The latest Haleiwa, Oahu, Hawaii Fishing Report...
Captain's Log
Thu Mar 31, 2005 1:56:47 PM Haleiwa, Hawaii
Adam Spah, Wade Navratil, Zachary Navratil, and Samantha Navratil caught 1 mahi 22 shibi and 1 shark
|
We got going at 5:00 on this day of 20 kph trades going to my next favorite buoy. No hits trolling so we jigged and put out 2 live aku, and caught some small shibi to start then the bigger ones came up and were biting the light line good. The birds were to much of a problem to be able to bait the shibi, so we just trolled. These folks did great on all these fish. It was a steady bite all morning, lots of triples. On our way in we hooked a mahi on the center and had a shibi hook up on the corner and then it got eaten by a shark, the shark hooked up on the lure and we reeled it in and took it's picture before we let it go. Back in the harbor only Wade and Adam were up for some eyeball consumption, good going men. Aloha Capt Rusty
|
A Note To Our Valued Customers
Communication is vital to the success of your big game fishing charter.
Charter check-in Captain Rusty
|
Two things you need to do:
1. When you arrive on the island, give us a contact phone number, where you can be reached.
2. Contact us the afternoon to early evening before a scheduled charter. (4:00 to 8:00 PM -
We go to bed early)
We start preparing the boat for your charter the prior evening. The morning of your charter,
we start getting the boat ready at 3:00 AM. It would be nice to know if you will be showing up. If you don't
call, we won't prepare the boat since this involves perishables.
We constantly track the weather. It is crucial to keep informed of the forecasted conditions
and other possible changes that can come up. Call us the day before to make sure the ocean conditions
are favorable and we are all set to go.
We need to set a starting time so we know when to expect you at the dock. In addition,
I need to be sure no bananas are smuggled aboard.
We want to show you the best Hawaii deep sea fishing has to offer. A little communication
goes a long ways to making things run well.
Aloha Capt Rusty
|
|