The New Zealand Herald

Kahawai worth the effort

- Geoff Thomas

Kahawai — that is the buzz at the moment. And it says a lot about the quality of sport fishing in this country that anglers are going to a lot of trouble to try to keep away from a fish which anywhere else in the world would be held up as a trophy catch.

In Australia they are called salmon, because of their physical similarity to trout and salmon, and their scientific name recognises this: arripis trutta. Aussie anglers love catching their salmon and the fish is highly regarded both as a sport fish and for the table.

Kahawai are a respectabl­e sport fish. Many trout anglers chase them with spinning tackle or fly rods and on this gear the feisty and powerful jumper is an impressive performer.

But for those hunting snapper in the Hauraki Gulf the kahawai can be a nuisance, particular­ly when fishing around the work-ups where crowds of pilchards are attracting predators like kahawai and kingfish, dolphins and whales and birds like gannets.

It’s a common sight at this time of year around our coasts, especially in the gulf along the 40m depth.

The problem can be getting a bait or lure down through the mass of kahawai feeding close to the surface to the snapper lurking on the sea bed.

Heavy lures which sink swiftly help. Some people wrap their sinker and bait together in one package held together by tissue paper, to discourage the predators as it sinks, then a sharp jerk releases the terminal pieces on the bottom.

Another solution is to avoid such surface activity, for the snapper may be several hundred metres downcurren­t as they hunt for scraps drifting down from the feeding melee.

But others will be quite happy to reel in lots of kahawai. All fish should be killed quickly and put on ice.

Fast-swimming species like kingfish, tuna and kahawai have a network of blood vessels through their muscles which delivers oxygenrich blood to fuel the energy required.

They will be far better eating if the blood is removed from the muscles.

For kahawai this is done by first administer­ing a sharp rap on the head then slicing through the throat or the wrist of the tail. Kingfish can be bled by running a sharp knife around the soft membrane around the gills, and tuna have a major artery running along the lateral line and a knife thrust into this will make the blood run freely. The spot is found by holding three fingers against the flank, hard up against the pectoral fin, and the knife point is pushed in on the lateral line until it meets the backbone. You can avoid a mess in the boat by hanging the fish over the side on a rope through the gills. Kahawai are an under-rated sport fish.

Kahawai make fine sashimi or marinated raw fish in the Polynesian kokoda style, but the dark meat which lines the centre of the fillet on the skin side should be discarded as this fat has the strongest flavour. That also applies to kingfish and tuna.

Smoked kahawai is always popular, and in fish pies or cakes is hard to beat. Fresh kahawai is also a top bait for snapper, when cut into strips with the scales removed.

Snapper and kahawai are moving into the shallows all around the coast, but on the west coast harbours like the Manukau are still not fishing well.

Offshore on the west coast a lot of good-sized snapper are being picked up at anywhere between 40m and 60m, which is 10-15km offshore.

Fishing is different on that side. With no islands and reefs creating channels and structure it is a question of finding the fish somewhere on an extensive flat seabed.

The schools of snapper will be attracted to features like shellfish or worm beds, so local knowledge is always paramount.

Otherwise you look for sign on the depth sounder — schools of bait fish in midwater, or fish sign on the bottom which is probably snapper.

Kingfish have also moved in and the first bronze whaler sharks won’t be far away. A king of 25kg was caught at the back of The Noises, so they will also probably be around the bottom end of Waiheke Island at Gannet Rock and the Pakatoa Reef.

Freshwater

The occasional patch of warm weather has sparked some insect activity, with better fishing on lakes like Otamangaka­u, Kurutau and Rotoaira as a result. Ether slow harling or casting nymphs around the weed beds are the favoured methods. Green or olive patterns resembling damselfly and dragonfly nymphs are always popular. The Tongariro River is reported to be packed with fish after much-improved spawning season this year.

Nymphing will produce more kelts which are recovering from spawning, while wet-liners are more likely to strike fresh-run trout.

 ?? Picture / Geoff Thomas ??
Picture / Geoff Thomas

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