This was the bulk of the report-
“No
bones were harmed during this trip..... but plenty of Trevs were well ****** up on your murderous
hooks !
I saw some monster Boners tailing in the lagoon...all buggered off when cast to…
An aussie was landing them hand over fist using shrimp and crab meat on a hook and Bubble thingy..... he landed a monster one afternoon...... took him to hell and back for about half an hour..... each to there own .
Stayed on Akaiami, saw some Bones but very shy... then watched the locals net the bejesus outa the place... dozens of big bones and trevs... parrott , goat fish and worst of all ..........BIG MILK fish !”
So – spooky fish, Aussie tourists using bait to catch bones (???) And a bunch of locals netting the hell out of one of the more stunning fly fishing beaches on the planet. That stunningly beautiful Akaiami beach-front can have great shelter, good visibility and – when the netters haven’t buggered the place up- big bones cruising close to the shore. It’s a magical spot, but it’s being rooted by the locals and their need to eat fish.
Obviously there is a need for a source of cheap fish protein on the island. Most of the pelagic fish go straight to the restaurants, the locals eat the stuff netted in the lagoon. There is a need to replace that fish with something else.
You would hope though that the Cook Islands Government could get behind some deepwater drop-lining, or milkfish farming, or… something… anything that might provide Aitutaki with an abundance of relatively cheap eating fish that might take some pressure off the lagoon net fishery.
Without some sort of real initiative from the Government I can’t see a lot of hope for Aitutaki’s bonefish and the lagoon fishery in general.
Sad really.


FishMan wrote:Andrew, whereabouts is it that you're working? |
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