Wrestling With Samsons
Transcription
Wrestling With Samsons
samsons Wrestling With Samsons Peter Morse goes west in search of samsons. issue one aug-oct 06 In Western Australia in particular, samson fish represent perhaps the best opportunity for Australian fly fishers to consistently tangle with seriously big, hard fighting fish (outside the billfish family of course). What one fly fisher calls big another might call ‘bait’, but with samsons there’s no confusing exactly what ‘big’ is. When first confronted by the sight of a pack of samsons even a seasoned fly fisher will go ‘wow!’, let alone the reaction from those who’ve never seen fish this size before. The first sight of a big samson can have you picking yourself up off the deck, and the thought, ‘Am I supposed to land that on fly gear?’ crosses your mind. That had certainly been my reaction a few years ago when Craig ‘Noddy’ Radford first bought one to the surface on jig tackle off metropolitan Perth. Samson fish (Seriola hippos) are members of the trevally tribe – carangids for the scientists. Their closest relations are the other Seriolas - amberjacks and yellowtail kingfish are kissing cousins. Few fish families carry a more fearsome, thuggish, fighting reputation than this gang. samsons The first sight of a big samson can have you picking yourself up off the deck, and the thought, ‘Am I supposed to land that on fly gear?’ crosses your mind. They can be a kilometre long and forty meters deep. Jig fishers have exploited this fishery over the last few years and it is unquestionably the major tackle testing ground for heavy duty spin gear in the world – it is brutal, with some experienced and hardened jig fishers landing (and releasing) over 30 fish a day with an average weight somewhere around 24 kilos. Shattered rods and seized reels litter the decks of charter boats. For a fly fisher to exploit this deep fishery requires good weather, heavy tackle, and techniques that are just a little outside IFGA rules, but sometimes you do what you have to do. Not quite wthin IGFA rules... Unconventional tactics were needed to drop flies 100 metres down into the feeding zone. Books will tell you samsons have a known upper weight limit of 57 kilos but fish larger than 60 kilos have been regularly recorded, particularly from Perth’s offshore summer spawning aggregations in recent years. This aggregation is truly massive. The size of the schools of mature fish that congregate in several places off the coast, in particular west of Rottnest Island, is almost incomprehensible. issue one aug-oct 06 samsons SPAWNING AGGREGATION TACTICS From a fly tackle perspective these spawning fish are in very deep water, well beyond the normal limits of fly fishing and sixty meters is about as shallow as they come. The average depth they’re found in is around 100 meters and this is a major hurdle to overcome. To get the fly down to a fishable depth you need minimal drift, but a windless day off Perth in summer is a rare event. The fastest sinking line you can find (Rio’s tungsten dredger shooting heads worked well for us), matched with a big fly loaded in the head with solder wire and tungsten putty is just the beginning. To get to where the fish are you also need to strip backing off the reel, and to avoid having this lying around on deck (a disaster just waiting to happen) you need to use the reel to retrieve the backing - it’s far from classic fly fishing. It’s a long process and we did it successfully off Perth in early 2006; not only see if we could get a hookup, but also to see if the tackle we were using was capable of lifting these fish from those depths. Several of us used a prototype Sage 16 weight mounted with a Tibor Gulfstream, and to our great surprise (and that of the other anglers and deckies) found we were landing fish almost as easily as the jig guys using geared reels spooled with 80lb braid on short stroker spin rods. Noddy dropped deep berley cages packed with chopped pilchards and whether it was coincidence or not, the best bite period and the shallowest the fish showed on the sounder was when we were berleying at our hardest and the wind was at its lightest. As far as we’re concerned we caught fish so the system had some merits. This success piqued our curiosity: could we catch big samsons outside this spawning aggregation and in shallower water? SAMSONS ELSEWHERE Tag returns post-spawning indicate most of the fish off Perth head south once spawning is completed (usually by late February) and many excellent captures come from the waters off Bunbury right around into the Great Australian Bight. The movement and mix of the population of fish has not yet been determined because north of Perth they are also thick, but tagged fish off Perth have not shown up in those waters. issue one aug-oct 06 Solder wire and tungsten putty helped sink flies into the strike zone. These northern fish are accessible in many places, in big numbers, and in reasonably shallow water along that band The Abrolhos Islands are stark and windswept with a rich history of shipwrecks and commercial fishing. This crayfish village was our base for week. We launched from here every day to chase huge samson fish from the back of Nat Gedero’s commercial cray boat. of ancient reef that begins at Rottnest Island and continues all the way to North West Cape. It seems this may be a different population though. Samsons are considered a poor eating fish and many WA fishers go out of their way to avoid them. Because there is also no commercial fishery for them numbers on even close reefs remain good. Subsequently though there’s a lack of information, which doesn’t assist in joining the dots on distribution, locations, likely structure, and of course tactics. Its known by a few that many of the reefs and structure north of Perth holds good samson populations. The wreck of the oil rig ‘Key Biscayne’ has been exploited by Perth based fly fishers Kev Holt, Tony Cranstoun and mates for some time. There are plenty of small towns along the