Vlad
02-04-2006, 02:00
I visited Caleta del Fueste between 18 and 25 of March.
My stay there was very pleasant mainly due to the excellent accommodation at Casa Kerisa, the Jane & Kevin's villa:
http://www.fuerteventuravilla.info/
Big thanks to them.
The weather was lovely. What a change from the cold and rainy Kidderminster :D
I made a big effort to arrive at Caleta well prepared with tackle and information.
I've printed a catalogue of all species of fish ( more than 200 of them ) that can be caught from the shore in Fuerteventura.
I had a full set of surface and sinking lures, as well as a bag full of plastic worms of all kind.
I brought with me FIVE rods and reels for all type of fishing conditions I may encounter.
And despite of all this, the results of 6 day fishing for up to 16 hours a day were pitiful.
I don't know what I did wrong because I did everything in the fishing books without much to show for it
The situation was as follows, small fish like 7-8 inches bogues, 3-4 types of small sea bream ant 5-6 inches mackerels could be caught easily in big quantities all day long on bred and shrimp.
Any other fish was a rarity.
The mullet was much more difficult to catch than I expected. The method with the float and treble hooks in French bread was not very successful, most probably because there was no French bread in the supermarket until the last day of my stay, and the ordinary bread was snatched form the hooks by the crafty mullet without any hook-ups. I managed to hook only one fish with this method.
From the reports in the forum I was led to believe that there is a lot of gar fish and barracuda close to the shore. I've used any lure imaginable for 6 days and I also had a float with a live small mackerel or mackerel filet for 10-12 hours in the water for 6 days and I didn't have a bite!
That was real puzzle to me as there was supposed to be sea bass, tuna and blue fish around.
The most puzzling fact to me was that for 6 nights I did not have a single bite on the rod with live small mackerel on the hook. There were supposed to be a lot of night predators like sharks, rays and other bottom fish. Very strange. Bay the way I haven't seen any of the locals to fish at night. They most probably knew that it's a waste of time. The only fish I was catching at night was the infamous bogue.
The squid proved to be not very effective. Apart from bogues I managed to catch only a baby sand tiger shark on it. If you happened to catch one - eat it. It was absolutely delicious!
Every day between 4 pm and 7 pm a dozen of local angles arrived to fish with lures. The used mainly 13 cm rapala deep diving plugs. The result of all this effort was two bonitos, of 10 lb each, caught for the period of 6 days.
I used the same plugs as the locals but didn't have a touch, like most of them.
The only success I registered was hooking into a huge ( over 80 lb ) Bull ray - the locals called it Manta in Spanish. It took a live mackerel on the bottom in the middle of the day. After a very exiting battle that lasted more than an hour, with the help of the local fishing expert Pepe, who was pooling directly on the line while I was retrieving it on the reel ( it was impossible to shift the huge fish off the bottom only with the power of the rod ), we managed to bring the fish within 5-6 feet from the surface. It looked enormous, like a dinner table. Pepe tried to hook it, with a gaff (he fetched from his car), while holding the line. The fish suddenly turned and the wire of the snap link on the swivel of the metal trace - SNAPPED! :sad:
Never mind, I had the most exciting fight with the biggest fish I ever hooked in my live!
This thrill alone was worth coming to Fuerte!
My second success was the fact that with the help of Pepe, I've learned the secret how to catch Parrot fish ( Vieja in Spanish ).
This is very prestigious and highly desired fish by the local anglers. It is one of the most delicious fish from the island.
I will share my secret knowledge with you :cool:
The parrot fish has a very strong bonny beak (like a parrot's beak ) with which it crushes trough the shells of the crabs and molluscs.
It reaches up to 50 cm in length and leaves by vertical rock faces at depth between 20 and 50 metres.
The best time to fish for it is early in the morning during the months of March and April.
It is not active at night!
It is fished with a 8 - 12 g sliding float, with at least 10 lb fluorocarbon hooklenght on a 14lb mainline.
The heavy lines are necessary because after the fish is hooked, it immediately rushes to a hole in the rock and once in there it cannot be moved. A lot like an eel. So you need the strong line to bully it away from the rock immediately after it is hooked. It is not easy, when you have to drag it up from at least 20 metres of depth.
The three most important factors for successful fishing of the parrot fish are:
- strong, size 5- 6/0 hook, straight with very short shank.
- the sea mast be very calm, because the led is 20 metres below the float and even the small waves make the float to go under with each wave. This makes detecting the bites very difficult.
- the bait is a small crab with the size of 5p coin (dead), the locals gather at low tide from beneath the rocks at the shallow beach between the Atlantico centre and the Salinas ( the salt museum ).
The bait should be about 3 feet off the bottom. Te crab is impaled on the tip of the hook. with the point just showing trough ( just one small crab ).
Before start fishing, gather two dozen of sea urchins. Crash them slightly - just to brake them to 2-3 peaces, 4-5 at a time ant throw them in the swim as loosefeed.
Fish close to the rockface, no more than 2-3 yards out.
