- SkipsTournaments.com
Transcription
- SkipsTournaments.com
MARCH 30-APRIL 2, 2016 Presented by Crook & Crook and Capt. Skip Smith Letter from Tournament Director Skip Smith Dear Sailfish Shootout Participants and Sponsors: Who would’ve thought I’d be running a Miami Sailfish tournament? Not me! But when KC and Bryan from Crook & Crook approached me at the Fort Lauderdale Boat Show and asked about having a Sailfish tournament in the Grove, how could I resist? It all made sense once I got to know them, and their support was more than I ever expected. It wasn’t long before the phone started to ring and the sponsors started showing their support as well. From there, I began to reach out to those of you who fished the Grove sailfish tournaments in the past, and you too were excited to get a tournament back in the Grove. The motivation was there once the owners, anglers and captains got behind us…and here we are! I honestly believe in getting new people into fishing, and feel our amateur and kids divisions will do just that. I’d like everyone to remember this: should you ever have any suggestions or comments, please do not hesitate to let me know your thoughts. I rely on your input to help me produce a tournament that is exciting and fun for everyone, every year. Catch-em-up, Skip Captain Skip Smith 4 | Shootout In The Grove 2016 Anytime, anywhere, anyplace . . . is there for you. Yachts • Sportfishing Boats • Center Consoles Charter Boats • Mega Yachts • Guides • Triple & Quad Outboards 954-784-1807 Smith-Merritt.com 2016 Schedule of Events WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30TH 5:00pm to 8:00pm - Registration Monty's - Coconut Grove 6:00pm - Kickoff - Cocktails & Appetizers Monty's - Coconut Grove 7:00pm - Captain's Meeting Monty's - Coconut Grove One team member must be in attendance, as rules are subject to change THURSDAY, MARCH 31ST 3:00pm - 7:00pm - Late Registration at Crook & Crook FRIDAY, APRIL 1ST 8:00am - 4:00pm - Day 1 Fishing 4:00pm to 7:00pm - SD Cards delivered Gamefish weigh-in Monty's - Coconut Grove SATURDAY, APRIL 2ND 8:00am - 4:00pm - Day 2 Fishing 4:00pm to 7:00pm - SD Cards delivered Gamefish weigh-in Monty's - Coconut Grove 7:30pm to 9:30pm - Awards Dinner Monty's - Coconut Grove SkipsTournaments.com | 7 AUGUST 1979 My First Meeting With The Hooker Captain Eddie Herbert called to invite me out to be his mate during one of the big-money tournaments in Texas in 1979. I flew into Houston and drove to Bridge Harbor Marina in Freeport to get on the boat, and then I fished with Eddie and my brother Kent. After the tournament, we were invited over to have drinks on a fifty-three-foot Hatteras, The Hooker, with owners Jerry Dunaway and Chuck Sims. Jerry and Chuck owned a business called Remco, and they had been very successful with their rental company. There was a pretty good party going on—lots of whiskey, country music, women, and fish stories. After the introductions, I got a chance to talk to Jerry. His love of fishing was very present as he shared his passion about all kinds of fishing by telling me stories and asking questions about catching blue marlin all around the world. Much later that evening, when we were done talking, he offered me the mate’s job and said they wanted to fish Cozumel, St. Thomas, and the Bahamas; the best months to fish these areas did not match up with the schedule they had told me. So I said no, and my brother Kent took the job. I made the decision to go back to longlining because the money was real good and the fishing was very exciting. Before they left Texas, Jerry and Chuck hired and brought in one of the best marlin fishermen they could find, Captain Jeff Fay from Kona, Hawaii. Then they went from Texas to Fort Lauderdale for a new tuna tower and then off to Belize. The remaining itinerary was Cozumel for the spring and back to the Bahamas for some more marlin fishing for the summer. Once they had Kent and Captain Jeff on the boat, they figured out the schedule and were on track for a good season, while I was on track for an injury that would change my life. NOVEMBER 1979 The captain, or whoever is operating the boat, aims the vessel at the line of buoys to pick up the miles of line and also operates the lever that makes the spool retrieve the main line. The second man is on the leader cart, storing the leaders and wiring up the fish. The third man retrieves the buoys and cleans the fish. I was the leader man this morning, and—I felt— I was the best person for this job. You grab each leader and feel for a fish. If the fish is on the leader, you get to “wire” (handline) and fight the fish the last one hundred feet to the boat—mano a mano. Wiring the fish was the fun part. This consisted