coast from Perth to Kalbari, that because of the prodigious inshore reefs are all potentially good ‘samson ports’ for small boat fishers. samsons THE SAMSON MOTHERLODE The Abrolhos Islands off Geraldton seems to be pretty much at the heart of this northern samson fishery. This very large group of low, windswept islands and enormous reef complexes is a wild part of the world with a rich history of shipwrecks and commercial fishing. The edge of the continental shelf is only eight miles from the outer reef and warm oceanic currents sweep the group. Tailor and mackerel co-exist, as do spangled emperor and pink snapper. It’s a huge source of crayfish and several of the islands have seasonal crayfishing villages on them. Only residents and a few guests can stay on the islands. I visited the islands in April 2006 with Noddy as guests of Nat and Greta Gedero. Nat’s a second generation Abrolhos cray fisher and Greta’s from Sweden. Nat’s father was one of the very first to set up a camp out in the islands in the early 1950’s and we stayed in the original shack his father had built. Nat runs a commercial cray boat so our fishing had to fit in with work, but he’s also a very keen fly fisher. At first light we were on the inside of the outer reef as the pots started coming aboard and the boxes of live crays slowly filled. The old baits were tossed over the side and bronze whalers surged and swirled in the morning light to snatch them. Abrolhos crayfish issue one aug-oct 06 samsons Noddy with Abrolhos bycatch - a superb WA snapper. competition to get them up on top and fighting over the scraps. Some pots had fish and some didn’t, it depended on how close they were to reef. Suddenly from one pot we had samsons everywhere, big ones, massive ones, half a dozen of them. The big rods came out; two huge flies hit the water almost simultaneously for instantaneous hook ups – mine busted on the strike and Noddy came back with half a shooting head – not a good start. ‘Don’t worry, the others will follow us to the next pot’ said Nat. ‘No Kingies (samsons) out here’ said Nat. ‘Wait until the last twenty inshore pots, that’s when we’ll have them up thick’. With the first forty pots cleared and re-set we move into the calmer, shallower waters sheltered by Wallabi Island to check and reposition a further sixty pots. The bottom was clearly visible and when the first pot came up there were flashes of pink and blue down deep as big snapper grabbed the discarded baits. The next twenty or so pots had fish in attendance and we caught some big snapper. Then suddenly, from nowhere, we had two big samsons around the boat; our first eye to eye encounter with 20 kilo fish on the surface. The water was only 5 meters deep and coral reef was all around us. ‘If you want to lose a fly line go ahead’ said Nat. I made a cast and the fly was instantly inhaled, but the fish turned and came straight back under the boat before I had a chance to set the hook and it fell out. issue one aug-oct 06 Noddy and I had strung up 11 weight rods for the snapper with fast sinking lines and smaller flies. Nat told us small flies would help avoid the samsons and pin the ‘snaps’. We also had very heavy rods rigged and ready with big flies; a 16 weight Sage and a 17 weight Cam Sigler, both loaded with Tibor Pacific reels and 850 grain Rio tungsten dredger lines – we weren’t here to avoid the samsons, we were here for battle. There were more glimpses of them down deep as they grabbed the sinking baits but there wasn’t enough We frantically re-rigged from a prepared stash of jumbo flies left over from other big fish trips. It seemed that if you thought your fly wasn’t going to be big enough it probably wasn’t, and if you thought it was going to be too big, well, it wouldn’t be. There was about two minutes between pots. Noddy simply tied a surgeon’s loop on the front end of his remaining fly line and we both had a supply of leaders ready rolled. On the way to the next pot half a dozen more samson’s joined the pack swimming under the boat - now there would be competition. We could see fish waiting in the shadow of the boat as the pot came up. ‘Shit! They’re huge!’ I said to Noddy. ‘Yep!’ he replied, grinning mischieviously. ‘Smack the fly down hard as the old baits hit the water’, called Nat from the wheelhouse. A big silicon headed fly tied on a 10/0 hook hit the water with an audible splat, samsons surged from the shadows of the boat and broad grey shoulders launched from the water in a welter of spray. With this first round of hook ups we began three days of unbelievably intense big fish fly fishing. It’s hard to imagine in this day, with depleted oceans and fish stocks pummelled from all sides, that you could encounter so many massive fish in just a few hours of fishing each day. Most fly fishers might be fortunate to encounter one or two fish such as these in a lifetime. There were many highlights, incidents, and countless lessons learned. This was an astonishingly brutal and instructive course on knots, rigs and fish fighting techniques. You wouldn’t dare pull out anything heavier than a 10kg tippet in Noddy’s presence; he’s a stickler for IGFA line classes so that was what we fished with even though they’re not a recognised IGFA species. Rio IFGA Hard mono was my choice. The crucial connection from class tippet to shock tippet (at first a uni knot) failed me twice as I battled to keep these fish from gaining the reef. I changed to a triple turn surgeon’s knot and that connection did not fail again. We were fishing with Tibor Pacific reels, not for the backing capacity, but for the huge retrieve rate and the massive amount of drag you can apply through them. Both rods had been tested before the trip and we knew they were capable of breaking 10 samsons On many occasions we copped a pummelling. Picture on of those early black and white movies of a bare knuckle boxing match with the two heavyweights, a blacksmith and a wharfie, going toe to toe for as many rounds as it took to finish the job. kilo tippets