davem2005
Well-known member
Well...as some of you may have read Jeff, Oblikta and me were supposed to be going sharking at scrabster for 4 days but windguru was predicting a 5 metre swell in that area and the skipper called it off.
So...since we had all booked days off for the trip we had a plan B. That was to take my boat to the west coast of Scotland. For the purposes of a public forum I will describe the area as "just south of Oban". If anyone wants exact locations PM me for details. This area is far more sheltered than scabster and a wind affecting scrabster would not affect this area.
The slipway I use is terrible to say the least but the tides were slack ( .9m ) yep...thats less than a metre tide flow! so arrival at high tide for launching is important. Once the boat is in I put it on a mooring untill its time to bring it out. The high tide friday was 10.30 am so we planned a 4.30 am departure...but a post on another forum informed me of the closure of the A83 due to a landslide and this meant an extra hours detour...3.30 start!
Day 1
Despite the early start jeff and graham arrived on time and off we went. We arrived with half an hour to spare for the tide so booked into a hotel in town , filled the tanks and launched the boat. All was set for the weekend.
The wind was coming from a SW'erly direction ...the worst direction possible for this mark...any other and it would be fine. We headed out and tried for mackrel at a known mark...nothing...but we had about 20 kg of frozen mackrel from the summer and during one drift we got about 20 coalies which make an ideal bait. We headed out about 3/4 mile to the chosen skate mark and dropped the anchor in about 410 ft of water. the chosen mark was about 1/2 mile from where I had previosly caught skate. Dropped the anchor and put out the rods.
Due to the high winds the anchor was dragging and this is not ideal for skate fishing...its far better if you can nail the boat down and let the fish come to you. But over went the rods and we sat back to wait. Baits were a variation of coalies and frozen mackrel. We did not have to wait long before one of the rods hade a bite which was hooked up by me and the rod handed to Jeff who was kitted out with the butt pad and harness. About 35 mins later he had a huge male skate at the surface which as I reached for the gaff slipped the hook. It was a 100lb + fish but annoyingly jeff never even got to see it as he was stood back in the boat but as I had hold of the hook trace we will count it as a "catch and release fish" of over 80 lb. Jeff had has his first skate and never even got to see it. Fortunately this was something that would be rectified very soon.
The wind picked up ...the sea got rougher and we decided to move to more sheltered fishing. We moved to an area sheltered behind some islands in 100' of water wich I am told gives many small skate...we maybe got the area wrong but it did not produce anything but doggie s and mackrel which where a welcome addition to the bait box. As darkness fell and after a long day we went back to the harbour and the curry house to reflect on the one that got away and the day in general. A few beers and an early night for all.
At this stage we had not got a single picture worth posting...things were about to change and when I have chance to upload them to a server I will continue the post as we still had two more days and one unexpected one.
All I will say is it gets better
and then worse. 
Cheers
Dave
So...since we had all booked days off for the trip we had a plan B. That was to take my boat to the west coast of Scotland. For the purposes of a public forum I will describe the area as "just south of Oban". If anyone wants exact locations PM me for details. This area is far more sheltered than scabster and a wind affecting scrabster would not affect this area.
The slipway I use is terrible to say the least but the tides were slack ( .9m ) yep...thats less than a metre tide flow! so arrival at high tide for launching is important. Once the boat is in I put it on a mooring untill its time to bring it out. The high tide friday was 10.30 am so we planned a 4.30 am departure...but a post on another forum informed me of the closure of the A83 due to a landslide and this meant an extra hours detour...3.30 start!
Day 1
Despite the early start jeff and graham arrived on time and off we went. We arrived with half an hour to spare for the tide so booked into a hotel in town , filled the tanks and launched the boat. All was set for the weekend.
The wind was coming from a SW'erly direction ...the worst direction possible for this mark...any other and it would be fine. We headed out and tried for mackrel at a known mark...nothing...but we had about 20 kg of frozen mackrel from the summer and during one drift we got about 20 coalies which make an ideal bait. We headed out about 3/4 mile to the chosen skate mark and dropped the anchor in about 410 ft of water. the chosen mark was about 1/2 mile from where I had previosly caught skate. Dropped the anchor and put out the rods.
Due to the high winds the anchor was dragging and this is not ideal for skate fishing...its far better if you can nail the boat down and let the fish come to you. But over went the rods and we sat back to wait. Baits were a variation of coalies and frozen mackrel. We did not have to wait long before one of the rods hade a bite which was hooked up by me and the rod handed to Jeff who was kitted out with the butt pad and harness. About 35 mins later he had a huge male skate at the surface which as I reached for the gaff slipped the hook. It was a 100lb + fish but annoyingly jeff never even got to see it as he was stood back in the boat but as I had hold of the hook trace we will count it as a "catch and release fish" of over 80 lb. Jeff had has his first skate and never even got to see it. Fortunately this was something that would be rectified very soon.
The wind picked up ...the sea got rougher and we decided to move to more sheltered fishing. We moved to an area sheltered behind some islands in 100' of water wich I am told gives many small skate...we maybe got the area wrong but it did not produce anything but doggie s and mackrel which where a welcome addition to the bait box. As darkness fell and after a long day we went back to the harbour and the curry house to reflect on the one that got away and the day in general. A few beers and an early night for all.
At this stage we had not got a single picture worth posting...things were about to change and when I have chance to upload them to a server I will continue the post as we still had two more days and one unexpected one.
All I will say is it gets better


Cheers
Dave