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Virginia Beach Sport Fishing > VBSF.net Sport Fishing Forums > Offshore, Gulf Stream & Canyons (Ocean City MD to Hatteras NC)
Billable
BillableOurs is pulling out all stops to continue to raise fish this season. We read about some tricks used on some Florida boats, and our recent haul-out provided an opportunity to try it this season. We'll let you know. cool_smiley.gif
Tight lines.
Dave
Click to view attachment
fordbjr
I've always wondered if those actually help.
Knot Too Fast
I have heard that the Kingfish guys do that a lot. Best of luck with it. If the experiment works, maybe you could get Don to make a thousand Ballyhoo mesh spreader to hang over the front of the boat and dangle below.

--Brett
Billable
QUOTE (Knot Too Fast @ Mar 28 2007, 10:42 AM)
I have heard that the Kingfish guys do that a lot. Best of luck with it. If the experiment works, maybe you could get Don to make a thousand Ballyhoo mesh spreader to hang over the front of the boat and dangle below.

--Brett
*


I think he's working on an 8-boat spreader bar.
Dave
Marlin Maniac
Ahhh, so that's where all the flathead tuna come from.... biggrin.gif
peejcj8
I read an article last night from a MIT scientist who said that painting ballyhoo on your hull frightens tuna and makes Billfish unhappy and not wanting to eat.
bobdu11
that's awesome Dave...makes me hungry !...

Eric...you aint' right man...lol.....Bob
peejcj8
They said that it make your boat look to tuna to be a very large gay rabid whale.

Good luck dave.

I tried to get George to paint ballyhoo on my hull, but he was too tired from sanding to skillfully paint them.

Eric
Marlin Maniac
There's something horribly, terribly wrong with you Eric! And it's very entertaining! LMAO!
Fish Dad
Is there a trick to keep the slim from covering them up? Is that white bottom paint? Or just the hull showing thru? Just curious. Where I keep my boat, the slim build up in the summer is horrible.

But the boat that looks like a school of baitfish to the tuna.....wins. action-smiley-033.gif
fordbjr
QUOTE (Fish Dad @ Mar 28 2007, 02:42 PM)
Is there a trick to keep the slim from covering them up?  Is that white bottom paint?  Or just the hull showing thru?  Just curious.  Where I keep my boat, the slim build up in the summer is horrible. 

But the boat that looks like a school of baitfish to the tuna.....wins.  action-smiley-033.gif
*

They are painted on
REELAX
Next time your offshore and hear a thumping noise... you will know what it is.


Tom
Mega Bite
Some of those guys used to paint their Props Bright Day Glo orange also.
Billable
QUOTE (Mega Bite @ Mar 28 2007, 07:04 PM)
Some of those guys used to paint their Props Bright Day Glo orange also.
*


After the hull was bottom painted, I made a stencil and used Grey ACT Bottom paint with a handful of glitter thrown in. I figure as the ablative paint wears down it should expose fresh glitter. If it gets them looking they will see the dredge and teasers and the trailed baits!!!! Who knows. We'll see.
Tight lines.
Dave
longhorn
Dave they look top shelf. Keep us posted.Keith what are the orange props simulating ? Maybe a teaser.....
skinnys-kid
Nice job Dave..they look great and I'm sure will work. I saw a boat in Fla at a yrad that had nearly the entire rear thrid painted with hoos. Looked fishy. It was in the yard to remove sailfish bills biggrin.gif biggrin.gif
Mega Bite
I guess The Orange attracts the TUNAS.
georgebarronj
I lived in Miami in 2002 and looked for squid or hoo stickers for my boat but could not find em.

Would be good for a boat without bottom paint.

shark_smiley.gif
Captn Fatbeard
I'm gonna paint a picture of the Fonz on the bottom of my boat!!
peejcj8
I not sure if Henry Winkler raises fish or not. Now he did raise some sharks one time by jumping his bike over them.
Marrdro
QUOTE (Billable @ Mar 28 2007, 09:30 AM)
BillableOurs is pulling out all stops to continue to raise fish this season.  We read about some tricks used on some Florida boats, and our recent haul-out provided an opportunity to try it this season.  We'll let you know.  cool_smiley.gif
Tight lines.
Dave
Click to view attachment
*


Dave, You are a sneaky sneaky man. biggrin.gif

I can just read the headlines know:

This just in, a rash of Tuna are being caught off the eastern shore with huge lumps on thier heads. Reasons unknown biggrin.gif
m.t. pockets
Mega


I have a Dayglow orange prop on my boat, the previous owner said it raised fish in Jax Fla, I kept it on so no one has an excuse to run into the back of me while on the trailer.....
Capt Nemo
I have seen some boats in NJ with squid painted over the entire hull in glow in the dark paint. Not sure what kind of paint it was but it could create an interesting effect at night with the sword lights hanging over the side of the boat.
Captain Jack
My boys and I are cutting out fish shapes from the reflective holographic tape like they use on spoons to do the same thing on the hull of our boat that isn't bottom painted. The shape is a cross between a menhaden and a really fat ballyhoo. I am getting ready to add a thru-hull transducer. I think the high speed fairing (blue) will look like a small tuna in the bait ball!!
Billable
QUOTE (Captain Jack @ Mar 30 2007, 03:31 AM)
My boys and I are cutting out fish shapes from the reflective holographic tape like they use on spoons to do the same thing on the hull of our boat that isn't bottom painted. The shape is a cross between a menhaden and a really fat ballyhoo.  I am getting ready to add a thru-hull transducer. I think the high speed fairing (blue) will look like a small tuna in the bait ball!!
*


