Honolulu, Hawaii, April 27 to
May 1, 2010
A synopsis of
various reports from SteveL, SteveT and BobW for
mikescatchreport.com
BobW releases one of his two
o'io
(bonefish) he caught and
tagged on the south shore.___________
All photos by SteveL for
mikescatchreport.com
TWO
ACORNS
SteveT and SteveL joined BobW to fly fish for
o'io (bonefish) on the south shore and
according to SteveL, Bob did really well.
"We have an expression back
in Virginia that 'even a blind squirrel finds an acorn once
in a while' and this blind squirrel was overdue," said
BobW. "SteveL and SteveT met me at the Hale Koa Hotel parking garage at 5:30am. I had fished
with SteveL before and was looking forward to meeting
and fishing with SteveT. I follow their bone fishing
adventures on mikescatchreport.com and now had the
opportunity to fish with two of the local experts."
Bob was in Hawaii for two weeks with his
wife and his
fishing window was limited to just a few hours in the
morning--unfortunately when the tides were at their
worst stages. On this day they decided to fly fish on a
semi-secluded flat on the southwestern side of Oahu. Bob
explained that, "The water was a smooth as a mill pond
and I saw tailing bones soon after I entered the water."
"I continued using the fly SteveL had given me and had been
successful for me a few days earlier. I cast in the
vicinity of a tailing bone and for once did not spook him
and all the other fish on the flats," said Bob. "I followed
the advice Steve had given me earlier and let the fly sit
completely still for what seemed to be an eternity. I then
began a slow retrieve and a bonefish nailed the fly. After
two long runs, I was finally able to get the fish close at
hand and SteveL came over to net the fish. Steve took my
picture then he weighed, measured and tagged the fish. I
had only caught three bonefish on previous trips to the
island and up till now had no pictures to substantiate my
claims."
A great catch. BobW with his
Hawaiian bonefish.
A little while
later Bob hooked and landed his second 'acorn'.
"Even though the tide was dropping, Bobby caught two--one
was 4 pounds 13 ounces and the other weighed 2.5
pounds. He said that he would frame the picture of his
fish along with the fly that caught it," said SteveL.
They left the flat at 10am and headed back to the Hale Koa
Hotel in Waikiki where Bob and his wife later celebrated
his successful adventure with a pork saimin lunch at
Zippy’s.
MORE
FISHING
"I've been fishing with SteveT. the last few days,"
said SteveL. "We are trying to squeeze in as much
fishing as possible because bad weather will be rolling in
on Sunday."
"The fishing's been tough," added SteveT, "with wind gusts
up to 30 mph" blowing across the flats. However, despite
the wind, SteveT "managed to get one 4 pounder after a
million cast."
The two Steves and BobW spread out
over the flats as they try to spot schools of tailing
bonefish.
"I fished with SteveT
yesterday (Saturday). I got out (on the flats) early," said
SteveT. "While I was out there fishing I saw a this guy
zooming across the beach and then plowing through the
water. I thought to myself that can only be Steve
L. No one move that fast, especially through the
water."
SteveL explained that both of them "went out in the
mid-afternoon to catch the rising tide" at their favorite
south shore spot.
"SteveT said he tried everything today and finally put my
fly on and caught his 4 pounder," said SteveL. "In
fact, it's the same pattern fly that BobW used to catch all
three of his fish this past week."
SteveT's 4 pound bonefish he caught
using SteveL's Go-To Fly.
SteveT also had success with his
special fly and managed to get the end of his line
attached to a couple of hot fish but he could not land
them. Too big.
"I hooked a couple of huge
fish on that fly this week but could not bring them
in. It's become the 'Go-To Fly'. It's been great
for blind casting into those deeper pockets as well as
sight casting on skinny water. I've been trying a
variety of fly patterns and this is by far the best
and I haven't seen anything quite like it out
here. I just gave SteveT two more since he may have a
couple more days of fishing, weather permitting."
"He keeps coming up with new flies," moaned SteveT. "I take
home samples and reproducing them and sticking them in my
fly box. Now my fly box is getting too full. I'm sure by
August he'll have another hot fly!"
EQUIPMENT:
The boys used fast-action 7-9
weight fly rods and clear floating weight forward lines
with heavy fluorocarbon leaders and various flies from size
2 to 6, although everyone seems to be using only Steve's
Go-To Fly to catch their bonefish.
A bonefish feeding crater on the
flats. The fish will blow water into the soft, sandy
flats hoping to pull up shrimp and
crabs.