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Messages - TerraFirmaTackle

#1
Recently we hit the road with some other content creators and business folk from the industry, and as is customary for such road trips, we plotted a course that took us into some pretty untapped areas in search of hidden gems.

One of the first stops was in the Sacramento basin in search of natives, including White Sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus), a fish we would be seeing alot of this trip if all went well. Of course, its never a Terra Firma Tackle mission without a chance at something much rarer than the typical fare, and there was a chance that we would be dropping in during the out-migration for the much less common Green Sturgeon (Acipenser medirostris).

We were greeted upon arrival with muddied brown water, likely fire run off as there had been some activity in the area earlier that week, and this may have contributed to our unexpected, but not unwelcome success moments after arrival.

We had baits in all of 30 minutes before we had our first connection! The fish immediately aired out, showing us its distinct green flanks and I was sure to make "excited little girl noises" loud enough to wake the dead! It was a big fish, a genuine giant and it LOOKED to be a green one at that!

After a grueling battle on just 40lb test (euro style carp gear, as we were anticipating slot sized whites) that took us out of the initial hole and past a set of rapids into a narrow cut of the river, nearly a mile from where we first connected, we were able to get hands on the animal and were shocked by the sheer size.

Green Sturgeon are typically much smaller than White Sturgeon, with the largest recorded a mere 6'11". This fish, if it was measured, would have given that record a run for its money. We see alot of sharks and sturgeon, and I would place this fish easily in the 7+ foot range, possibly tickling 8'!



After a long rest, we fished the rest of the day for only a few short knocks and decided to continue on to the next leg, a little further north to the Rogue River in Southern Oregon, the original location we had picked out for our best shot at scratching a Green Sturgeon! With success under our belt and good hunch that the more densely populated (fish speaking, not human wise) Rogue River would be equally, if not more productive.

The environment in Oregon was much more relaxed, and the higher elevation, fog, and pines coupled and sapphire blue water made it feel that much more remote, a world apart from the muddy brown Central California river system.

Our hunch was correct, and we were able to coax a handful of sturgeon, all Greens, to play with us in Oregon. These smaller fish had extremely sharp scutes that made using a rag or gloves a requirement to handle them. Also, Oregon allows the removal of the fish from the water for handling and photographs so long as it is under the 54" size designated by their regulations, a stark contrast to the rules in California.



After the Rogue we continued on to Alaska, and thats another report for another day....BUT....on the way back through the lower 48 we dropped into Idaho for a short session chasing white sturgeon.

The first few hours of the session went by slowly, with only a single 6' class critter to show for it, but around sunrise we connected to a really solid fish and after a short battle on the heavy surf tackle we had her subdued and released!



We then continued on to a truly magical sight fishing location where we landed some half-dozen black suntanned 4-6' fish on light tackle to conclude our sturgeon adventures for this particular trip!




I am growing quite fond of these prehistoric river-dwellers as this "year of the sturgeon" progresses, looking forward to meeting even more of the North Amercian species as the year comes to a close  ;)


#2
While the business(es) have been keeping us home ALOT more than previous years, every so often we get to go walkabout still, and this time we set our sights on Florida for a little bit of exotic hunting centering around ICAST. We alotted 3 days and three nights to this particularly surgical mission, and it worked out well!

The first place we set our sights on was the Panhandle and its network of warm-water tannic rivers in search of record size longnose gar and spawning bowfin, which we of course found in incredible abundance!

However, the river was also home to some even more elusive dinosaur fish, the Gulf Sturgeon (Acipenser oxyrhynchus desotoi) and we knew there was always a chance that one of these rare beasts would make an appearance, but it was such a long shot that we figured it was borderline impossible.

While we were fishing we could watch them air out every so often, and just that alone was magnificent, but when the baitrunner on our eurocarp spinner started screaming....we knew it was no gar! A quick hookset later and we watched the line vanish at an alarming pace.



We were only fishing 40lb braided mainline, so it took a bit of doing to bring the 7+ foot animal within reach of the bank, but once we had her in hand it was a couple quick photos and a glorious release!







