Just got home from the last day of halibut fishing in WA state and it was nuts. You're only allowed to catch them for 10 days in the spring and that's it, and you're allowed 1 per person/day.
You leave at 4am and it takes 4 fucking hours to drive each way to the fishing spot, today was rough going out, luckily I stopped at walmart and bought sweatpants/hoody and rubber pants/jacket for me and my lady.
A little after 8am you get to the middle of nowhere and there are a dozen other boats floating together.
It was mind blowing once you get there. It's 750' deep and takes 3-4 full minutes for your weight to get to the bottom. Only 7 people fish at a time out of 14 people on the boat (due to depth and lines crossing), but it's insane how fast it's over.
Literally nobody had bait on the bottom more than 2 minutes before all 7 people have halibut on the line. We drift while they crank in all 750' with a 50lb doormat and 1 lb lead weight. Then the other 7 people get on and he goes back over the spot. You drop your line and as soon as it hits the bottom it just feels like you're snagged and it starts to pull and you spend 15 minutes reeling that fucker up.
Then I caught the smallest fish so I got to go again hehe and the 2 deckhands and captain kept the smallest fish and let 3 of us catch bigger ones.
And after 45 minutes everyone (14) had a halibut, 3 people caught a second halibut (17 on boat), and we started heading back.
Then we spent the rest of the day catching big lingcod and bottom fish(sea bass, cabazon, etc).
I had a big mofo on the line then ended up realing up a 14" fish (kelp greenling) and was like what/how the fuck and the deck hand pulled it up and tapped on the captain's window and he was like throw it back in just like that, a ling cod was chewing on it... no shit as soon as it hit the bottom I reeled it up a couple feet and just held it for 30 seconds and bam I had a big heavy fish on the line.
The captain said reel it really slowly because the lingcod isn't hooked, they just hang on to it and no shit it came all the way to the surface and he netted it like a pro. I caught 2 more doing the same shit in 30 minutes.
I can't wait for salmon season, and they go out for albacore tuna in august-sept.
You leave at 4am and it takes 4 fucking hours to drive each way to the fishing spot, today was rough going out, luckily I stopped at walmart and bought sweatpants/hoody and rubber pants/jacket for me and my lady.
A little after 8am you get to the middle of nowhere and there are a dozen other boats floating together.
It was mind blowing once you get there. It's 750' deep and takes 3-4 full minutes for your weight to get to the bottom. Only 7 people fish at a time out of 14 people on the boat (due to depth and lines crossing), but it's insane how fast it's over.
Literally nobody had bait on the bottom more than 2 minutes before all 7 people have halibut on the line. We drift while they crank in all 750' with a 50lb doormat and 1 lb lead weight. Then the other 7 people get on and he goes back over the spot. You drop your line and as soon as it hits the bottom it just feels like you're snagged and it starts to pull and you spend 15 minutes reeling that fucker up.
Then I caught the smallest fish so I got to go again hehe and the 2 deckhands and captain kept the smallest fish and let 3 of us catch bigger ones.
And after 45 minutes everyone (14) had a halibut, 3 people caught a second halibut (17 on boat), and we started heading back.
Then we spent the rest of the day catching big lingcod and bottom fish(sea bass, cabazon, etc).
I had a big mofo on the line then ended up realing up a 14" fish (kelp greenling) and was like what/how the fuck and the deck hand pulled it up and tapped on the captain's window and he was like throw it back in just like that, a ling cod was chewing on it... no shit as soon as it hit the bottom I reeled it up a couple feet and just held it for 30 seconds and bam I had a big heavy fish on the line.
The captain said reel it really slowly because the lingcod isn't hooked, they just hang on to it and no shit it came all the way to the surface and he netted it like a pro. I caught 2 more doing the same shit in 30 minutes.
I can't wait for salmon season, and they go out for albacore tuna in august-sept.