Fish Sniffer On Demand Digital Edition Issue 3703 Jan 18-Feb 2 2018 | Page 26

18 Proven Kokanee / Trout Dodgers! violently as a nice tuna headed for the depths. I was using a Cousins 7 foot graphite rod with a Shimano Trinidad reel loaded with 40 pound test Yozuri Hybrid line, and this fish tore line off the reel and headed straight down! Bridget let out a cry and I saw she was also hooked into a tuna. After several minutes of intense battle, we both landed tuna of 20 and 25 pounds. Hurriedly we tossed bait back into the water and were immediately hooked up again!
240 different size / color combinations!
4 All Natural Scents... Kokanee, Trout, Salmon & Shad
82 YEARS of Catching TROUT & KOKANEE 100 % Made in the USA
www. dicknite. com • fs @ dicknite. com

FRESHWATER

24 Jan 18- Feb 2, 2018 VOL. 37 • ISS. 03
Fish Sniffer publisher Paul Kneeland with a 45 pound yellowfin tuna take on live bait in the Sea of Cortez.
Photo by Bridget Looney, Colfax.
we found the fleet! As we slowly motored up to the group of boats, we saw several people hooked up, including Dave Barsi with a deeply bent rod and a big smile on his face!
Our captain slowed to an idle and the mate set up our rods with small sturdy hooks that he baited with a single sardina and tossed over board. We pulled line out of the reel so the bait would free line behind the boat and slowly sink out of sight.
When all our baits were out, the mate started throwing handfuls of the dead sardinas into the water. They sparkled and swirled and gradually sank like so many bright silver quarters. Suddenly, I felt my live sardine get nervous, and then my line started running quickly off the reel.
I put the reel in gear and reared back and struck hard! My rod was pulled back

Trout ~ Kokanee ~ Salmon ~ Shad

18 Proven Kokanee / Trout Dodgers! violently as a nice tuna headed for the depths. I was using a Cousins 7 foot graphite rod with a Shimano Trinidad reel loaded with 40 pound test Yozuri Hybrid line, and this fish tore line off the reel and headed straight down! Bridget let out a cry and I saw she was also hooked into a tuna. After several minutes of intense battle, we both landed tuna of 20 and 25 pounds. Hurriedly we tossed bait back into the water and were immediately hooked up again!

This time, my tuna felt much stronger and heavier, and all I could do for several minutes was hold on tight as the fish tore 40-pound test off the reel and headed straight down. Bridget landed 2 tuna and 2 small bonito while I was just trying gain some line back. After a full 45 minutes, I was finally able to bring the big tuna to the gaff.
My arms were tired, my back was sore and I was sweating heavily – definitely time for the first cerveza of the day! Hours later at the dock he weighed 68 pounds! We caught several more tuna that morning, and weighed a total of 173 pounds on the dock scale.
Dave, Wanda, Ken and Dena had a very good day as well, with tuna, dorado and wahoo in the fish box. We all met at

240 different size / color combinations!

GONE FISHING continued from page 1

the lovely palapa bar next to the infinity pool and had wonderful margaritas and swapped tales of big fish from the Sea of Cortez.
We all went back to our rooms, took a short siesta, and went to dinner at the Bay View restaurant located at the south end of the hotel. Dinner was excellent, with choices from rib eye steak to coconut shrimp to fresh Mexican specialty dishes.
The next morning we were up and ready to go with another gorgeous day dawning brightly! Brother Ken and Dena joined us on our boat today, and we headed out for marlin and dorado. We had more than enough tuna to bring home. The captain headed in a southwesterly direction, and we started trolling after about a 40 minute run.
We started trolling with 4 rods out – 2 on outriggers and 2 off the stern of the boat. The mate set up ballyhoo bait on the Cousins live bait rod and left it in the bait well for when needed. We put out an assortment of the Cousins trolling lures and settle down to wait for the first strike.
We had been trolling for only about 20 minutes when the port side outrigger popped off and the Penn Torque 30 reel started buzzing like a chain saw. Dena was first up, and she grabbed the rod and was into a spirited fight! The fish tore drag like a tiger 3 different times, but then seemed to tire and Dena brought in a beautiful 30 pound wahoo!
Back on the troll, it was only a few minutes later that a long straight bill appeared behind the boat and slashed at the closest trolling lure! The drag screamed for a second and went silent as the marlin missed the hook! The captain immediately slowed the boat and the mate made tossed the ballyhoo out behind the boat, jigging it constantly. I could see
the ballyhoo dart each time he jigged it.
Suddenly I saw a tall fin behind the swimming bait and there was a huge splash. The captain gunned the boat and the mate set the hook violently three or four times. Fish on!
Ken jumped up and grabbed the rod and held on. The
40-pound test line was burning off the reel at an alarming rate! Then, about 200 yards out, the striped marlin starting jumping and tail walking, skipping over the water in jumps that cleared at least 10 feet!
After about 30 minutes, we saw the dazzling electric blue stripes on the fish as it came to the surface, and the mate grabbed the bill of the 100 pound striped marlin in his gloved hand, gently pulled the lure out of his mouth and released him.
We were trolling along at the usual 8 knot pace when the lure on my heaviest Cousins rod with a Shimano Tiagra 2 speed reel was ripped off the outrigger and the 50 pound test line started screaming off the reel! Bridget grabbed the rod and was amazed when a long blue and silver bullet erupted from the sapphire ocean and skipped across the top of the water like a Corvette blazing off the starting line in a spray of boiling water! That marlin stayed out of the water for a good 100 feet before suddenly diving straight down toward oblivion!
The captain called out“ Blue! Blue!” and we realized she was tied to a large, pissed off blue marlin! The captain had to back down on this fish three times before we actually started gaining line and stopped worrying about being spooled. Bridget sat in the fighting chair and fought the blue marlin valiantly. The sweat was streaming off her face and arms, and I told her she was glistening!
She looked sideways at me and said,“ Don’ t bug me!” and went back to fighting a fish longer that she is! After about 15 minutes of just holding on and slowly gaining line, she was getting worn out, so Ken took over for a while. The three of us took turns playing the fish, until after an hour and 30 minutes, the big fish suddenly lost its power and came right to the boat.
As he neared the surface, I noticed that he looked kind of gray, instead of the usual luminescent glowing blue. The captain slowly idled while the mate held the great fish next to the boat, trying to get oxygen into his gills, but the fish was dead – he had fought so hard and long, that he died at the boat. Back at the dock, he weighed 280 pounds and was almost 12 feet long! Marlin steaks for everybody!!
Back at the hotel, we had our usual“ margarita meeting” around the pool, and exchanged stories. Dave and Wanda had a
3703

4 All Natural Scents... Kokanee, Trout, Salmon & Shad

82 YEARS of Catching TROUT & KOKANEE 100 % Made in the USA

Without a DICK NITE... You’ re Not Fishin’ Right!

www. dicknite. com • fs @ dicknite. com

The author and Bridget Looney with 68 and 45 pound tuna caught in the Sea of Cortez. Photo by Dave Barsi, Oak Run