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Old 09-12-2010, 07:50 AM   #1
dsafety
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Sunfish

It seems like every time I go out, I see something that I have not seen before. Saturday was no exception. Several times during the day I saw a bunch of fins sticking out of the water, gently moving back and forth. Sometimes there were only three or four fins. Other times there were many more.

Now I have been told the YT sometimes do this. I can't say that I have ever seen the behavior but thinking that what I was seeing might be some puddling YT, I grabbed my jig stick and let the iron fly. The cast was perfect and the retrieve went right through the school of fish. No response. I tried again, several times and eventually spooked the fish.

A little while later, I came up on one of the larger collections of fins. They had surfaced less than 20 feet from my yak. As I slowly peddled up on the school, I realized that these were not Yellowtail. They were small Pacific Sunfish, sometimes known as Mola Mola. Similar to these guys.

309acdf40c8469d5c67df93be767a6a5.jpg

Alt_The%20Pacific%20Sunfish.jpg

Mola Mola can get to be as big as a door. These were small, less than two feet across. Very cool to see. Later I noticed that some of these fish were jumping out of the water. In the distance they looked like the mullet you often see jumping in the bays. When one jumped right next to me, I was able to confirm it was a sunfish.

I still don't know what a school of puddling YT looks like but at least now I know what it doesn't look like. Live and learn. I wonder what new experience I will be treated to on the next trip?

Bob
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Old 09-12-2010, 08:00 AM   #2
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Bob ,

Good meeting you yesterday. The molas also tend to jump similar to mullet and were all over out there. I confess to grabbing the jig stick on the puddling lil school of molas before paddling over to them.
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Old 09-12-2010, 08:01 AM   #3
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I was in the middle of a school of these guys. Looked over the side, there they were. I would have to guess that none were above the 10lb range for first fish in the tournament, so I left them alone.

Got out the camera to take a video underwater, but it spooked them away.
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Old 09-12-2010, 08:30 AM   #4
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I was wondering what those guys were. I too tossed an iron and nothing as I thought they were YTs also.... They came right up to the yak and were looking at me. It was cool. Loved the school of dolphins too yesterday. With those experiences catching any fish is a bonus.
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Old 09-12-2010, 08:34 AM   #5
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Too funny,
I was out in my skiff a couple of day ago and I too tossed my iron over and through them.

How many others have done the same in that past week?!

Those fish are surely growing up fearless of the iron!

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Old 09-12-2010, 09:01 AM   #6
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I actually hooked one with the sabikis and took some pics.
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Old 09-12-2010, 09:45 AM   #7
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They appear to congregate around kelp. Seems like everytime fishing offshore and there is a mola or more around a kelp paddy the palegics are missing. I'm assuming yt and mola don't mix. If I come across a paddy with mola are around I move on to the next one, hope I'm not missing the fish by doing this!. Just my observations.
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Old 09-12-2010, 08:01 PM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dsafety View Post
Mola Mola can get to be as big as a door. ....

They get a lot bigger then that Bob.

I've seen some offshore that were as big as a volkswagen. We almost hit one off SBI that had eyes as big as dinner plates and must of weighed several tons. It's amazing that something can grow to that size just eating jellyfish, and other junk. They are kind of a pain in the ass offshore, as their fins can be mistaken for finning gamefish and the larger ones can damage an outdrive, prop or outboard if you hit one.

Jim
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Old 09-12-2010, 08:13 PM   #9
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I hit one years back on the skiff. Scared the crap out of me and spun the prop.
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Old 09-12-2010, 08:17 PM   #10
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haha Wikipedia says japanese eat those... i swear what dont they eat over there. they eat the organs...

Make sure you keep your plastic bags in the trash and not flying intot he ocean, just like sea turtles, mola mola eat mostly jellyfish, and the bags kills em.

wiki says thsoe thigns get to be 1500lbs or so. Slayride!
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Old 09-12-2010, 09:02 PM   #11
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wiki says thsoe thigns get to be 1500lbs or so. Slayride!
Still bigger...

Evidently they are the largest growing bony fish in in the ocean, reaching 11 feet and over 5000 pounds.


They start out so tiny and grow to great size that a full size adult weighs 60 million times as much as it did as an infant, it's like a sparrow growing to the size of the Titanic.


Yep those yellow lines are a parking place.



The one I saw at SBI was, just huge, the biggest thing I have ever seen in the water other then boats, subs, or whales.

I could never figure out why sharks did not eat them but it turns out thier flesh has a neurotoxin in it which is not that big of a surprise when you realise they are Tetraodontiformes or in the same family as poisonous pufferfish. Makes sense, probably the only way they could grow so big while moving so slow.

Cool stuff.

Jim
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Old 09-13-2010, 08:32 AM   #12
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here is a shot of the "puddlers"

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Old 09-13-2010, 09:34 AM   #13
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I snagged one of those weird things about a month ago...jumped a few times too. Hard to believe something that's built like a beer keg can jump.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pJOjIqzpAmk
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