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RECORD YOUR CATCH!
A fact of matter that separates winners from losers
is keeping records of when,
where and how big fish were caught.
by Terry Lacoss
When asked the one
single factor that helped “Fish Fever” win
2002 “Angler of the Year” and the 2002 “SKA
Open National Championship”, team Captain Ed Mecchella
was quick to reply, “Keeping good records!”
Can you imagine winning two
major fishing crowns in one tournament! The Georgia
based SKA fishing team, “Fish Fever” recently
accomplished this incredible feat while sitting in 7th
place in the “Angler of the Year” race prior
to the start of the 2002 SKA National Championship.
However deep trolling five-pound
blue runners next to a Gulf Coast oilrig, stacked with
30-60 pound king mackerel, netted a 63.51-pound king
mackerel during the first day of competition.
“We had located the
large school of king mackerel during pre-fishing and
hoped they stayed there during the tournament competition,”
Mecchella said. “Naturally we headed to the tournament
scales after our big catch, excited that we had landed
such a huge kingfish, we also had enough of those 5-6
foot seas!”
The fishing team including
Jim Conway, Ed Mecchella and son, Shawn jumped into
the tournament lead in the Angler of the Year race and
also stood atop the leader board for the first day of
competition in the SKA National Championship.
“On the final day of
the tournament, we dared not to go back to the same
oil rig in fear that the whole tournament fleet would
follow us,” Mecchella said! “However while
fishing that morning, Dan Upton called us and said that
we better get there in a hurry because a big bite was
going on.”
“Upon arrival, we saw
the oil rig surrounded by the entire fleet of kingfish
boats! King mackerel ranging from 30-50 pounds, were
sky rocketing everywhere, in the midst of the battle,
fishing lines tangled, kingfish ran over and under boats
and into the oilrig too! It was definitely the best
bite of kingfish that we had ever scene.”
Luckily, “Fish Fever
landed a 38-pound king mackerel, winning both top honors
in the SKA National Championship and the coveted Angler
of the Year award as well! Reeling in two of the highest
achievements in SKA history has never before been accomplished
in the same tournament season.
I have been a personal fishing
friend of the Fish Fever fishing team since 1980 and
first of all was very excited to learn about their great
accomplishments. My son Terry David and I have shared
kingfish holes with both Ed and son Shawn for many kingfish
seasons and ironically sold chum to fellow king mackerel
teams. The Mecchalla’s sold packaged pellets that
were pre soaked in menhaden oil, while Terry David and
I sold a concentrated menhaden oil. We were also on
the same Wendy’s fishing team.
We both had kingfish tricks
up our sleeves at all times, naturally chumming up kingfish
in a wide variety of ways to stink up a money kingfish
at the tournament scales was our number one kingfish
tactic. However “Fish Fever” used one fishing
tactic that won them over $200,000.00 during the 2002
SKA National Championship.
“If I had to put my
finger on one fishing tactic that has won our fishing
team these two great awards, it would have to be recording
each and every kingfish catch,” remarks Mecchella.
“When our fishing team first began to competitively
fish for king mackerel, we recorded each and every significant
catch and we still have all of this information today,
which dates back to the early 1980’s.”
“In fact when returning
to Biloxi this fall, our fishing team already had a
note book full of kingfish numbers! Included were locations
where we had caught kingfish previously, the depth of
water that kingfish were hooked in, water temperature,
weather conditions, time of day, tides and the bait
and tackle that we caught them on.”
Keeping records of catches
is not new to the fishing world; most of us hard core
fishermen will never forget when, where and how we landed
a particularly large game fish. I can remember waiting
all winter for the beginning of trout season on my favorite
Vermont rainbow stream. During those cold winter nights
while tying salmon egg bags, I would contemplate my
fishing strategy for the opening day by going over in
my mind where some of the largest trout were taken from
the river during the previous opening day of fishing
and how the fish were caught. Finally during the opening
day of trout fishing season, I would take all of this
previous knowledge and pick a trout hole at 4:30 AM
in the morning and wait for sunrise. Needless to say
everyone else had the same intentions and if you did
not get there long before sunrise, you were simply crowded
out of your trout hole.
More importantly, keeping
good records of every significant catch can be a lot
more involved than most fishermen would believe. And
there is good reason.
“I have found that
big fish often return to many of the kingfish holes
each year to feed on a particular specie of bait-fish,”
instructs Mecchella. “With this in mind, you have
to keep records of which bait-fish are holding in all
of your kingfish locations and which kingfish baits
have produced the best king mackerel catches.”
“For example when fishing
in the Gulf Coast and around the bait-fish laden oil
rigs, large schools of big blue runners to over five-pounds
school down deep and are the main menu for tournament
winning king mackerel. Keeping records of how deep these
large blue runners are holding, which oil rigs have
the best concentrations of big runners and how to catch
them is critical to weighing in a tournament money fish.”
Keeping in mind, many king
mackerel fishermen will store one size sabiki rig, while
the “Fish Fever” fishing team knows by keeping
past records, a custom bait-fish jig is needed and cut
bait to lure a five-pound blue runner for a kingfish
bait. Besides several style and size sabiki rigs are
stored on their Wellcraft fishing boat as well as records
to guide them to exactly which baitfish rig will be
needed for a variety of fishing conditions.
“I can remember several
past late spring kingfish tournaments ago, while fishing
the Georgia SKA division events when Shawn, Jim and
me would scout the close to shore live bottoms for greenies,”
remembers Ed Mecchella. “We had found that early
in the kingfish season that greenies were both numerous
in close to shore and were a prime forage food for king
mackerel as well. Some of these live bottom areas were
also pretty small, but held large pods of nice size
“Green Backs”. Obviously our key to filling
our boat’s live well with large greenies, was
keeping a record of these live bottom areas so that
our fishing team could navigate right to them in coming
fishing seasons.”
“And in some cases,
the larger live bottom areas produced late spring king
mackerel bites when they were stacked up with live bait.
Other areas of live bottoms were simply a waste of time
to fish. Keeping a record of which live bottoms produced
the best catches was a key to our fishing team placing
in the money!”
Obviously there are numerous
reasons why fishermen should keep a good log on where,
when and how they have successfully caught both game
fish and bait-fish as well. Fishing is like putting
a thousand piece jig saw puzzle together. However if
your fishing team keeps good records, your jig saw puzzle
may well be reduced to a small twenty-piece puzzle.
In the early years of competitive
king mackerel fishing, “Fish Fever” would
also keep good records of the tidal stages and when
and where big kings could be found according to the
tide.
“Tides move massive
amounts of forage foods for inlet kingfish to ambush,”
Ed Mecchella says. “Here it is extremely important
to record where you have caught good catches of inlet
king mackerel, their location to the inlet and the stage
of the tide. Water clarity, water temperature, depth
of water and kingfish baits that were successful were
also logged into our boat’s records.”
You can be sure that the
SKA 2003 Angler of the Year Team will keep good records
in order to top the ever growing field of competitive
king mackerel boats. I know Ed Mecchella, son Shawn
and Jim Conway are extremely excited over their recent
SKA championship wins. Because they kept excellent records!
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