onsdag 10 april 2013

Recap 2012 Part One

Hello World.

I just sat around thinking about where to go fishing this year when I remember that I have actually not made one single blog post during 2012.

How is that?

Well, the answer would be none, I got no reason to justify it, but I will try to make up for it! So in order to do that I'll do a brief recap of the only fishing trip i did 2012.

The trip went to the island Vaeroy in northern Norway. I went back to Vidar at Sjybrygga as usual. But instead of going with my ordinary fishing buddies this was a suprise party for my dads 60th year birthday. So I decided to bring my cousin and his dad along for the trip, none of whom have fished in Norway before. We went in the beginning of August.

Me and my cousin took the car up from Stockholm two days earlier with all the fishing gear and food before my dad was supposed to be snagged unowkningly and brought to the airport. So we had enough time to get up to Vaeroy in time before their arrival. Me and my cousin unfortunately missed the ferry from Bodo to Vaeroy and was stuck for one entire day in Bodo. So when going to Vaeroy make sure you do NOT miss the Ferry. There is a new ferry 2013 that is supposed to be faster, go more frequently and take alot more cars, so everything is good there! The ferry still takes a long time, so this is something to consider, the helicopter option is more expensive but takes only 20-25 minutes when the ferry takes approximately 6 hours.

Since me and my cousin had missed the ferry we wanted to make up for lost fishing time when we arrived at Vaeroy with the Ferry. The weather was smooth and the ocean was like mirror when we arrived. We threw our gear into the bunks, brought the most important stuff and went straight out on the ocean. The fishing was great and it felt so nice to get out on the northern sea after almost a year. This year the ordinary boat I usually book was taken so I got one of the other new boats Vidar have invested in. It worked just as nice as before, since Vidar only have nice boats!

We got alot of fish during the night but at dawn I got something that felt heavy, I expected it to be a decent sized tail hooked cod or pollack. I was right about one thing, it was a cod but it was not hooked in the tail and it was big! really big!


Here I am with my grand prize, this is taken when it's right out of the ocean! Happy as a pup!!

Since we were tired from fishing all night we decided to head in to the harbour and see what the weight landed on, it landed on 33.5kg!! New PB for me! The weight is alot for a cod caught in the summer. The cod are quite slim during summer time, this cod would most likely have weighed 40+ if it was caught during the skrei season around march-april.




My old record on cod was 28.5kg and that was during Skrei season (this is when the big arctic cod comes from the north and swims along the coast south), they eat everything they can find and therefor also weigh alot more than they usually do. As you can see below it was heavy to lift!!


Huff & Puff!

We arrived at the harbour just as the other fishing teams at the camp was about to hit the ocean. We hurried to our beds to try and catch a few well earned hours of sleep before our dad's arrival.

The cod was caught using my favourite rod, the Synit Deepshot 350 and my JM PE5 reel. The jig was a River2Sea Sea Rock 500g, this is my favourite jig for cod/halibut since I prefer metal jigs nowdays over soft jigs. Unfortunately River2Sea no longer sells these amazing jigs at 500g but the biggest one they sell now only being 300g. :/. 

So with my dad in the car without any idea where he was going, my cousins dad brought him to the airport, much to his suprise the destination was far up in northern Norway. They had to change flights two times to get to Bodo in Norway but it went fast, the flights does not take alot of time. They arrived late at Bodo so I had set them up for the night at a nice hotel by the marina in Bodo. Early the next day, they went by helicopter from Bodo - Vaeroy in mere 25 minutes.

After a few hours of sleep we met them at the helicopter pad and went straight to our fully loaded boat and out on the ocean! They were all eager to get the jigs in the water.


Here we are all set and ready to go, as you can see, perfect weather. My cousins dad to the left, me in the middle and my dad on the right. My cousin is the photographer. You can see him sitting in his favourite spot in the front of the boat below!


I will continue the story later this week with more pictures.....



måndag 27 juni 2011

Results Vikna!

I am still at work after an extremely long journey.. Hardly slept at all, we took the car back for around 20 hours to Gothenburg where I took the airplane back to Stockholm and went straight to work! Sooo tired....

But it was well worth it! What a midsummers eve we had!

We had an amazing first day, we caught around 10 rosefish that weighed around 2kg each, alot of cod around 10kg and a halibut of 140cm that weighed around 35kg caught by my friend Torbjörn! We also caught some coalfish of decent size aswell!