After we shook off the awe of that experience we headed back south to the more familiar warm-water canals in search of other exotics, which we found in great numbers, but the real prize for this trip was one thats eluded us a good while, the Red-Bellied Pacu (Piaractus brachypomus).

These fish are exceptionally smart, and while we had located them last year, they were un-catchable during the day as they were far too skittish to even approach with a rod.

So we switched up the game plan, and returned to their known holding sites under cover of darkness and pitched to them from the limits of accuracy.

The explosive power of these animals is insane, and we did not expect the first one to take to be the largest of the pack, and as a result, we found ourselves significantly undergunned, but with a little doing, we coaxed the fish into the net and not a moment too soon as the hook-hold failed just a split second before we got hands on the fish!

The result, an absolute trophy of a Pacu and the final notch in the "established invasive species" tally for south Florida!



At any rate, it was good to get out and get back on the road again for a little mission. It only took 5500 miles of air travel and 1200 miles of driving once we landed but two more big game species got added to the tally and the itch has been satiated....for now.....
#3
Quote from: Chris on May 30, 2022, 10:48:51 AM
Quote from: jrodda on May 29, 2022, 03:09:00 PM
Really nice looking specimen too. Can't believe you got makos and sixgills and multiple prickly sharks before a blue.

So, we have this guy named Ed.... And he accidentally caught a socal hammer and blue from The surf before any of these techniques were perfected, they were just 3ft long.

Thanks man, huge weight off the shoulders with this one. It gets rough when all thats left to chase are impossibles 🤦‍♂️

The accidentally part is what makes me laugh so f@cking hard lol

Yea gotta give ed the surfcasting clout for those little dudes. He reminds me every chance he gets 😅
#4
Quote from: Latimeria on May 29, 2022, 01:49:21 PM
Right on Spencer!  Man, you're surf caught shark list is waaay impressive!  I remember back in my early 30's that I wanted to catch a Sevengill from shore and only heard of one guy who would actually target them.  I had a plan for years... and one day Squatch just said... "Lets try your plan and go for a Sevengill"...  I caught and lost one on the first trip and never looked back.  Mostly it was trying and hoping for exotics since we were only casting baits out, but you guys paddling out baits have just opened up an entire new fishery out here.

I'll be putting this on the front page if you don't mind.  8)

Its that drive for the new that keeps me at it honestly, 90% of the fishing for me and my guys happens indoors, and in our heads, brainstorming and researching. The actual execution is such a small part of it. Usually. 😅

Appreciate the front page!
#5
We dedicate a lot of time and energy, both on and off the water to researching and patterning our target species and planning our expeditions, but no species in our landbased game fishing  journey has taken as much effort, or eluded us as long as the pelagic  Blue Shark (Prionace glauca).

Our endeavors to catch one of these true open ocean sharks while shore fishing  have spanned nearly a decade, spanned the continent, involved two oceans, several offshore islands, and time and again have come up empty. Everyone we talked to, interviewed, involved and fished with had all but told us, it was improbable, if not impossible.

Well impossible odds  are our specialty here at Terra Firma Tackle  so when we got word of several being caught far offshore in SoCal our skiff fishing  friends (Thanks Chris and Tom and Dale!) we cut another expedition short by ten days, rebooked our flights, put together a last second team and shot a 3-day weather gap to one of our local spots we knew had promise.

Mid-morning on day two we got the bite, connected, and when we saw the slender, vibrant Blue Shark  hit the beach, elation ensued. Many years, thousands on thousands of miles, and countless hours had finally come to fruition, and at home, on our local beach, where we always knew we could do it if we had the chance!

We owe tremendous thanks to our supporters, teammates, including Alex  who dropped everything to be our second body, and to all the people that shared their intel with us to give us this chance. Massive thanks to Sandbar Tackle LLC. and Tight Line Braid for the hooks and line we trust when our Holy Grail is at stake!

