SEYCHELLES; THE RETURN TO PROVIDENCE ATOLL Trip Report by Peter McLeod, March 2019
A year is a very long time to have to wait for a fishing trip. For the last four years Providence Atoll in the Seychelles has very much captured my heart. Many ask me why; is it the fact that it is an enormous area at 55 km x 14 km? Is it because it is covered in marauding giant trevally, bumphead parrotfish, triggers and bones? Perhaps it’s down to knowing the guide team so well and their continued passion for the environment and the fish that inhabit it. I think the answer is that it’s a true saltwater wilderness with huge areas of totally unexplored flats, channels and lagoons. After four trips every experience has been different. Each time we have focused on different areas and often species. Although the GTs that I am so passionate about continue to be the star of the show, each trip has had different conditions and tidal variations that have brought a particular species to the fore.
This year was no exception, and as our group met at the Eden Bleu Hotel on Mahé most were already veterans and the few that weren’t soon would be. Cold beers were consumed while friendships were rekindled; some had not seen each other in a year since last year’s trip. The evening revelries passed with our usual dinner at Bravos before turning in and attempting to sleep, which never comes easy. I found myself checking my watch every hour and half until at 0430 I could not take it anymore and got up to make last minute adjustments to kit, luggage and camera equipment that were unnecessary but helped pass the time. Finally departure was upon us and as I ventured out to the concierge I found that most were in a similar state of excitement. After the usual fun and games at the IDC hanger was complete we at last boarded the IDC Beechcraft to begin the 1 hour and 45 minute flight to Farquhar. On arrival Tim Babich and Wesley de Klerk were there to greet us. Everything was loaded onto the tractors to the loading ramp in front of the Farquhar Lodge. As luggage and bodies were loaded into tender boats to head for Mayas Dugong, those of us left behind enjoyed the shade of the main lodge building and watched the pet GTs play in the bay. I think they have got even bigger than last year and some are well over the metre mark now. Must be all those birds… Arriving on Mayas Dugong is akin to coming home, after a few hours it feels like you have never left. Boat life takes over, shoes are thrown in a corner to be forgotten and as the six hour sail begins Tim briefs everyone on mothership rules, life at sea, safety on the flats and emergency procedures before getting into to the nitty gritty of fishing prospects for the weeks ahead. Then begins one of the best parts of the trip, the explosion of tackle on deck, kitting up and rekindling old friendships over cold Seybrew. The number of Hardy Fortuna XDS that spewed forth was telling as even the revered Charlton Mako had been forsaken by a few for this trip. The guides implemented a brilliant system of using a label gun to tag rods with names for this season which speeds up the morning process dramatically. However someone left it unattended for a while which was unwise and silliness ensued.
Day 1 – Learning Curve The first day was a bit of a blur as it often is. Easing back into the swing of kit organisation and working out the stiffness of several days travel combined with lack of sleep and a massive adrenaline rushes always tends to do that. I went out with David and John with Justin Rowland as our guide and we were to concentrating on home flat, a large area on the south west of Providence Island. It’s a big turtle grass flat, but we were faced with strong westerly winds that had beaten up the edge and made visibility tricky. There were a few highlights of the day though, the first coming not ten minutes out of the boat. As Justin pulled the boat along behind I took a position to the left of David, wanting him to get the first shot. Shortly after, I spotted a black shape some twenty yards to the right that was moving and looked like a big GT on a ray. I pointed it out to David, got him lined up and he began to cast. The first two cast landed short, but the third landed just to the right. As he stripped the GT turned and hammered the fly, almost doing a 180 turn on the spot and charging off in the other direction like a stung horse. David was totally taken aback having never cast at a GT before. As the line ripped through his hands a loop jumped up, hooked around the back of the reel and the line went off like a gunshot. As the belly of the line free flowed through the rest of the rod and dropped onto the surface Justin and I made a lunge for it. I managed to grab it and hang on, thinking we could jury rig something. The GT nosedived into the flat and after some thrashing come free and disappeared giving me nothing but a good dunking to show for it. The whole incident had taken no more than 30 seconds and David was standing there, I suspect wondering what had just transpired. A bit of baptism of fire, but hey, that’s GT fishing. The tide was dropping by now and I had one shot at another big GT tailing on a ray. There is nothing quite like seeing that big black tail waving in the air. I put three casts to that fish and each time, just as the fly landed, the fish changed direction and lost it in the mud coming up from the ray. Finally he wised up and made a break for the deep. Frustrating. John had some shots at triggers and then we hopped back in the boat and made for the lagoon to check the inner edge on the low tide. Sure enough, we came across a pack of GTs tailing on the edge on a ray. Justin steered the boat to the edged and while I grabbed it, he and David leapt out and run up the edge. The fly went in and instantaneously went tight. Sadly for David it tore off so fast it popped the fly. The rest of the afternoon was spent chasing GTs around the lagoon and John picked up a lovely bohar snapper on the way home.
