






I saw this endandered Ae'o or Hawaiian Stilt Bird when I came back into shore, Dad always liked these shorebirds.









Dories are extremely seaworthy though they are a tad tipsy for those not used to dories due to her narrow beam and flair. Her gunwales will almost touch the water but go not further without effort. Her tipsiness actually makes her more seaworthy especially in a beam sea, an outrigger defeating this trait. In rough seas she is much drier riding than either of my outrigger canoes. Yesterday there was 5' seas, a steady 15 knot wind with wind chop and this Dory was dry as a bone in the bilge, my canoes I would be constantly bailing in similar sea conditions. She is a seaworthy craft and a joy to row as Grizz can testify to.BlaineG wrote:Beautiful craft, Bro......is it stable in rough stuff without the outrigger? Easy to cartop? Appox weight? I'm going to need a light, one man (with a crappy back) rig someday soon.
I still have the picture of your Aeolus Dory you gave me years ago the one with your kids in it, my Dad was pretty thrilled and nostalgic when he saw it, and amazed she was still going strong, and I'm amazed she's STILL going strong. Thanks for sharing that.Grizz wrote:Thanks Ji
Last summer a young couple rowed my old Aeolus Bank Dory from Elfin Cove to White Sulpher Hot Springs and back again. Everything went well and they had a great time.
I'm glad to see you have your Dad's boat commissioned and get to enjoy her. It's great memories with every stroke...
Grizz


Steve, that's an awesome setup you have, does the rod have the old style wood butt? I love the old Penn Senator reels, I still have 2- 9/0s my Dad bought me back in the early 70s, and I have them mounted on old fiberglass wood butt rods I inherited from a friend on Maui who passed away several years ago. I had to replace the rollers on the guides, and i've rebuilt the reels numerous times over the years. Everyone loves the gold anodized Internationals but I prefer the workhorse Senators. I'm installing solid flush mount rod holders on my outrigger canoe for my heavy trolling rods so I'm ready when the large (150+ pound) Yellowfin Tuna start running in lmid summer.Nate Kiowa Jones wrote:Ji,
You sure are tweaking my salt receptors. If I ever get over there you gotta take me fishin.
One them rod holder hold this thing?
This is a 12/0 on a 130# class homemade rod. One of the last rods I built years ago when I was fishing some offshore tournaments.



GANJIRO wrote:Aloha Steve, that fish wrap pattern is amazing, you'd have no problem keeping busy here in the islands doing custom rod wrapping. Seems like nowadays every boat wants their unique pattern matching rod set, allot of people with money burning holes in their pockets. You are gifted in many fields. You gotta take a deep sea fishing vacation to keep in touch with the sea.

Aloha Steve, Most likely I've met Jerry as I used to attend these clinics and casting competitions when I was younger 20+ years ago and into shore fishing for out Giant Trevally (Ulua in Hawaiian).Nate Kiowa Jones wrote: I still get to go fishing. I have a friend near New Orleans that fishes out of South Louisiana and I go with him.
Do you know any of the longcasters over there? I have an old friend that is a world champion long distance caster and he has been over there a few time putting on clinics for some of those guys. His name is Jerry Valentine.
http://www.linter.org/stories/casting.htm
nemhed wrote:Ji, tell us what it's like to tie into a 150+ lbs Yellowfin while sitting out in the open ocean in a canoe.![]()
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My outrigger canoe is new to me launched just this past December, but I have hooked into many large tunas in my 13'7" SEARS Gamefisher aluminum skiff (designed for calm lakes not open ocean), and been taken for a "Nantucket Sleigh Ride" on a few occasions. Hopefully I'll catch something sizable this summer as the big Yellowfins migrate thru the islands. Last time I had my canoe out I did see a shark as long as my boat which is 17' long, pretty cool.mescalero1 wrote:You guys are insane!
150 pounds of fish would be able to pull that boat! ( I think? )