The second day was not as good but still decent! After such an amazing day the previous day we lived on that the entire trip, we easily filled our quotations even after the first day of fishing...(15kg fish fillet per person, per trip).

We had perfect weather conditions, no sun but no wind either! Perfect and the bite was on the entire day.

Pictures to come later!

Back to work!

onsdag 22 juni 2011

Midsummers Eve approaches! Destination Vikna...

So traditionally I would spend the midsummers eve with my girlfriend eating good traditional swedish food and beverages! But this year we had nothing special planned, so there was no suprise that when my friends asked me if I wanted to go back to Norweig and fish for three days and celebrate midsummers eve there that I said yes!!

We are going tomorrow, this time we are going back to where I started fishing in Norweig, Vikna archipelago it's located quite a bit north of Trondheim but not as high north as Lofoten. The camp is called Vikna Skärgårdscamp.

We felt that the last time we were there the place had alot of potential being hardly fished by any tourists and the boats we had back then was very basic, even without a plotter. This time we are bringing our own boat, so the expectations are high. We are also alot more experienced fisherman now then we were back then. I did loose a halibut there last time! Time for a rematch!

Now with a few days left before we arrive the weather forecasts looks very promising with light wind and some rain, this could change but at the moment it looks good. The wind is the only thing I am worried about as the traveltime to the fishing destinations here is quite long but is well worth the effort of going all the way.

The bad thing about this trip for me is that my friends decided to go by car on the westcoast of sweden, I live on the east side. This meant I had to try and get my gear together and try to take it with me by airplane to Oslo where my friends pick me up. I Never thought my gear weighed as much as it did, I do not have half of it packed and i easily breeched the 40kg limit...Sigh, I think I packed and unpacked my gear 5 times yesterday, I just keep removing fishing lures one by one since they weigh so much... My guess is I will end up with to few...I am only bringing two rods and two reels aswell, bummer! It's better to get used to it now since I imagine I will be going alot more times using airplane.

Anyways, I will make a little report once I am back home from this short trip.

I am looking forward to this summer alot, first I am going to Malta between the 14th - 21th of July with my girlfriend, There I am going out with Nick from Maltafishing.com and we will do a costsharing trip with a few others from Malta and jig for some tuna, amberjack or whatever the ocean has to offer, it's also dependant on what everyone wants to do, but Vertical Jigging is on the main menue. Yummy!

Later on, the 18th of August I am going back up to Vaeroy where I was earlier this year in April. My main focus will be catching a big coalfish and to break my old halibut record which I also got earlier during April this year! So I would not would not mind working really hard for halibut that entire week!

I'll keep ya updated!

Tight lines.

fredag 27 maj 2011

Sunline..

I Know it's been a long while since I posted, got some request from fellow friends to post the diameters and statistics of the Sunline PE line. So here they are! I will get back to you guys soon with more posts, been busy with a new job and planning some eventual fishing on Malta while I go there on my summer vacation.

This picture shows the actual diameter and Its taken from a russian site I believe, I found it a few months ago when trying to figure the thickness of the line. It's the best line I have ever used and it's smooth as silk.


This is the statistics from Sunline themselves.




Over and out!

söndag 1 maj 2011

The first trip, full report Vaeroy 2011.04.07 - 2011.04.15

The trip towards Sjybrygga on Vaeroy (www.sjybryggga.no) began on 2011.04.07 and we took the car early, around 9 am to make sure we had a good margin to reach the ferry in time. Since none of us had made this trip before we were uncertain of the quality of the road and if there was going to be alot of snow in the mountain pass between Sweden and Norway. My previous experiences has been that the roads are bad.

The car trip went suprisingly fast and it took us just about 15-17 hours to reach Bodö which was alot faster than we had expected. We took the road to Skellefteå and then of towards the west and Norway.

Since the whole car trip went as fast as it did we ended up in Bodö in the middle of the night. We tried to find a car space where we could sleep for a few hours, it was terrible to try to sleep in the car and the sun came up to early! I woke up in the car with fog on all sidewindows and still felt as tired as I was when falling asleep, if not worse..

I had to face the fact that the clock was around 5 am in the morning and the ferry did not leave until 15.00, what can you possible do in bodö until 15.00???

The simple answer was nothing..We really did try our best to entertain ourselves.

The day started of by us taking the car on the "tourist route" going south of Bodö, it was a lovely scenery and you did get to see the maelstrom in Saltströmmen aswell, its especially beautiful this time of year when all the mountain tops are white..We got some if on film for you guys to see later on.

