Halibut 2018

It's funny, but I've never even owned a harpoon. I've boated several 100+ lb halibut with my good old gaff. I kill them over the water, while they are on the gaff (even the big ones), so don't really have to deal with a lot of thrashing once I bring them on board.

There are people I know who go at anything over 20lbs with harpoons and shotguns, and there are people I know who just keep a harpoon around for the occasional monster.

I guess a harpoon-free boat makes good sense for me because I release 90% of the big fish I get (60+ lbs), and really only keep them if they are badly gut hooked or gilled, or if someone visiting from out of state catches a big one.

I used a bow rod for awhile, but had issues getting fish on the boat from the bow (I don't walk the rods back to the cockpit when I'm by myself) so I started keeping the bow rod back in the cockpit and running the line up to a downrigger clip on my bow rail. That was a lot more manageable.
 
Interesting on using the downrigger clip for the bow rod. Any trouble getting the lines tangled when you have a doubleheader?

Love the gaff but from time to time my glancing swing or my effort to bring a 70 pounder thrasher over the side has resulted in having to haul an angry fish back up from 240 feet!
 
It's nice. I'm going to add a spring line this year so it's a little less sharp a pull for the fish. I've tangled lines plenty, and no doubleheader needed. Because I have a subsistence card I regularly fish 4 lines all by myself. I often get tangled. I also put chum out on a manual downrigger. But, I usually get it all sorted and land my fish. Or at least, in terms of cost/benefit, the 3 off the cockpit and 1 off the bow with a downrigger out has produced far more fish than it's lost. The biggest trouble I have is actually with the anchor line and the bow line. I've been thinking about maybe putting a poly buoy on another downrigger clip and using that to get it away from the boat a bit.
 
Kushtaka":9tde403c said:
It's nice. I'm going to add a spring line this year so it's a little less sharp a pull for the fish. I've tangled lines plenty, and no doubleheader needed. Because I have a subsistence card I regularly fish 4 lines all by myself. I often get tangled. I also put chum out on a manual downrigger. But, I usually get it all sorted and land my fish. Or at least, in terms of cost/benefit, the 3 off the cockpit and 1 off the bow with a downrigger out has produced far more fish than it's lost. The biggest trouble I have is actually with the anchor line and the bow line. I've been thinking about maybe putting a poly buoy on another downrigger clip and using that to get it away from the boat a bit.

How does the spring line work? Any luck with the poly buoy is that for the middle one off the cockpit? I can't imagine fishing 3 off the cockpit! Nice work.
 
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