When you last came to this blog, you may recall that we left off with a night of shark fishing with two of my buddies. One of them, Adam, hooked into a behemoth that we took turns fighting for over two hours. Adam's fish made it clear to me that my ten foot medium heavy surf rod was far too small for an ordeal like that.
So I returned my rod (it was on its maiden voyage so it could be resold) and ordered a twelve foot heavy spinning rod. I had to wait for it to come in so I was in shark fishing limbo until I could pick it up in the store. Once in, I made plans with Adam and James to go shark fishing again. That trip was last night.
We met at 6 pm and rushed to buy eels at Red Top. From there, and a quick stop at McDonald's we made our way to the beach. We set up our rods right about dark and waited. James bought some glow sticks so after we casted we put them on our rods. We all converged in the middle so we could talk. My new rod was at the far left.
About an hour in, my glow stick fell to the ground and I ran over to it...nothing. Probably the wind. This happened again so instead of putting the glow stick on the tip I moved it down to the third guide from the top. Again I had my glow stick fall and I ran to my rod. My Shimano Baitrunner was screaming. I pulled my rod out of the sand spike and set the hook. As I did, I felt the fish drop the eel. Heartbreaking. Adam, never one to pass up a chance to make a moment more awkward, gave me a hug. We suspected it was probably a skate pulling the bait because any size shark could have handled that eel.
A few moments later I felt some tugs on my rod but nothing took it and I left it alone. This was a good decision. I had another run. This time I took the rod out of the sand spike gently. I let the fish run for quite some time. I even took the glow stick off of my rod while it was running. After I felt it make a brief pause I finally set the hook. Fish on!
Unlike the fish we fought ten days ago, I knew within fifteen seconds I was going to see this fish as long as it didn't fall off. After I set the hook it kept running despite my drag being as tight as I could tighten it. But it quickly slowed and I could gain line by pulling back on my rod, reeling down and repeating. During this process the shark had three more runs in it and I had to recover line that I previously had on the spool seconds earlier. Once I got the fish into the shallows it fought much harder. It did not want to go into skinny water. I'd say half the battle was when the fish was within thirty feet of dry sand.
The battle lasted about twenty minutes. I turned on my head lamp just as I got the fish in the wash. Adam pulled it up by the tail. I held it down and lifted the mouth so Adam could pop the hook. James took photos. After the hook came out we took five more photos and got the fish back into the drink. I tried to lead it into the deeper water but it turned on me to bite me. Adam pulled the tail and got it just under knee depth and it swam away.
We fished another ninety minutes but the current really picked up bringing with it a lot of weed. The weed was clinging to our line and dragging our rigs down the shoreline. I even put on ten ounces of lead and the sinkers still rolled. So we packed it in and we drove home.
Lastly, I know next to nothing about shark fishing. Like I did with pike, I ask anyone with experience what I hope are the right questions. With pike, it still hasn't mattered yet since I still haven't caught one. The shark that I caught was the manifestation of learning what size bait to use, time, and the right gear (replacing what I realized was a rod not up to the task with one that is basically a 2x4). After the first fish dropped the bait, I remembered being told to let the fish run and set the hook at a pause. I did this and it paid off. Do not discount getting info from books, the web, or people you can talk to face to face.