Day 2 – Trigger Time Many of you who have read my trip reports in the past know I have a bit of a thing about triggerfish. I love to fish for them, and after GTs they are probably my next favourite species – the Jack Russell of the flats. Hooking and landing titans has always been fine for me, but the yellow margin has always been a nemesis. While fishing with Brummy on another occasion we were moving down the middle of a flat pock marked with small depressions and holes. On the outer edge a big yellow margin had ventured out of the comparative safety of the deeper water to feed on the edge. Steve had gone ahead with Tim, who was guiding us that day, scouting for GTs. Brummy and I brought up the rear with the boat. Brummy is fully aware of my obsession with the coral biters and kindly let me have the shot. I stripped some line of the Hardy HBX and began to make some false casts before gently dropping the Itchy Trigger fly a little short. The trigger was feeding up tide, every so often sticking its large half-moon tail in the air as it munched some unsuspecting crustacean. As it put its head up again, I gave the fly one short strip and immediately it rushed over and nailed the fly. I set the hook and it instantly went into reverse. The number of times triggers have done that to me has ended in them spitting the hook back in my face. I felt that small seed of doubt creeping in. But this time was different. Suddenly it took off, charging for the middle of one of the deep holes. I ran around the outside of the depression in the knee depth water, desperately trying and keep it away from mischief. I had quite a bend in the 9’ 9# Hardy HBX and as I put the rod butt into my hip to begin leaning on the fish everything stopped moving. I looked up and felt the sinking feeling return as I saw it had dived into a coral bommie. Brummy dropped the anchor and was about to come over with his goggles to swim for it and prize it out when suddenly the fish flew out of his hole and made his way across the open flat. A surge of relief tore through me as knew now I had a chance. A short while later I had a firm grip around the wrist and immediately it start snapping at me. Wow… finally I had managed to land a big yellow margin and for me, that was the one fish I wanted to land on this trip. I was elated! Brummy took some snaps and we released it. We had a short window on that tide, and now I was done, Steve was up. Another yellow margin was tailing in a hole and Tim guided him on to it... the fish followed and pounced. Steve slowly striped the fly another foot and the trigger rushed and pounced again. He striped again and finally everything went tight as the trigger charged off to the left. As the line flicked up it got line wrapped and ping! The battle was over. We muttered words of sympathy. There really is nothing you can say that makes it better.
