The Kona Fishing Chronicles 1999 |
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Author:
| Rizzuto, Jim |
ISBN: | 978-0-7388-3885-4 |
Publication Date: | Nov 2000 |
Publisher: | Xlibris Corporation LLC
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Book Format: | Hardback |
List Price: | USD $32.99 |
Book Description:
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Between these pages you´ll find the 100 best fishing stories and 200 best fishing tips of 1999, and you´ll meet some of the world´s best offshore fishermen.
If you plan to fish the world famous Kona grounds, or just visit the historic towns along the Kona Coast, be sure to read this book first. Each volume of the Kona Fishing Chronicles takes you through a year in the life of the picturesque villages, ports and fishing grounds along the west coast of Hawaii´s Big Island. When...
More Description
Between these pages you´ll find the 100 best fishing stories and 200 best fishing tips of 1999, and you´ll meet some of the world´s best offshore fishermen.
If you plan to fish the world famous Kona grounds, or just visit the historic towns along the Kona Coast, be sure to read this book first. Each volume of the Kona Fishing Chronicles takes you through a year in the life of the picturesque villages, ports and fishing grounds along the west coast of Hawaii´s Big Island. When you´ve finished this month-by-month guide, you´ll feel as though you are among familiar faces, and you´ll understand and appreciate what makes Kona fishing unique and so inviting.
The lee coast of Hawaii Island is uniquely blessed. Mauna Kea, Mauna Loa and Hualalai block the trade winds and provide malia (gentle and calm) conditions for fishing boats of all sizes from kayaks to sportfishing yachts. The steep slopes of these dormant volcanoes drop sharply down through the mid-Pacific depths and bring the open ocean habitat of billfish, tuna, and other offshore gamefish right up to the beaches. Prevailing east-to-west currents create huge eddies that spin baitfish into undersea ledges formed by lava flows cooled to solid rock.
The result is a remarkably rich fishing grounds. Big fish hunt in calm water a few-minutes run from port. Indeed, giant marlin and tuna have been caught within sight of the buoys marking the harbor entrances.
Each week of each year, Kona produces thrilling fishing adventures for novices who visit to fulfill their dream vacation of a lifetime and big-game veterans who travel the world following the "bite." The mountain slopes are home to a large population of recreational fishermen. They live the daily lives of any community of doctors, lawyers, teachers, secretaries, plumbers, carpenters, shopkeepers, and business people but turn to the sea for unparalleled sport.
I have fished Kona since 1969. Soon after moving to the Big Island, I began writing the events and stories of Kona fishing in a weekly column published in the daily newspaper West Hawaii Today. This volume is a compilation of the WHT columns published during 1999 (with one exception; "Technology Took Over" first appeared in Hawaii Fishing News). Each column appears in almost exactly the same form as when first printed. I have resisted the temptation to re-write events from the longer lens of hindsight. Rather, I have given you the chance to watch the fishing year unfold just as it happened. The dates on the sections indicate the dates the items were written and not when they were published.
If you are new to Hawaii fishing, you will find entertaining stories that draw you into the methods and techniques perfected on the Kona fishing grounds. Readers who are long-time residents will enjoy recognizing friends and reliving familiar exploits. For future generations, this book will serve as one volume in a history of sportfishing, Kona-style.
The "big-fish list" is a weekly feature of the WHT column. It tracks the largest catch of each of 16 major species for the year to date. For this yearly compendium, I pondered the idea of reducing the number of lists to just one at the end of each month. This brought protests from some of the anglers who proudly held the lead for just a few weeks and then had to give it up by the end of the month.
Much of the data was gathered by the dedicated dockworkers who help anglers and captains throughout the day, then weigh and record their catches at the end of each trip, and, finally, take the pictures needed to verify the sometimes-unbelievable tales. During 1999, the team at the fuel dock scales consisted of Amber Hudnall, Jessica Young, Kathy Bakke, and Joy Painter. These are the folks who book fishing charters (the "hooker bookers") through the Charter Desk at Honokohau Marina (808-329-5735).
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