly
start to crank it back as fast as you can. The takes are mind blowing; an
explosion of white water and an arm wrenching jolt as the fish grabs the lure,
kicks down a few gears, lights its after burners and screams off. Most of the
tuna we caught were in the 30-60lb class, schoolies, but ton plus yellow
fringed lumps of muscle are always on the cards. During our trip I saw one angler
brought almost to the point of tears by the shear physical exertion of battling
a tuna for the better part of an hour, and that was just a 50 pounder, albeit
hooked in the tail!
I could go on and on about the fantastic adventures and experiences I
had during my trip, but alas I've run out of space. Suffice to say this was one
of the most memorable trips I have ever made. I was totally overwhelmed by the
experience, and yes, I am going back next year, sooner if I can arrange it!
Everyone who has seen
the full set of images I took on that trip has already confirmed they will be
joining me, and it looks like I'll be escorting several groups in early 2008.