As the atoll had been experiencing some strong westerly winds for the first few days we were anchored on the east side and fishing mostly the north east. The vast open turtle grass flats were our playground, but not many bumpies were around to this point. They tend to arrive with the spring tides. We therefore searched these areas for GTs on rays, but flat light made spotting tough. As a group we would often therefore put the guy with the best eyes (the guide) up on the front of the deck and then one of us pull the boat around with a fisherman on either flank. Although the guides protested to this it made the most sense to us and resulted in hitting fish we would otherwise not have seen. There is nothing more frustrating than wading flats you know have GTs on and then spook them by nearly stepping on them. While Tim and I were near the boat with Steve a shout went up and Brummy hooked a nice GT off the back of a ray. The fish was jet black and charged the fly down. In short order Tim had it to hand, a lovely fish about 85 cm. We spent the rest of the afternoon moving down the flat with the tide, but apart from a few brief encounters that did not materialise into hook ups we did not see too much. The light was against us and soon our little party was wandering along the edge of the flat. Brummy managed a lovely bluefin trevally before the end of the session and then we headed back to Mayas Dugong for the evening. Some groups came back having got amongst good numbers of fish which was great to hear. Peter O, Fred and Tom had got over the apex of the flat on the east side sand flats near Providence Island to the ocean side. They had found the bonefish, hungry and aggressive. The smallest was about 6 lbs and largest, a monster that Fred had spotted and hooked all by himself. The fish was 70 cm in length, a real tank.
Day 3 – Backcast of Wonder The following day the weather took a turn for the worse. The westerly that had been hammering the west side of the atoll was now joined with grey and overcast skies making spotting very tough. This was my day to fish with Joern and Maria with Wesley as our guide and mentor. The day began by heading over to the west side to check the turtle grass flats for rays before heading up to the sand banks. We saw a few GTs here and there, but with the tough light getting a shot at them before they saw us was challenging. Wesley motored us up to the sand bar as we watched white caps rolling in… As we were there we opted to give it a go and after a good dunking managed to get up on to the bar. Normally standing in the surfline is one of the most phenomenal experiences and one I relish. There is nothing quite like watching GTs surf down the inside of waves, and this particular spot over white sand is one of the best I have ever fished. However today, not only was the surf coming in hard, but we were also dealing with a perpendicular crossing wave. Normally with the surf you have three larger waves followed by seven smaller sets. Today there was no respite to actually look over the wave form onto to the water behind. Every so often your body was caught between the oncoming and crossing wave which actually lifted you off your feet and dumped you in the turmoil. Maria stood her ground using Wesley as an anchor while Joern and I moved out further. After 20 minutes of being hammered we finally gave in as there was no point at which we could actually see anything, so the four if us headed back to the respite of the boat. Wesley immediately came up with an alternative plan and we putted up the channel into the relative calm of the lagoon to hunt out some triggers on the finger flats. We hit it just right as Joern went up the left and I, the right. Almost immediately the tails started waving as trigger after trigger began tailing on the finger in front of us. I counted four tails in the air at once at one point and I could have stayed there all day. Joern and I had follows, nips, brief hook ups consistently, but neither of us could achieve a proper connection. At one point a large yellow crescent began waving about 20 yard to my left. I zeroed in on the fish, and after the previous success with yellow margins I was full of confidence. The trigger came up out of its sandy little hole and was feeding just on the edge of the flat. I dropped the Itchy Trigger fly just short to its left, let it sink and then gave it one short strip. It rushed over straight away and pinned it. I gave a long strip and felt the nipping, but no tension. The fish followed and pinned it again. Again I stripped, the fly popped out of its mouth and it gave chase. By this stage it was getting very close so I dropped to one knee to keep my profile and low and continued the cat and mouse game. Suddenly everything went tight and I felt that elation of success! The trigger back away, shaking its head and simply spat the hook back at me... ergghh! It looked puzzled (as much as a trigger can look puzzled) and went back to the edge of its hole. I started the process again... and yet again the trigger gave chase. The short version is I hooked that trigger again... and lost it… again... until finally it got bored and headed out to the deeper water. By this stage I had probably been fishing at that one fish for half an hour. Perhaps that illustrates why these fish are so engaging and frustrating – why I love them so much!