and we thought we knew how far we could and couldn’t go. On many occasions we copped a pummelling. Picture one of those early black and white movies of a bare knuckle boxing match with the two heavyweights, a blacksmith and a wharfie, going toe to toe for as many rounds as it took to finish the job, neither gaining the upper hand, neither prepared to give in and neither able to land a really decisive blow and you have the broad picture of how it felt. It was mostly shallow water and the bottom was visible, you could usually see the bommies the fish were heading for. They also had a nasty tactic of diving back under the boat and their first run was Atrocious table manners made for superb surface strikes - until you realised the samson was only ten metres from freedom and heading straight for it. issue one aug-oct 06 samsons When big fish take flies with such ferocity so close to the boat your gear and knots better be good. 10 long and hard in that direction. With full drag on you strained just to hang onto the rod to keep the tip under the boat to stop it fatally bending around the chine. Just to just get one hand free to back off the drag was fraught with danger. There were many white knuckled moments spent bent right over the gunwales with bare toes barely gripping the deck, moments that teetered on the edge of a graphite-shattering disaster. We soon learned to back off the drag the instant they headed in that direction and this worked - sometimes. The need for a serious big game lever drag fly reel suddenly became a reality. But we also won plenty of rounds. The best fish of the trip was a massive samson Noddy landed. The crew declared it was the biggest they’d seen landed on ANY tackle. Our estimate put it at over 100 old fashioned pounds, a truly phenomenal capture on fly tackle and a testament to Noddy’s great fishing skills honed over many years of subduing big fish on heavy fly rods. A great personal moment came when I busted off a fish on the 16 weight and picking up the 11 weight because it was rigged, and landed a 25 kilo samson. We landed others over 40 kilos and the average size was somewhere around 25 kilos. That’s very, very serious fly fishing. issue one aug-oct 06 Extreme polaroiding... samsons There was no time for a full re-rig, the next pot was only minutes away, so it was a bimini double in the gelspun backing, double that with a surgeon’s loop, then double that again to give a secure eight strand loop. all the re-rigging process but on looking up could see a big bommie 60 meters away - exactly where the fish was heading. With the really brutal tactics we had to use, most fights were won or lost within ten minutes. When we had a bust off lessons were learned and rectified where possible. Sometimes it was correctable but much of the time it was just general attrition - a fifty pound braided loop wore through, a spool of brittle old 10 kg tippet material cost a few fish before being discarded, they took us around cray pot ropes, fly lines were cut off on the reef and Noddy broke several 10 kg tippets through the Cam Sigler 17 weight before learning to back off. I’ve always considered it less of a defeat to bust off a fish heading for cover by going as hard as the tackle will handle to prevent the fish from making it to cover, than it is to be buried. So I wrung another half turn of drag out of the Pacific. The fish slowed and turned short of the coral. Some line was cranked back on the reel, a few turns - it went again and must have turned only a meter short. It had put everything into reaching the reef and was duly landed. It was a great note to finish on and I think gave the anglers a slight points decision. There were many great lessons learned from these torrid encounters - how important not just good knots are, but great knots, just how much pressure you can put through a properly bent fly rod, the need to ‘ride the drag’ and to never give these fish an even break because they won’t ever return the favour. But mostly I think we learned to not be intimidated by the size of the fish and the country they were in. A faint heart never won a battle such as this. 11 On our last afternoon, on the last half a dozen pots when the bite was at its frenzied best, we both lost shooting heads and running lines. There was no time for a full re-rig, the next pot was only minutes away, so it was a bimini Craig Radford playing tug-of-war with the locals. Correct rod work is double in the gelspun backing, essential to even have a chance with these bruisers. double that with a surgeon’s loop, then double that again to give a secure eight strand loop - casts weren’t long so no need for a running line. We simply looped on a pre-rigged Rio T14 head straight to the gsp and back into the action. The gang was all there and still ravenously hungry and competitive. ‘Splat’, the flies hit the water and a big fish estimated at 30 odd kilos launched itself onto mine. I hadn’t looked around through issue one aug-oct 06 samsons Neptune cradles the bulk of a huge samson wrestled to the boat by the author. Samson fish are a wonderful species for fly fishers looking to tangle with something big. They eat big things and they certainly aren’t a fashionable fish, at least not until now. In places teasing tactics will be needed to bring them up out of deeper water and that can be a quest. Because of their poor eating quality they seem destined to be around for some time and represent the best opportunity for fly fishers to experience white knuckle battles with things capable of busting anything but the finest rigged tackle, of destroying inferior reels, and shattering badly bent graphite rods. I can’t recommend a round or two with a gang of bad tempered samson fish highly enough. Samson fish are a wonderful species for fly fishers looking to tangle with something big. They eat big things and they certainly aren’t a fashionable fish, at least not until now. 12 issue one aug-oct 06 Craig Radford manages on his own, but only just...these were serious fish.