Now you're thinking. Just add a set of eyes on the fairing. Your're Boys are truly on their way to a lifetime of addiction of the best kind...quality time with Dad and pursuit of fish! Good luck.
Dave
Captain Jack
The eyes are a great idea! I hope nothing bites a big chunk out of the bottom of the boat!
Tony S
I hope a 1200 pound blue marlin doesnt slam into the bottom! A few of the OI boats have bills stuck in their hulls. biggrin.gif


QUOTE
THE OSA ANGLER: A report on all things fishing

If you test Costa Rica’s cobalt Pacific waters in search of marlin, sails, tuna, or dolphin fish you will almost surely use the method of "trolling" to attract your trophy. There are many opinions as to where the art of trolling for sport fish originated. One night, many years back, my good friend Jon West and I were working our way towards the worm at the bottom of a concoction made from cactus when Jon shared his theory with me. According to Jon, the first marlin caught by this method was taken in Atlantic waters. "Large Nordic men with barrel chests and arms like steel pipes rowed big wooden boats across the Atlantic long before the conquistadores showed up in their wimpy blow boats," Jon began. One such boat was the Nilram, a giant deep V walk-around powered by 40 Norsemen. On its many crossings it was always captained by Dahs Evol Noprat, an angry red-headed Viking with buck teeth and bad breath. Needless to say, Dahs was quite an angler. After pillaging villages and devouring raw meat, he would comb local rivers and piers for record catches.

He lived to fish and fished to live. Being his fishing buddy was akin to golfing with Attila the Hun (who Jon claims was a third cousin of Dahs). In fact, fishing with Dahs could be deadly. He once had a man beheaded for goofing a net job and enabling a trophy salmon to escape. Dahs had heard stories of giant tuna and marlin eating men that had fallen overboard during the transatlantic crossings, but like most fishing stories told by large bearded carnivores, he believed none of them. Only to see it was to believe it. Prior to his next journey across the Atlantic, Dahs ordered the town’s tackle master, LeHork Giba-Leaux, to build him a giant rod and reel capable of whipping any beast in the sea. Including, he joked, his wife. The Nilram’s crew waited at the dock as Dahs picked up his new rod in town. As he was walking out the door, LeHork stopped him. "Wait" he said, reaching out to hand Dahs a package holding a pair of lures about 12 inches long, each consisting of small rounded heads trailed by dyed swatches of horse hair that looked like shrunken Crystal Gayle skulls.

An excited Dahs returned to the Nilram and ordered an immediate castoff. Within 12 hours the boat had crossed three color changes and was cruising a healthy eight knots over the cobalt seas. He began rigging his new rod as the crew rowed in sweltering heat. He carefully tied a Bimini, attaching a 12 foot shock leader, a 12/0 Mustad hook and, finally, the miniature Crystal Gayle head. A shrill cry broke his concentration. "She’s taking water on the port stern!" Dahs rushed to the back of the boat to find a river of water gushing in and a large marlin bill stuck through the boats' hull. He grabbed the ships' handy-man-galley guy Filly, a midget troll from Lutzemburg, and tossed him overboard. Dahs tied an 11 foot rope around the midget’s waist and fastened it to a stern cleat. With hammer and nails in hand, the midget was to remove the spear (it was too big to be removed from the inside) and patch the boat with a large board. "Keep the boat moving," Dahs shouted to his crew as he hurried to get his rod ready. "We're going to catch this beast." Dahs climbed halfway up the flying bridge and scanned the water for the rogue fish. Screams came from below. "Help me! Help me! This fish is trying to eat me alive."

Dahs turned to see the bill-less marlin slashing his stub at Filly the troll. The giant fish lit up in purple with its fin erect. "Keep rowing! Faster! Faster!" Dahs screamed at the crew. "The fish thinks the dumb troll is bait. Keep it going! Faster!" The faster the Norsemen rowed, the angrier the fish got. It tried in vain to slash the poor troll, but there just wasn't any bill there to do it. "Now someone pull Filly from the water!" ordered Dahs. He dropped his lure over the side where the plump troll had been moments earlier, floundering for his life. The fish immediately inhaled the lure and began stripping line from the large reel. It was a display of piscatorial power unlike any Dahs had seen. He ordered his crew to reverse their paddling as line disappeared faster than he could gain it. Dahs pumped and pumped. The fish began tiring. Soon it was boat-side. All 1,243 pounds and seven ounces of it. Several flying gaff sunk into the monster fish and it was hoisted aboard. Emotionless, the proud Dahs admired the giant dead fish. A fearful Filly huddled in a small ball on the stern. "Back in the water Filly." ordered Dahs. "We're trolling all the way to America."
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