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#1
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Actually... anything over a 30LB is so stiff it's not as much fun as
their smaller cousins. My favorite rig is a 20Lb spinner with sailfish or dolphin. More sport. Usually we fish TLD 25's and 30s with a standup rig, we have caught Sail, tuna, Dolphin (Mahi-Mahi), etc. Lots of fun. We fish Tiagra 50's for Wahoo and Swordfish and they are fun but you don't feel the fish as much. We use a belt or a chair depending on the fish. Moving into 80's and 130s you are mostly limited to a chair (OK, you macho types might be able to handle a 130 with a belt but most of us can't) We have also had times where we miss targeted an environment. We got a BIG tuna hit on a tld 25 once and the tuna spooled us staight down. We were fishing the edge in Bimini and the tuna went off the edge into several thousand feet of water. We cranked the drag past the 30% safety zone and it finally took the last bit of line and broke off. We have caught many Tuna in the 25 to 70LB level with TLDs so I expect this one had to be 100LB. A good TLD 25 rig with quality graphite rod with roller guides will be about $500. 50's with Tiagra or Penn Internationals will hit 800-1200, and 80's or 130's will be 1500 to 2500 ++++ Sport fishing magazine had an article a few years back that claimed the average Marlin in the US cost $25,000 each when caught on a large sportfish. (including boat expenses, gear and boat depreciation etc) Cheaper to charter in an area like venezuela where they are more plentiful!!!! Tim wrote: I figured it would be more than a "buck-49".. Sure looked like fun, though. Some of those Marlin fought like heck, well, they all did, but the huge ones looked like they'd take more of a toll on the fisherman, then they would on themselves. Gene Kearns wrote: On 12 Jan 2007 20:22:42 -0800, Tim penned the following well considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats: OK, I ove watching "The Water Channel" (217 on DishNetwork) and tonight they had some big "Bluewater Battle wagon" Out trolling for Blue Marlin. I was watching these people who pay a kings ransom to go do some heavy duty catching, and they had these very large, black (carbon graphite?) rods, whith large gold colored reels. About as big as a medium-sized coffe can. The only thig I've really ever used to fish with, was the Zebco 202 kit that my Grandpa bought for me for my 8th birthday. Obvious comparisons are similar to a Yugo to a Rolls Royce. I know different items draw different pricing, but on about an average, what does one of those fishing rigs cost? I know it's more than a buck-49. Oh... not knowing which models they were using.... I'd say $800-$1300 for the reel and about $400-$700 for the rod. A custom rig could run a *lot* more. Heavy sal****er artificial lures can run $25 or more each.... -- Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. Homepage http://myworkshop.idleplay.net/ Rec.boats at Lee Yeaton's Bayguide http://www.thebayguide.com/rec.boats |
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#2
posted to rec.boats
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Ed wrote: Sport fishing magazine had an article a few years back that claimed the average Marlin in the US cost $25,000 each when caught on a large sportfish. (including boat expenses, gear and boat depreciation etc) Cheaper to charter in an area like venezuela where they are more plentiful!!!! Sounds like a really expensive hobby. Well, for the most, but not for all.? I think I'd best stick to crappie, bluegill, and catfeeesh, with a worm and a Zebco..... |
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#3
posted to rec.boats
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"Tim" wrote in message ups.com... Ed wrote: Sport fishing magazine had an article a few years back that claimed the average Marlin in the US cost $25,000 each when caught on a large sportfish. (including boat expenses, gear and boat depreciation etc) Cheaper to charter in an area like venezuela where they are more plentiful!!!! Sounds like a really expensive hobby. Well, for the most, but not for all.? I think I'd best stick to crappie, bluegill, and catfeeesh, with a worm and a Zebco..... Book a long range trip out of San Diego. Lots of big fish, about $250-300 / day including tip. Includes meals and tackle is rented resonably. The really big fish, the cow tuna ((200#+) is mostly caught on Penn gold or other aluminum reels. Not Graphite reels as the aluminum is much better at dumping heat from the drags. |
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