Then we had a 2 hour stop in the parking lot of a Shell gas station eating breakfast..highlight of the day, and then we trolled a shopping mall for a few hours, enoyed the free internet of a espresso house and I think we walked the entire city of Bodö a few times over during the day. The highlights was the fishing shop in Bodö, despite the normally crazy high prices in Norway it had good prices and a very good supply of fishing gear. So if you forgot to buy something before the trip head to it and stock up. It's close to the harbour. I can also recommend a walk in the harbour looking at the ocean and feeling the nice smell of tar in the air.

So a tip of advice, do not exceed ur margin when going to take the ferry in Bodö! Try to cut it closer and you won't go crazy like we did.

I will write a city guide to Bodö when I get more time off! :D

Anyways.. lets fast forward to the ferry!

Oh the ferry, it's a nice ferry and it is easy to get a spot to sleep aswell, the downside is it took us 7.5 hours to get 88km out to the island of Vaeroy. If you can´t sleep I can let you in on a secret if you sit on the second floor there is a wifi broadband that is unprotected that you can surf on, I believe it belongs to the printserver of the boat. Also there is a long queu to the ferry so prebook!

The ferrys are almost always late due to all the hassle when unloading the cars/trucks at Röst before you head to Vaeroy. I guess it can go faster at times but for us it took a really long time.

I just wanted to let you guys get a "feel" for the trip up...It feels insanely long when you are filled of eager to fish, you guys know what I mean.

Vidar, the camp owner met us up at the ferry and we followed him to the fishing camp. It was evening and we were all really tired. We basically parked the car and went directly to sleep without either noticing how it looked around the fishing camp...

It was a totally other thing to wake up! I woke up to look out of the windows and see the spikey mountain tops of Vaeroy surround the big fishing harbour, a small mist surrounded the tops. There was classic fishing boats all over the docks. Right outside the window I could also see our own fishing dock with our boat , fueled up and ready to go. It was a Sea Pro 206CC with a 150HP 2 stroke, Yamaha engine. We had plotter with built in sonar, it's being replaced by a separate sonar and standalone plotter later on in the summer.
Vidar had also put in a drift anchor and safety rockets incase of emergency. This is something we have never experienced on any previous camps.


We knew we were alone in the entire house and started to look around. It's amazing. Two floors, the lower one being fully renovated with new furniture, wallpapers etc. We had all got our seperate rooms since we were the only ones there. But there is three beds in each room. There is two kitchens in the building and several sleeping quarters. There is also a big living room on both floors and you have several toilets and a dryer being built for the survival suits outside of entrance.

Saturday

We were eager to get out on the sea so we made some breakfast and waited for Vidar to come and give us the keys to the boat and give us the run through of the camp. He came just as promised early in the morning. The weather was very rough on saturday and we had winds up to around 13-14m/s with clouds and rain. So we knew we were not starting out under any good circumstances. I was a bit worried since both my friends I had taken with me on this trip had never fished on open water before and both are novice fisherman that has never caught anything above 11lb, I knew the weather can be a very dissapointing factor when fishing up in Norweig so that is why I booked 7 days, that usually ensures you to get a few decent fishing days out of your trip.

We took the boat and moved slowly through the stormy waters to the southern tip of Vaeroy,the winds stopped us from going anywhere and we stayed inside the bay of måskens the entire day trying to get some halibut. The area is supposed to have quite a few smaller ones, we did have some bites but we were empty handed.

During the afternoon the winds loosened up a bit and we took the boat east and decided to fish south of the lighthouse since it was close to harbour. Vidar had given us the tip that there was a lot of cod there at the moment. We parked the boat on around 130 meters of depth not even close to any ground so we did'nt expect any good fishing, the sonar was empty aswell.

But as the first jig closed on the bottom we got hit right away. We had tripple hits, double hits, we had a win win situation. It was impossible to go to the bottom without getting a hit. The sun came up and we had a really good evening of our first fishing night. The cod was'nt very large, average was 11lb - 22lb, biggest one about 30lb. So the trip was saved, all my friends caught bigger fish than they had ever before. In about 1.5 hours we filled all of the loading cargo in the boat with fish and headed home, took care of the fish, ate dinner drank some beer and blackened out exhausted.