Who knows when the next opportunity might arise for a shot at these animals from shore, and it may well become the new normal, but we are inexplicably thrilled to have put this one on the #beach for a new landbased shark fishing  first in California!

#dontletthemcatchyouslipping

#6
Fishing Talk / Re: Terafirm tackle
July 29, 2018, 01:38:23 PM
Quote from: Chris on July 29, 2018, 05:40:50 AM
Damn whites taking hammer baits. I'm always gone when they come in. I bet the ones around would give a better fight than that white too.

Oh Im sure they would! Some of the sightings are getting closer and closer! Any day...err...night now :)
#7
Fishing Talk / Re: Terafirm tackle
July 26, 2018, 04:15:02 PM
Oh my. Lets everyone just calm down a bit.

If I may interject here...

The location this fish was caught is actually one of Orange County's less populace, most productive beaches for ALL sharks. In fact, in the last month and a half that beach has produced 4 Soupfin, 1 Seven, a dozen leopard sharks, and 4 hook pulls on real large bottom fish, think big seven. And thats for me only. And all on the kayak baits. Until saturday there had not been a white shark hooked on that beach (to my knowledge) in over three months.....I for one had considered them gone for the year, and welcomed their departure as a way to ensure my big baits would stat in the zone offshore longer in hopes of exotics.

As to the talk of the baits being too large and the tackle too heavy: 1. I apologize, a 7' Sevengill or 5' soupfin or heaven forbid a "bait ray" or surf kitten unfortunatley has NO value to me as a sportsman. In fact a 7' white is not exactly a big deal for me either. This fish was a pest and consumed a bait I had been saving for a real exotic, one of a odd-shaped build that  what was hooked recently at the mouth of Dana Harbor! If I am going to fish, it is a big game affair at all times. I am always hoping for that one fish, be that a seven over 9', a sixgill, a hammer (and yes, they are already here) or heaven forbid that grander mako I lost last summer 400 yards down the beach from the location in question! I apologize if that comes across as offensive, but I consider myself a big game angler, and anything a spinning rod (and i dont mean a superspinner/shorejigger) can handle conformtably is either too small or not aggro enough to arouse me. The big baits serve two purposes: 1. Longevity: The longer soaks in the zone reduce fatigue from kayaking and mean the crabs and lobsters can have at it for longer before its no longer appetizing. 2. Exclusion: Big baits keep the little fish off (usually). Dont really feel like kayaking 100 times a day for repeated bat rays and leopard sharks...unless I need bait....2. The drop distances we are fishing vary from 50-400+ yards. Its not about distance from the beach, its about presenting a bait larger than can be cast on lighter tackle. The hook size is a funtion of bait size. Yes, for soups and leopards our 16/0 hooks are large, but not inneffective, at all. But when you start applying an honest, scale measured amount of drag over 30lbs any less of a hook is going to pull, be that from a seven or a soup. We use the same size hooks for casted gear as for yak gear. You need more purchase with real drag ratings than a mini-hook can give you.

Its not like the only fish we catch is White Sharks, In fact, its not even what we catch most of the time! They just get a disproportionate amount of attention. Those sharks are there, theyre everywhere. They eat all baits, from 1oz to 30lbs. Trust me, reducing the gear will not reduce the hook-ups, only the amount  of gear left in the fish. DFW have sat on my couch and asked that I get the gear back as much as possible when they are hooked. I feel bad that they continually get dragged into these stories as if there was some legal issue.

My personal opinion in this: More whites are hooked because there are more whites. I personally hook more whites because I'm on the water more. When we only casted we only lost more, not hooked less. And then they were swimming around with gear and that made negative press too! Damned if I do damned if I dont! I don't hide because I have been assured that my
practices are solid and my methods within the statute. When asked to not fish somewhere by lifeguards I leave, when asked I explain. When asked by DFW to design a flotation device that would not remain affixed to the fish upon pier release, I did. When asked not to pose for photos we refrained from that practice.

