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A great catch [September 2003]
When Shayne Dibben married Shimano’s Mark Mikkelsen in Vanuatu recently, there was never
any doubt that they’d have a fishing honeymoon. The surprise was that the
wedding album will now include photos of Shayne proudly nursing a world record
wahoo caught on fly.
The mad keen angling couple chose to exchange vows at the Iririki Island Resort
in Port Vila, a decision based on the resort’s romantic getaway reputation and
its access to red hot gamefishing – not necessarily in that order.
After the nuptials, Mark and Shayne -- who is a well known game fisher and an
active 10-year member of the Port Hacking gamefishing club -- spent several
days of great blue marlin fishing aboard leading charter boat Nevagivup.
Witnessing Shayne’s prowess with rod and reel, Capt Charles Wheeler and crewman
Eric Festa suggested the lanky blonde try her skills with a fly rod against the
local wahoo population. Having caught only trout on fly, Shayne didn’t like her
chances with these notorious marine missiles, but she was keen to give it a go.
On Friday, September 19, after a couple of near catches of both wahoo and world
record sized sailfish, her determination and skill won out when she boated a
26.3 pound wahoo on 10 kg tippet. If her world record claim is accepted, she’ll
make the IGFA books as the first woman to take this speedy species on the fly.
Congratulations to Shayne and Mark on tying the knot and for making great
catches all round!
Big Blacks in Vanuatu ? [July 2003]
The recent capture in Vanuatu of a black marlin tipping the scales at nearly
400 kgs has drawn renewed attention to the South Pacific fishery and sparked
speculation that the island group may be a staging point for giant blacks en
route to Australia's Great Barrier Reef.
On July 19, Capt Charles Wheeler, skipper of the charter boat Nevagivup, boated
the 397 kg (875 pounds) marlin with the aid of local crewman Eric Feasta, It
was the largest black yet taken in Vanuatu and the second largest billfish to
be caught there on IGFA class tackle.
Becoming known in recent years as a high calibre blue marlin fishery, Vanuatu
may also become a hot destination for black marlin captures as more is learned
about the movements of the species through the region.
In the eight months he has skippered a professional charter boat in Vanuatu,
English-born Capt Wheeler says he has encountered reasonable numbers of black
marlin and had caught and released an 850 pound specimen in May. “There are
often black marlin, but the blues are more prolific, so when fishing for big
billfish we have tended to specifically target blues, which like deeper water
than the black marlin,” he said.
With relatively little known about the billfish potential of Vanuatu in
general, Wheeler aims to spend more time studying the movements of black marlin
here. “During the winter months, we plan to devote more time to fishing baits
in the shallows (100 to 700 metres) to see just how good this black marlin
fishery may be,” he said.
If there proves to be a consistent mid-year run of black marlin through the
Vanuatu islands, as is speculated, could this be a migration stopover for the
big blacks that arrive in the waters off Cairns around November? According to
leading Australian marine researcher Dr Julian Pepperell, it's a strong
possibility.
Says Pepperell: "We know they go somewhere -- why not Vanuatu? Recent
encounters and captures would certainly suggest that."
Anglers interested in learning more about Vanuatu's blue and black marlin, and
general gamefishing in the islands, should contact Kahuna Charters through
dbsportfish@ozemail.com.au
Vanuatu's little
boat - big blue [April 2003]
Vanuatu may yet be in its infancy as a world renowned game fishing destination,
but a recent capture suggests it's only a matter of time before the true
potential of this fishery is realised.
A mere half dozen game boats currently operate from the capital Port Vila, and
only half of these are professionally equipped to fish the productive blue
marlin grounds just 12 miles from the Port. Alongside the gamefishers, a small
fleet of open boats work the local FADS for skipjack and yellowfin tuna for
sale on the local market It was aboard one of these small commercial craft
that, on April 19 [2003], a trio of local fishermen enacted a Hemingway-style
adventure that culminated in the capture of a leviathan blue marlin.