Sunday

Again, we had heavy winds from the South and decided to try and fish up on the northern side of Vaeroy to get away from the wind. We took the boat over near Nordflakken but the winds followed us even there and we kept trying to fish for halibut the entire day with nothing. The winds got even stronger at the end of the day around 13-15m/s. One of our team members got to wet and started to freeze so we headed in and let him off. Then the two of us went back to the same spot as yesterday and took some cod up for the evening dinner.

Monday

The winds was only about 8 m/s in the morning when we woke up hopeful. We took the boat and speeded out towards the shallow ground tips far south of Vaeroy. Without the wind screwing up your trip it took us just about 15 minutes from the harbour until we were out. We had not fished in that area before but lay a drift on Grunnaregga and drifted north west. This area is know for big cod and during summer alot of big coalfish aswell. We all got fish on our first drop down and the size was ALOT bigger in this area. I do not think we got any fish below 23lb and alot around 33lb with a top fish on 44lb and some just below that. We also managed to get two coalfish that gave up a very nice fight even though they were just weighted around 22lb. It "almost" got boring fishing cod since they bite on whatever you cast in and as soon as it's close to the bottom. During the afternoon we headed in towards land and finished with some halibut fishing, had a few bites with none landed again.

a picture of some nice cod we got this day.



Tuesday

We headed back out to the grounds south of Vaeroy, winds was still about 8-10 m/s and we had great confidence in the boat taking our previous very stormy days into consideration. The day started off even better than yesterday and in about 2 hours we had already landed 250kg+ (550lb+)of fish. We got a very big amount of fish around 37lb - 44lb with the top fish this day being MINE! :D It is the cod from the picture in my previous posts on 60lb bled out, most likely around 61lb if I would not have let it bled out. However he put up a good fight the first couple of meters then became a total dead weight. I caught it on my Synit deepshot 150 which is a very light rod, it was an amazing feeling taking such big fish with such light tackle. So easy to work the jigs using a rod like Synit. I can feel the jigs every movement.

Here it is on another picture laying beside the other big cod we got this day. We only kept some of the bigger one, less hassle when we come into harbour! It looks very small because there is nothing in comparison but you can see it's big if you look at its head.


Afternoon we were totally fed up with cod fishing, we had already lost a few ones that felt bigger than my record fish. However we did'nt feel we had to pull one up above 66lb even though it was 100% possible. But there is not much challenge to it, I could most likely mount a banana shell with a hook and they would bite, or a spoon..or whatever that sinks.
When the fishing is like this it's more about luck who catches the biggest fish than skill. We ended the day fishing for halibut again, had some nice bites this time but we did not manage to hook em properly.

We were quite certain we were not going back out for more cod. We gave most of our fish to Vidar since he works part time as commercial fisherman and part time as camp owner. We kept a few big ones, I think Vidar took care of around 150kg (330lb) fish in the same time we took care of around 5 big ones...There is a difference between filleting and filleting and we were three and he was only one.

This day was going to be a day to remember fo the rest of our lives we had an amazing day on the ocean.

Wednesday

Vidar called me early since he was out on the ocean doing his daily work, he said he had gotten a coal fish on about 35lb and that he thought there was more around. This was out near the grounds where we had been fishing on for the last two days. We all know how much fighting power these coal fish has compared to the cod so we decided to try it out. This is not the best season for it, the best season is around August - September. You catch them easily by jigging fast, mechanical jigging works great. I think they act alot like kingfish or other fish that love fast moving food. However we got none out there and if we stayed even two seconds near the bottom we had a cod on the hook. We let the cod back in this day and headed back for some halibut fishing closer to land.

We got about three small halibuts up to the boat following the bait and with our first one landed :D, haha, it was tiny. But we felt happy to finnaly being able to touch one. We released it ofcourse. This area around Grundflaken seems very productive. We all decided that this has been the most productive area that we have tried sofar and we decided we had to go back here to fish atleast one more time before leaving Vaeroy. Since we did'nt land any big fish today, we had no fish to take care of and that felt good. Just come home and sit down and relax and enjoy the sound of a beer can opening and have the evening off.