I have been staying out of the fray on here alot once I got wind of some negativity surrounding my fishing style; a style very popular in other locales just emerging here in California. I did not wish to offend or start a fire here, you  guys have a community and I appreciate that. I mistook the mindset here to be of a big game nature but I apologize for misreading the room.

Don't go kayak baits if you dont want, dont daylight fish if you dont want, and dont fish heavy tackle if you dont want. But I intend to fish a way that is proven and effective and in search of that big landbased T, cali landbased hammer, landbased blue, or landbased mako (again!). And Ill enjoy catching some truely large bottomfish along the way.
#8
Quote from: Pinoyfisher on July 23, 2018, 11:41:11 AM
Quote from: BackBayMan on July 23, 2018, 11:30:18 AM
Quote from: 1morecast on July 23, 2018, 10:57:07 AM
Better chance of catching a trout now then a shark with these conditions.

Not if you know how to catch sharks this time of year ;D

We just need a fool to paddle out some baits.

I will gladly come down and paddle some with you guys!
#9
Quote from: Pinoyfisher on July 19, 2018, 04:31:43 PM
Quote from: TerraFirmaTackle on July 19, 2018, 03:12:20 PM
Quote from: DJGGustafson13 on July 15, 2018, 10:14:48 AM
I will actually be there the first week of September

Do reach out when you're in the OC, were on the water nearly every day and will be able to find you something to pull on!

Nearly every day?!! Life is good!

Usually only miss a day due to injury, severe weather (and its gotta be really severe)  or an alarm malfunction!
#10
Quote from: Latimeria on July 22, 2018, 06:57:00 AM
I have a tuna head from a 39# ahi....

But in all seriousness, the back straps and belly stip left on the frame after cleaning from yellowfin and bluefin are the single best baits I have ever used! Tough as nails, oily and good for multiple casts!
#11
Quote from: Latimeria on July 22, 2018, 06:57:00 AM
I have a tuna head from a 39# ahi....

*drool*
#12
Quote from: DJGGustafson13 on July 15, 2018, 10:14:48 AM
I will actually be there the first week of September

Do reach out when you're in the OC, were on the water nearly every day and will be able to find you something to pull on!
#13
The one that got away is still buggin' me! Broke my long standing rule of never running mono/flouro on the float and it cost us :( Next time!
#14
Lots of sunken weed where we were hunting yesterday too! Stuck it out and eeked out two bites but didn't stay tight for long. Bumming over the surf forcast for the weekend :(
#15
Start the day like any other, early morning pier session chasing Mr. T. Been a few fish around so figure we should connect fairly quickly....

By 6:00am I'm tight on what is obviously a better grade fish than expected. I fish fairly light for Threshers, 30lb line being standard fare. Well, on this particular day i was undergunned. Fish blistered off and ran through all but 20 yards of my line before I got her turned. 45 minutes in we get our first look and take the gaff shot.

This came over the rail:



Share the stoke with my team and start thinking about how to use that delicious looking head! Since we got tight on a fairly decent 7 on the last thresher head we dropped, figure Ill run down south a bit and try dropping the head in a new location.

On the sand by 4, lines in by 4:30, easy launch, zero surf. We figure the timing is gonna be a sundown bite and whattya know, sun starts to fade and one of the lighter rods gets a slow roll....tighten up, head shake....off. Damn. Get that bait back out! Teammate jumps in the yak and gets the bait reset but before he can make it back the thresher bait goes off HARD! Run over, short feed, lever forward and bam! Were Tight! A few shouts later my sand hand is back on the beach and were watching 150 yards of line leave at 33lbs of drag.....big boy.

Start gaining a bit, still no signs of visual confirmation and then......the handle breaks off the reel.....are you kidding me? WHAT THE....



No matter, there's enough of a stump to keep grinding!

Time wears on, critter and I start to get tired and finally we get her in the wash.....



Hook pops out with no fuss, quick drag back out and got the beast released...



Pretty stoked to say the least. One hell of a day for me, beat up, tired, and back on the sand for more the next day! Fishing is hard.....