How To catch Kahawai
20-06-2004 -- Mark Feldman /NZ Fisherman

How to Catch Kahawai



How to Catch Kahawai



Mark Feldman describes techniques
to successfully catch Kahawai...


If you want to be a successful carnivore you must
understand your prey. To understand where to find kahawai you'll need to
understand how they live. Here's the basic information you'll need to know
to be able to catch kahawai.

In the autumn kahawai spawn offshore in deep water. The young find their
way into the shallow estuaries of the North Island and the top of the South
Island. The young spend their first two to three years in these shallow
waters where they can find all sorts of goodies to eat in the plankton.
As the young kahawai gain size, small fish become a more important part
of their diet. After their third year the kahawai outgrow their nursery
and move out of the harbours so they have better access to the schools of
krill, anchovy, and mackerel in open water.

We are not 100% sure what the patterns of movement of kahawai are
around our waters but we do know that, over a period of years, kahawai can
wander many hundreds of kilometres. Their movements are not just random.
As South Island kahawai grow they tend to move east from Golden Bay towards
the Marlborough Sounds and then south towards the Kaikoura area.

Around the North Island the pattern is not so clear. It appears that
the young kahawai off Northland follow a general pattern of movement towards
the rich feeding grounds in the Bay of Plenty. From there they may head
up the West Coast of the North Island or join the South Island schools.
This is why the largest kahawai are often found off Kaikoura, the Bay of
Plenty and the West Coast of the North Island.

Since the purse-seiners killed off the massive schools of kahawai in
the 1980s the patterns the fish follow have changed. ItÍs unusual
to see big schools along our Northern coasts now. The kahawai that survived
the slaughter travel in smaller schools or in groups of 3-10 fish. These
schools have learned to fear the sound of motors and will often sound if
they hear engines coming too close. Because of these behaviour shifts kahawai
are more often caught on the bottom now than they used to be.

When you do see kahawai schools on the surface it's either because they
are eating krill or anchovy. When they feed on krill the fish gather close
together and force the krill up to the surface where they become an easy
meal. Kahawai that are feeding on krill are hard to catch with conventional
lures; a SMALL piece of bait or a fly are much more effective in this situation.

To present a fly or small bait you'll have to get very close to the school.
The only way to do that is to manoeuvre the boat upwind and allow yourself
to drift towards the school. Most people prefer a 4kg line and a spinning
reel for maximum casting distance (make sure your spool is full). If you're
confident with ultra-light gear a 2kg spinning outfit will enable you to
cast a small bait up to 25 metres; just what you need to catch these fish.
If you want to use a fly then you can rig a split shot sinker ahead of the
fly and use that with a 2kg line to cast 15 meters or so. Remember NOT to
cast directly into the school; that'll scare the hell out of them and make
them sound. Instead, cast ahead of the school and pull your bait or fly
slowly into the school.

When the anchovy run in the autumn the kahawai fishing becomes much easier
and heaps more fun. Because the numbers of kahawai have been reduced the
number of anchovy seem to have risen. The kahawai no longer have to gather
in huge schools to catch the anchovy; instead of herding the anchovy like
they used to, the kahawai gather in small groups and dash into the enormous
anchovy schools, killing and maiming their victims as they flash by. The
kahawai then turn and pick up the wounded fish they left behind. At this
time of year they're sloppy eaters so a lot of anchovy drift down to make
an easy meal for snapper and trevally that follow the kahawai.



You can take advantage of this situation in two ways. You can use a small
silver or chrome popper and skip it along the surface to imitate a fleeing
anchovy or you can drop down a 50-70mm white or chrome jig into mid-water.
There you can jig it in a highly irregular manner but with SMALL movements
of 20-30 cm. This imitates the injured anchovy that the kahawai pick up
after their initial dash through the schools.

When kahawai are not schooling in search of krill or anchovy they are
much harder to catch. During these times kahawai tend to travel in small
groups of 3-8 fish patrolling headlands, drop-offs and rises for small fish
caught in fast current flows. To catch these fish you can take one of two
approaches.

The first method is to lay down a berley trail along an area that should
hold kahawai on patrol. You then have a choice of baits: a small live-bait
on a 5/0 wire hook is very effective but difficult to use because they tend
to swim under the boat or out of the berley trail. The next best bait is
a whole small sprat or pilchard. Sprats are most easily hooked through the
eyes with a Salmon-style 1/0 hook. Pilchards are so soft that eye hooking
seldom works well; usually you're forced to use a keeper hook rig with the
keeper hook through the lips or eyes, and a 4/0 wire Carlisle hook tied
onto the body with cotton thread. If you don't have any whole baits
available, a strip bait made from a fillet of mackerel or mullet will usually
work O.K. These strip baits have to be changed every ten minutes or they
lose their flavour and attract nothing but sea weed.

Unless the current is so strong that your bait won't sink down at all
it's best to use no extra weight. If gulls are a problem or the current
is strong, slip on a sliding sinker just heavy enough to hold the bait under
water.

Another approach to fishing for kahawai on patrol is to fish out of a 12 or 14 foot dinghy and motor up along cliff faces and headlands. Drift about 25 metres out from the headland and cast on an angle towards the rocks. Use a silver, white or chrome jig about 80-90mm long. Retrieve it fast enough so it looks like a piper struggling along
the surface. You can pick up some large kahawai fishing this way but its
heaps of work.

The large kahawai often follow the tide into harbours and bays that also
hold the young kahawai. If you want to fish these estuarine areas you'll
need to position yourself near a wharf or other area that holds small mullet
(sprats) or mackerel. The kahawai come into the shallow waters to pursue
these smaller fish. In this situation berley is not necessary but it sure
can help, especially if you're anchored upstream from the flats and want
to attract the fish as they move out of the main channels towards the mud
flats to feed.

The techniques for harbour fishing are much the same as deeper waters
with one exception. A berley trail will attract large numbers of very young
kahawai. These fish are aggressive feeders and will take huge baits. To
avoid gut hooking these young fish I recommend you use a hook like a Black
Magic 4/0 KL. This is an "idiot hook". Any idiot can catch fish
with them because of the bent-in point. All you need to do is sit there
with a tight line; when the kahawai strikes it will lip hook itself if you
DO NOT strike. All you have to do is sit there like an idiot. If a small
kahawai takes the bait a simple flip of the hook at the boatside will release
it unharmed.

Kahawai make a wonderful feed IF they're properly cared for. Either keep
them alive in a baitwell or kill them immediately and bleed them. Then keep
them on ice in a cooler. If kahawai are treated right they make a wonderful
meal if eaten that day. A kahawai thatÍs left to lay in the sun on
the floor of the boat or sits in the fridge for two days tastes so bad it
doesn't even make good bait anymore!
END

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