Thursday

The morning looked calm and sunny and we thought we were going to have a pleasent fishing day ahead of us. We had already decided before that we were going to fish for halibut but were uncertain if we were going to try Nordflakken, north of the island or go back to where we fished yesterday with somewhat success. We also knew that the weather was going to turn for the worse during the day to culminate in a storm tomorrow.
For that reason we decided we will go to Nordflakken today and fish near land tomorrow due to the storm. Nordflakken is where they caught a 445lb halibut 2008 at very shallow water, it was the WR for atlantic halibut caught on pole for about a year before it was beaten.
Nordflakken is a large sandy area that goes on depths between 5m - 20m and is supposed to be one of the best places to fish halibut on around Vaeroy.
After speaking to Vidar about his experiences catching halibut around that area he said he usually fish using a herring connected with two hooks and a sinker. He drags the sinker in the bottom, since its basically all sand and keeps the bait close to bottom the whole time.
Vidar has also managed to get around 500kg of herring for his guests into his freezer so they can use it to fish for halibut.
I tried this the whole day without a single bite, on the other hand my friends using jigs did'nt have any luck either. The weather was nice for about two hours before the storm started coming, hail and rain and the winds caught up quickly and it made it hard for us to fish properly due to the quick drift. We did continue to fish the whole day unwilling to give up, we had perhaps two single bites the whole day with no hookups, it lowered our spirits since we had only one day left to fish and we knew the weather to be even worse tomorrow. We had been quite sure that we were going to land a halibut during the trip but we were getting more and more uncertain if we were actually going to. We got home a little earlier than usual and enjoyed it having a feast of anythin we could find that did not taste fish! We had a huge omelette in oven with tomatoes, salami and bacon and parmegano cheese ont he top, then we had a nice dip with garlic and raw peeled carrot sticks as second dish and finnaly home made lemon ice cream as the last dish. It was a feast to remember and suddenly tomorrow did'nt feel all that bad.

Friday

Our last day, our last chance to get that one halibut we had tried to get during the trip. We had set our alarms earlier than usual, me being anxious as always woke up before the alarm set of. I prepared the usual, our oven baked ciabattas we always eat as dinner on the ocean and I cooked eggs for all of us and prepared the coffee. Everyone was soar from our entire week of fishing and going up was quite hard. We were out on the ocean alot earlier than usual to enjoy the "somewhat" calmer waters during the morning. The water was anything from calm though, we had alot of winds around 12-13m/s and high seas. We took the boat south to Grundflakken where we fished during wednesday afternoon with success, we went quite far out so we would have a good long drift towards land. The waves never feel that bad when you finnaly turn of the engine and let the drift anchor point the front of the boat towards the waves making it feel safe and calmer.

I had already decided before we went out that with this heavy wind I was going to fish using a heavy metal jig to be able to have any control of my contact with the bottom which is very important when fishing for halibut. On this perticular jig about one year ago I had a halibut bite that I lost to me having to much initial break on the reel and the line cut in and broke. It had proven to me before and this was also the one I got the small one I landed one on Wednesday. The jig is a River2Sea Sea rock 500g jig using my favourite supersharp single circular hook, Owner Super Mutu size 10 with swivel,on the bottom of the jig, these are expensive but worth every penny. I rig it using my homemade assist hooks in the top going around half the jig down, mounted with a JM monster hook size 10 and 300pound kevlar cord. The way to fish halibut that has worked on me every single trip is some heavy bounces of the jig on the bottom then an uncosistent jigging up towards the surface. I go all the way up then repeat. The bites always come quite fare up near the surface. The jigs do get worn out from all the beating in the bottom but if you got quality jigs they manage without any problems.

On our first drift over rocky and sandy bottom with about 40-45 meters of depth, I felt that something touched my jig on the way up. I stopped, let the jig just float still for a moment. Nothing happened and I made one more movement of the jig up towards the surface. I felt it right away, about 15 meters from the surface there is no bottom. I got hooked and it felt like I was stuck to the bottom. I was getting no line at all. The fish figured out it was hooked up and took off towards the bottom as they always do. I yelled out to the others, HALIBUT!

I was loosing line fast until it stopped and I had to quickly try and pull it up from the bottom not allowing it to rest. My new JM reel PE5, mounted with sunline 90lb (depth colored) and Synit deepshot 350 rod proved to be better than I ever hoped for. Having a leverdrag is so convenient towards using a star drag. I know it's individual but for me it felt great. Afraid to do the same mistake I did a year ago I started out with quite low gear slowly raising it to avoid the line cutting in. As soon as the gear got heavier the fish started to tire and I was getting line in. He was heavy to lift up but was coming towards the boat. He did a few more rushes but overall I felt I was winning..

