Bonito
on the fly
Bonito:
Spanish, from
bonito,
pretty,
related to and resembling the tuna.
You’re standing on the flush bow deck of an
open 20’ fisherman. The
swells of the dawn ocean lift you up and ease you back down.
You’re looking.
Swiveling your head from horizon to shore and back.
And then the water erupts!
The calm sea turns into a churning maelstrom with thousands of silver baitfish leaping and diving, while being strafed by hungry gulls and pelicans from above and torpedoed by hungry fish from below.
The captain yells, “Hang on…here we go,” as the outboard motor roars to life and the boat races to within casting distance of the acre of chaos. The excitement of the hunt is only increased by the necessity to keep in contact with a bouncing pounding deck.
Such is the thrill of ocean fishing for bonito,
a smaller relative of the tuna.
These 10-
For any fisherman, the opportunity to catch
something that will truly test your ability and that of your
equipment is always hard to turn down, so when Capt. Randy Dumars
called me from his cell phone on the ocean side of
A couple of quick phone calls to some local
fishing buddies, Mark Pullen of Waxhaw and Steve “Nightcrawler”
Patterson of Lake Park, and we hurriedly arranged to drive the 550
miles from
We met Capt. Randy at
I was still threading my fly rod when the water was churned to a froth off our port side. “Toss over there!” Capt. Randy yelled to Mark holding his spinning rod. As soon as the jig hit the water Mark was holding a bending rod. No subtle “nibble” here. These fish hit like George Foreman. After 20 minutes, Mark finally brought the subdued fish to the boat.
If you’ve never seen a streamlined pelagic fish fresh from the water, you’ve missed one of life’s visual treats. These silver and blue bonito are iridescent. Beautiful. But we didn’t spend long enjoying the eye candy. Another school of baitfish surfaced 50 yards to starboard, so it was “hang on and run” again.
Steve was casting with his 8 weight rod on the
stern platform and I was casting my
My
Finally, after a half hour, I brought my fish to the boat. We lifted it up to remove my fly and I noticed its mouth was crammed full of baitfish. I was staring into a cave that had over a dozen eyes staring back. That was an unusual experience.
Nightcrawler managed to subdue his bonito, and we took some quick photos before we released the fish. It was apparent all four of us aboard had something in common—our shirts were soaked through-and-through…and it wasn’t with sea water. The activity of chasing fish and fighting them after hook-up had worn us all out. Randy, the youngest of our group, does this sort of thing for a living, so I’m sure his muscles didn’t cry, “Aleve” like ours did.
Writing this article two days after the event I can still feel the tightness in my neck, shoulders, and lower back…and arms and legs and….But, oh what fun it was.
After a couple of hours of this “fun” we were
whipped and came back through the inlet into the
The brackish water of the
If you’re going:
Contact Capt. Randy Dumars at:
Randy's Saltwater Specialties
Captain Randy Dumars
Phone: 407.908.8498
E-mail: randy@fl-fish-guides.com
Sandy Shoes Motel
Phone: 321 723 5584
Contact the author at RFULTON@esouthernoutdoors.com