of fighting the fish with your hands wrapped around a four-hundred-pound leader, pulling in a few yards and then losing enough that it would pull the snap swivel back under as it was still attached to the main line and even a buoy or two. Then you would take a break, let the fish pull on the buoy, and start the leadering of the fish all over again. If you pulled too hard, you could pull the hook, which happens way too often, or you could even break the leader. A swordfish does not have solid bone structure in its mouth, and most hooks are either lodged in the throat, in the roof of the mouth, or in the corner of the jaw. A popular hook at that time was a 10/0 7731 Mustad J-hook, which was offset in two places and would stay embedded in the swordfish better than any other hook we had tried. Quite a few of the fish were dead when we wired them up, but even wiring a dead fish and being the first to see it was always special. Not knowing what kind of fish and how big they were (or weren’t) was why we did it. Wiring a live fish was the challenge we lived for. I took a lot of pride in myself, knowing that I was one of the best at this position and having a feel for each fish; I would not pull the hook or lose the fish under the boat or one of the other million ways that the fish could get away. It was just after sunrise, and we had already recovered about five miles of our longline. The beginnings of a real nice catch of swordfish were laid out on the deck waiting to be gutted and iced. We still had fifteen more miles of longline to retrieve and close to two hundred more leaders left of the more than three hundred leaders we had put out. The seas were relatively calm, and I was at the leader cart, one If there wasn’t a fish, you simply snapped the snap of the better jobs on the pelagic longline vessel. swivel to the last hook and fed it onto the leader cart. One hard crank on the handle would spin the 8 | Shootout In The Grove 2016 cart and roll up about a third of the leader, due to the weight of the squid still on the hook. It took three different good cranks of the cart to get about one hundred feet of leader in. The hook would catch on a ring on the side of the boat, or you could just let it go straight on the cart, being careful to slow the cart when the hook came close. To take the leader off the main line, you watched the mainline, which was running from a sheave up the side of the boat and down into the water. As the leader and the snap swivel came up, you would reach out and grab it, and on a thirty-foot boat affected by even small seas, one mistake could cost you a serious injury. You would watch the spool for new leaders and the hook coming up behind you. So when I attached the swivel to the hook and gave the cart a spin and looked for the next leader, I wasn’t expecting a short leader. The hook flew out of the water, and as I was guiding the line evenly onto the spool, the hook embedded in my hand and took my hand and arm into the hook end of the leader cart. The weight of the spool kept rolling, causing my body to follow up and over the cart. When the cart stopped and I got in a position to start removing the hooks from my arm, I counted five that were just penetrating and two that were embedded in beyond the barb. The first five came out without a hitch; the first hook that was embedded was in my forearm. The barb was just under the skin, and it came out with a quick jerk. The next one was more serious. It had gone through the glove and into the palm of my hand as it took much of the momentum from the spool. From my palm, the hook went up into my ring finger. I started to try and remove the hook. I realized that I could not take the glove off, and I didn’t want anyone to cut it away with a knife. We were twenty-five miles offshore, and leaving the remaining fifteen miles of longline in the water and returning home was not an option. I backed the hook out and had some trouble with a tendon that had gotten stuck on the barb. I asked Craig to help with that part, and when the hook was out, Craig handed me a bottle of Clorox. I was pretty much in control—or perhaps in shock—until I poured the Clorox on the wounds. That’s when I dropped to my knees and the tears flowed from my eyes. This is an excerpt from Tales of a Hooker and Her Madam by Capt. Skip Smith. To purchase go to www.amazon.com Tournament Rules TROPHIES/PRIZES/AWARDS Top Team Top Angler Second Place Team Third Place Team Top Lady Angler Top Junior Angler(s) age at registration Ages 12-15 Ages 7-11 Age 6 and under (Gamefish will count toward this category, if necessary) Gamefish Division(s) For a list of tournament rules, go to www.SkipsTournaments.com 10 | Shootout In The Grove 2016