After around 10-12 minutes we could glance something at the surface, It looked quite big and I felt happy to see it coming. My two friends on the boat took everything so calmly and took care of the fish and landed it without any problems. The fish seemed exhausted when coming up. I do not know if I should thank my new rod and reel or that the waters are quite cold. But the halibut was beautiful and for me.. The third time is the charm, I have lost two big ones previously. One on every trip. This time I won. This made us all feel enlightened and since the weather was as bad as it was we decided to fish until noon and then head back towards harbour and pack and taking it calm the rest of the day until our long journey towards home began. At harbour the halibut was weighted to 77lb (35kg) bled out and with empty stomach, it was measured to 150cm (4,9 feet), a great catch and it was the perfect ending to this amazing trip.

If I were to give out a grade to the camp it would be a 5/5 counting Vidar. His prices are lower than most other fishing camps and the equipment and boats he has is of alot higher quality than most camps in Norweig. It is an adventure fishing in harsh waters, and on the open ocean where anything can happen. When fishing in Norweig there is nothing saying it can't be that world record halibut taking ur jig/lure. I can recommend this to all foreign people ever thinking of fishing in Norweig. Vidars home page is (http://www.sjybrygga.no) if you want it translated using google translate follow this link, sjybrygga. This was my first time visiting sjybrygga and far from the last time. Vidar even gives you a vacuum packer to take care of your fish so that you can get it as fresh as possible with you home. Our trip home felt fast and everything went as smooth as it can be.

To fish in Norweig you can usually fish with a guide or you just hire the boat and fish on ur own. I know that in other countries it's usually a chartered boat with a captain but here you just hire the boat and on you are on ur own.

This was my trip report from an amazing trip where everyone broke their old records and where you can actually relate to the old man and sea with rough storms and oceans roaring at you where anything can happen. Fishing around high mountain tops coming out of the oceans surrounded by a swirl of mist at all times make you wonder there is still wild places like this able to take your breath away. I have alot of movie material from the trip and also a big amount of pictures but I will try and post it later on.

Thank you for listening.

/Marcus

söndag 17 april 2011

Raw...

Here is the raw cut from the halibut fight. We will try to cut a movie from all scenes during the trip but it will be a long while before it's finished. No music, nothing.

Enjoy.

150cm halibut fight at Vaeroy 2011-04-15 from Marcus Viderberg on Vimeo.

This is the Uncut video of my halibut fight on the trip to Vaeroy 2011-04-15. The rod is a Custom built antacid wrapped Synit Deepshot 350 made by CJ (Synit) and the reel is a Jigging Master PE5. It's taken outside the southern tip of the Norwegian Island Vaeroy located near Lofoten. The bait is a River2Sea Sea Rock 500g and the fish was caught on 40 meters of depth. It was measured to 150cm on land.

fredag 15 april 2011

Third time is the charm

As the title says.. Third time is the charm, atleast for me.

After loosing one big halibut every trip, before, due to inexperience and bad gear. This time I was prepared, I took it calm and it went good all the way. It wasn't a huge halibut but still decent enough to be very happy!

Our weather recently has been far from optimal with winds up to 17 m/s but we still kept fishing. We had heavy rain and hail coming in heavy bursts. Today we drifted far to fast to use soft baits so I changed to a heavy metal jig on 500g and rigged it with one assist hook and one owner single hook so i could keep bottom contact and work the jig from bottom and up.

 I fished from the bottom and far up and about 15 meters from the surface when I felt something, I slowed down and waited a second or so, then made one last jig and I felt it right away. It was ON!.

 The fight lasted about 12-15 minutes long and we got most of it on film but it will be a while before we got anything edited and done, I might put up a link to the raw material.

The Synit Deepshot 350 Strumpan did the job at ease and it was a pleasure putting pressure on the halibut, the bend in the rod is just amazing you can see how soft it is but still extremely strong. The bend is crazy. I felt i could easily put on much larger fish without having to worry. I am also very satisified with my new JM reels having a leverdrag instead of a star drag makes fishing so much easier.

We caught the halibut on Storflaket on the southern tip of Vaeroy. This is the same area we earlier caught the small fish on. Its a big sandy area with around 45 meters depth.

We decided to keep it since it wasn't huge and we have been hungering for some good halibut meat and to tired of cod... In the harbour it was measured to 150cm and weighted 35,2 when it was bled out. The other people at harbour said it should have weighted 40kg due to empty stomach.

This is the last chapter of this trip to Vaeroy. I will write a sum up about the trip altogether after. But "as" I promised some people here is the fish together with my rod ;)



Now comes the long wait for the ferry and then a very long drive home. It feels both sad and great to leave this place. 7 days on the ocean does the trick... It worns you out in a good way!

Adios for now!