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![]() "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Thu, 28 Sep 2006 21:19:05 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote: "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message . .. On Fri, 29 Sep 2006 01:02:25 GMT, "Calif Bill" wrote: Come to San Diego and take a long range trip. Then you will see it as more than luck. I don't mean to imply that tuna fishing is all luck, but it is an important part of the recreational process. From my small amount of experience .... it's 99.5 percent luck getting hooked up. The .5 percent skill is just being there dragging bait in the water. Now, getting it in the boat takes some skill. According to some pelagic species dudes extraordinare, the boat actually seems to have something to do with it. Apparently, four stroke diesels make a heavy thrumming noise and vibration that two stroke diesels don't and that has a tendency to bring the giants up to the surface out of curiosity. There's also some thought that prop size and type can do much the same thing. Don't ask me - I'm an outboard guy. :) Yup. Then there are the guys that paint images of bait fish on their hulls. I have one friend with an old Hateras with DD 6-71 two stroke diesels. Of course, he claims the fish like the sound of his engines. The guys with four stroke Cats claim Charlie the Tuna likes their engine sound. It's luck. Eisboch |
#2
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I went out of Santa Cruz for albacore a few years back...and I gotta agree,
luck was all important. We went out about 25 miles, and there were 12 of us on the boat. 1/2 caught fish and we were all on the same boat! I was really lucky and caught two! At one point, we had a pod of dolphins playing in our bow wake...that was beautiful. That was a fun day, even though I chummed off the side in the morning g. --Mike "Eisboch" wrote in message ... "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Thu, 28 Sep 2006 21:19:05 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote: "Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Fri, 29 Sep 2006 01:02:25 GMT, "Calif Bill" wrote: Come to San Diego and take a long range trip. Then you will see it as more than luck. I don't mean to imply that tuna fishing is all luck, but it is an important part of the recreational process. From my small amount of experience .... it's 99.5 percent luck getting hooked up. The .5 percent skill is just being there dragging bait in the water. Now, getting it in the boat takes some skill. According to some pelagic species dudes extraordinare, the boat actually seems to have something to do with it. Apparently, four stroke diesels make a heavy thrumming noise and vibration that two stroke diesels don't and that has a tendency to bring the giants up to the surface out of curiosity. There's also some thought that prop size and type can do much the same thing. Don't ask me - I'm an outboard guy. :) Yup. Then there are the guys that paint images of bait fish on their hulls. I have one friend with an old Hateras with DD 6-71 two stroke diesels. Of course, he claims the fish like the sound of his engines. The guys with four stroke Cats claim Charlie the Tuna likes their engine sound. It's luck. Eisboch |
#3
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On Thu, 28 Sep 2006 21:42:45 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote:
I have one friend with an old Hateras with DD 6-71 two stroke diesels. Of course, he claims the fish like the sound of his engines. The fish might be the only ones. My neighbors say they sound like a bus, actually two of them. :-) I always tell them it's music to my ears. |
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