The bite is short and sharp. You have to be ready to strike into it as fast as possible. The fish attacks the bait from above. If you don't strike immediately, the small crab is inevitably gone. If you miss a bite, retrieve the hook to re-bait. There is no point to wait for a second bite. The crab is gone.
It took me three days to work out why the locals are catching the parrot fish and I cannot.
Following this strategy I managed to land one Parrot fish at 10 am on the third day.
The next morning armed with my new knowlege I was at the rocks at sunrise, just to discover to my disappointment that the sea was quite choppy and it was impossible to float-fish close to the rocks.
I tried ledgering with braid, but all I could feel was a short gentle nock and the crab was gone. It was impossible to strike into this nocks quick enough.
Now a few more tips I picked up.
The small mackerels are excellent bait. To catch them fish with a float of 4 g and hook №12. They take everything - bred paste. small peace of shrimp even small filet of other mackerel. They are very tasty fried too.
The best bait on the island was shrimp. In the supermarket they don't sell fresh shrimps, so you buy the freshly frozen green ones - not the boiled red ones. When you arrive at the fishing spot, first peel off two dozens of shrimps and leave them to dry on the sun. They become rubbery and though. Small peaces of them stay much longer on the hook.
To catch tuna use 13 cm very deep diving plugs. At least 6-8 feet.
Beware small yellow dragon fish with black dot on the dorsal fin. It is very venomous. I caught at least two dozens of them.
Always have your arterial forceps with you to unhook it without touching it.
Basically, don't touch any fish you don't know. I had my catalogue with the venomous fishes in my bag for quick reference :cool:
Here are some of the photos I took:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/salinas1.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/2006_03250131.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/laguna5.jpg
The typical catch
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/laguna2.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/laguna6.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/akula.jpg
For five days I fished the rocks at the Salinas - The Salt museum, because the water was deep -20 metres, and it is a popular mark with the locals.
This is the place looking towards Caleta at low tide.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/salinas2.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/salinas6.jpg
This is the place looking towards the Salinas at low tide
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/salinas7.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/salinas3.jpg
And this is the place looking towards the Salinas at high tide
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/salinas8.jpg
The epic fight with the Bullray
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/manta.jpg
My first Parrot fish
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/vieja1.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/vieja3.jpg
It was delicious!
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/vieja4.jpg
Puerto del Rosario
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/RosarioS.jpg
Corralejo
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/coralejo1.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/coralejo2.jpg
And at the end:
The bull ray I never landed :sad:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/bullray4.jpg
My stay there was very pleasant mainly due to the excellent accommodation at Casa Kerisa, the Jane & Kevin's villa:
http://www.fuerteventuravilla.info/
Big thanks to them.
The weather was lovely. What a change from the cold and rainy Kidderminster :D
I made a big effort to arrive at Caleta well prepared with tackle and information.
I've printed a catalogue of all species of fish ( more than 200 of them ) that can be caught from the shore in Fuerteventura.
I had a full set of surface and sinking lures, as well as a bag full of plastic worms of all kind.
I brought with me FIVE rods and reels for all type of fishing conditions I may encounter.
And despite of all this, the results of 6 day fishing for up to 16 hours a day were pitiful.
I don't know what I did wrong because I did everything in the fishing books without much to show for it
The situation was as follows, small fish like 7-8 inches bogues, 3-4 types of small sea bream ant 5-6 inches mackerels could be caught easily in big quantities all day long on bred and shrimp.
Any other fish was a rarity.
The mullet was much more difficult to catch than I expected. The method with the float and treble hooks in French bread was not very successful, most probably because there was no French bread in the supermarket until the last day of my stay, and the ordinary bread was snatched form the hooks by the crafty mullet without any hook-ups. I managed to hook only one fish with this method.
From the reports in the forum I was led to believe that there is a lot of gar fish and barracuda close to the shore. I've used any lure imaginable for 6 days and I also had a float with a live small mackerel or mackerel filet for 10-12 hours in the water for 6 days and I didn't have a bite!
That was real puzzle to me as there was supposed to be sea bass, tuna and blue fish around.
The most puzzling fact to me was that for 6 nights I did not have a single bite on the rod with live small mackerel on the hook. There were supposed to be a lot of night predators like sharks, rays and other bottom fish. Very strange. Bay the way I haven't seen any of the locals to fish at night. They most probably knew that it's a waste of time. The only fish I was catching at night was the infamous bogue.
The squid proved to be not very effective. Apart from bogues I managed to catch only a baby sand tiger shark on it. If you happened to catch one - eat it. It was absolutely delicious!
Every day between 4 pm and 7 pm a dozen of local angles arrived to fish with lures. The used mainly 13 cm rapala deep diving plugs. The result of all this effort was two bonitos, of 10 lb each, caught for the period of 6 days.
I used the same plugs as the locals but didn't have a touch, like most of them.