Trolling at Tukatuk Fad, just five miles offshore, it was business as usual
aboard one of Ren "Daddy" Laura's 14-foot skipjack boats. Crewmen Anatole
Coulon, John Pascal and Tout Lorenzo were fishing 400 pound line with an Alvey
deck winch when the huge marlin nailed their Pakula-copy medium Sprocket lure.
On its first run, the fish snatched their full load of line, and the crewmen
chose to secure the winch handles, lock off the line, and kill the 25 hp
outboard. For the next three and a half hours, they let the big blue tow them
out to sea.
The sleigh ride
ended when the exhausted fish gave up and sank, and another arduous hour was
spent getting the fish back to the boat and tying it alongside. With
insufficient fuel to get back to base, the crew headed to the nearest land, to
arrange more fuel for the final leg. Their eventual return to Devil's Point in
Vila Harbour was met by an excited gathering who'd turned out to celebrate the
return of the missing boatmen and to witness the monster they'd pulled from the
deep.
With no adequate scales available, the marlin was hung from a beachside tree
for measurement and photography. As the fish was hoisted, a hole had to be
quickly dug in the sand to make way for most of its bill. Weight approximations
based on measurements -- short length 3.3 metres (130 inches), girth 2.00
metres (79 inches), overall length 3.6 metres (142 inches) -- put the blue at
around 1000 pounds. Subsequent estimations by experienced game skippers who've
viewed the photos, range around the 1100 pound mark, due to how fat the fish
was. Whatever the exact weight, it was unquestionably a phenomenal catch from a
14-foot boat.
The capture of this goliath followed months of notable runs of blues in the
140–300 pound range. Since late 2002, swarms of these smaller marlin had been
encountered on the local grounds and skippers were laying odds that the big
fish would not be far behind. Though no others were caught, several more giant
fish were fought and lost during the months of April and May, adding credence
to the growing speculation that Vanuatu may be a spawning ground for the
Pacific blue marlin.
A new charter operation in Vanuatu [Dec 2002]
Just two weeks after being hoisted from a cargo ship, Vanuatu's newest gamefishing charter
boat has captured that country's first broadbill swordfish on rod and reel.
The custom outfitted 34 foot Blackwatch Nevagivup is owned and run by English
skipper Charles Wheeler, who arrived in Vanuatu in April 2002 after spending
two years charter fishing in Kenya.
With the late November arrival of Nevagivup, Capt Wheeler wasted little time in
applying the deep-trolling techniques he'd honed on Kenyan broadbill to the
fish-rich waters of Vanuatu.
His first broadbill outing, on the night of December 10, resulted in three shots
and the captures of a 65kg and a 25kg fish on Pakula lures – another milestone
in Vanuatu's growing reputation as the Pacific's newest gamefishing Mecca. And,
coming after Nevagivup's tally of 13 blue marlin raised for six releases in its
first five fishing days, it was a spectacular debut for Wheeler's charter
company, Blue Marlin Gamefishing Vanuatu.
Alongside Wheeler in the new operation are Vanuatuan Captain Eric Festa, widely
regarded as the country's finest skipper, and experienced Vanuatu sport, game
and fly fishing guide Dean Butler.
Nevagivup, (which boasts an impressive CV from its former guise as Devil's
Pride, owned and operated by renowned Australian Captain Paul Whelan) has been
fully outfitted with Shimano reels and custom built Ian Miller rods, in
readiness for the serious pursuit of all of Vanuatu's wealth of gamefishing
targets.
Already, record hunters have signed up for 60 days in 2003, looking to target
Vanuatu's legendary blue marlin on ultra light and fly tackle and there are
charters already in place to specifically targeting grander blues. With the
potential for world class blue marlin fishing and some of the best medium to
light tackle fishing for wahoo, yellow fin tuna, sailfish and dog tooth tuna
going in the world today it is exciting times ahead for the crew and guests of
Nevagivup.
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