The only success I registered was hooking into a huge ( over 80 lb ) Bull ray - the locals called it Manta in Spanish. It took a live mackerel on the bottom in the middle of the day. After a very exiting battle that lasted more than an hour, with the help of the local fishing expert Pepe, who was pooling directly on the line while I was retrieving it on the reel ( it was impossible to shift the huge fish off the bottom only with the power of the rod ), we managed to bring the fish within 5-6 feet from the surface. It looked enormous, like a dinner table. Pepe tried to hook it, with a gaff (he fetched from his car), while holding the line. The fish suddenly turned and the wire of the snap link on the swivel of the metal trace - SNAPPED! :sad:
Never mind, I had the most exciting fight with the biggest fish I ever hooked in my live!
This thrill alone was worth coming to Fuerte!
My second success was the fact that with the help of Pepe, I've learned the secret how to catch Parrot fish ( Vieja in Spanish ).
This is very prestigious and highly desired fish by the local anglers. It is one of the most delicious fish from the island.
I will share my secret knowledge with you :cool:
The parrot fish has a very strong bonny beak (like a parrot's beak ) with which it crushes trough the shells of the crabs and molluscs.
It reaches up to 50 cm in length and leaves by vertical rock faces at depth between 20 and 50 metres.
The best time to fish for it is early in the morning during the months of March and April.
It is not active at night!
It is fished with a 8 - 12 g sliding float, with at least 10 lb fluorocarbon hooklenght on a 14lb mainline.
The heavy lines are necessary because after the fish is hooked, it immediately rushes to a hole in the rock and once in there it cannot be moved. A lot like an eel. So you need the strong line to bully it away from the rock immediately after it is hooked. It is not easy, when you have to drag it up from at least 20 metres of depth.
The three most important factors for successful fishing of the parrot fish are:
- strong, size 5- 6/0 hook, straight with very short shank.
- the sea mast be very calm, because the led is 20 metres below the float and even the small waves make the float to go under with each wave. This makes detecting the bites very difficult.
- the bait is a small crab with the size of 5p coin (dead), the locals gather at low tide from beneath the rocks at the shallow beach between the Atlantico centre and the Salinas ( the salt museum ).
The bait should be about 3 feet off the bottom. Te crab is impaled on the tip of the hook. with the point just showing trough ( just one small crab ).
Before start fishing, gather two dozen of sea urchins. Crash them slightly - just to brake them to 2-3 peaces, 4-5 at a time ant throw them in the swim as loosefeed.
Fish close to the rockface, no more than 2-3 yards out.
The bite is short and sharp. You have to be ready to strike into it as fast as possible. The fish attacks the bait from above. If you don't strike immediately, the small crab is inevitably gone. If you miss a bite, retrieve the hook to re-bait. There is no point to wait for a second bite. The crab is gone.
It took me three days to work out why the locals are catching the parrot fish and I cannot.
Following this strategy I managed to land one Parrot fish at 10 am on the third day.
The next morning armed with my new knowlege I was at the rocks at sunrise, just to discover to my disappointment that the sea was quite choppy and it was impossible to float-fish close to the rocks.
I tried ledgering with braid, but all I could feel was a short gentle nock and the crab was gone. It was impossible to strike into this nocks quick enough.
Now a few more tips I picked up.
The small mackerels are excellent bait. To catch them fish with a float of 4 g and hook №12. They take everything - bred paste. small peace of shrimp even small filet of other mackerel. They are very tasty fried too.
The best bait on the island was shrimp. In the supermarket they don't sell fresh shrimps, so you buy the freshly frozen green ones - not the boiled red ones. When you arrive at the fishing spot, first peel off two dozens of shrimps and leave them to dry on the sun. They become rubbery and though. Small peaces of them stay much longer on the hook.
To catch tuna use 13 cm very deep diving plugs. At least 6-8 feet.
Beware small yellow dragon fish with black dot on the dorsal fin. It is very venomous. I caught at least two dozens of them.
Always have your arterial forceps with you to unhook it without touching it.
Basically, don't touch any fish you don't know. I had my catalogue with the venomous fishes in my bag for quick reference :cool:
Here are some of the photos I took:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/salinas1.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/2006_03250131.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/laguna5.jpg
The typical catch
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/laguna2.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/laguna6.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/akula.jpg
For five days I fished the rocks at the Salinas - The Salt museum, because the water was deep -20 metres, and it is a popular mark with the locals.
This is the place looking towards Caleta at low tide.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/salinas2.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/salinas6.jpg
This is the place looking towards the Salinas at low tide
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/salinas7.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/salinas3.jpg
And this is the place looking towards the Salinas at high tide
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/salinas8.jpg
The epic fight with the Bullray
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/manta.jpg
My first Parrot fish
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/vieja1.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/vieja3.jpg
It was delicious!
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/vieja4.jpg
Puerto del Rosario
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/RosarioS.jpg
Corralejo
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/coralejo1.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/FuerteventuraMarch2006/coralejo2.jpg
And at the end:
The bull ray I never landed :sad:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v649/HarryPHotter/bullray4.jpg