For something a little different later in the afternoon we went offshore to look for some sailfish. A couple of other boats had found them the day before so we were optimistic. After landing a couple of GTs from the edge, sailfish flies were rigged up we headed out over the edge. No sailfish, but Wesley found us some busting tuna and instantly both Joern and Maria hooked up! Tuna are very powerful adversaries on a fly and they did well to land them. We immediately thought of the sushi to come! A tougher day with some challenging conditions, but a huge amount of fun. Jim regaled us with his first underwater GT fishing session. His team had ventured onto the sandbanks as well that afternoon. They had seen fish surfing down the waves, but were struggling to cast almost totally submerged! Peter O, Fred and Tom had had a very different day. They had come across an area of higher ground on one of the flats offering refuge to a huge amount of baitfish. There were a couple of white tip sharks in the vicinity as well as a good number of GTs making the most of the snack bar. Peter had been casting at a smaller GT in a white depression while Brendon Becker stayed on the boat up high to keep an eye on the sharks. As Peter O was casting, Brendon had suddenly yelled at him that it was coming‌ Peter had not seen movement from the GT in front and it transpired that a much large GT had seen his fly on the back cast and moved around him to chase it. As it circled round to the white depression in water it could swim in, it then chased his fly up into the shallows and smashed it half out of the water. The big fish then headed off, but attracted the attention of one of the white tip sharks than then chased it up into the shallows before it escaped back into deeper water. Finally he brought it under control and Brendon grabbed it, stunning fish of 108 cm.
Day 4 – Bow Waves The beginning of day four is always the day that the previous three days impact you physically. The miles waded and habitual casting of 12 weights, not to mention the hammering in the surf had me feeling a little stiff and marginally slower to spring out of bed in the morning. Or it was the Takamaka. One of the two. Peering out of the porthole revealed similar conditions to the previous day, a bit overcast, but no rain.
I was out with David, Tim and Brendon as our guide. Time for a bit more boat pulling on the eastern side. With Brendon on the front and me pulling, with the better visibility he quickly put David onto a couple of fish on rays. A huge fish charged the fly and hit it, but sadly came unpinned, but he also landed a smaller one. We were finding a number of GTs dropping off the flats on the dropping tide by intercepting them along the edge with lots of opportunities. Tim quickly followed suit and the morning was shaping up nicely. I found myself wading along the edge on the left flank and landed a lovely bluefin I intercepted cruising just in the depths. A much larger fish hove into view, but simultaneously Brendon and Tim yelled at me from the boat to warn of a shark that had found me interesting and was coming at me fast. I looked at the GT, looked at the shark which was coming quick, and was just wondering if I had time to make a cast first before dealing with the shark. Time was not on my side and Brendon yelled “prepare to defend yourself!” I took one step forward, turned the rod around reel first and as the gap closed fast I identified it as a big lemon shark and braced to whack it in the face with the rod butt. In a couple of seconds the gap closed to a couple of feet and as I drew the rod back the shark saw the rest of my body above the water and spooked off to the deep water. Immediately I began scanning for the GT I had seen but it had already moved off… shame. Brendon moved us then up to the east side of Providence Island to hunt along the margins. Sometimes some beasts come down off the northern point, so we had lunch in the bay before hopping out and investigating. The western side of the island was clear, but sadly our intended area was covered in green murky water that had been flushed down from the north by the westerly winds. We putted along the edge on the off chance, but having seen hundreds of turtles and nothing more, abandoned the pursuit to check out a lovely spot on the western side to look for bow waves. This huge open turtle grass flat has some lovely depressions across its length culminating in a big white sand cut in the middle. Fishing for bow waves is always exciting as you never really know what’s coming. As we putted down to out intended position suddenly the boat was surrounded by huge bow waves coming off the flats. We had spooked a huge number of massive leatherback turtles that have been feeding up on the grass. Some of these turtles were pushing up a bow wave akin to small submarine, and it was awe inspiring to watch.
We arrived at our intended spot and hopped out, immediately seeing bow waves across the flat. They would come off the apex of the flats and then vanish into depressions, sometimes continuing out the other side. We made cast after cast, hitting bluefin, big yellow lipped emperors, and some certainly GTs. With the light coming in the other directions the glare made it impossible to decipher what you were casting at, which almost makes it more fun. There were a few chases, but no hook ups other than smaller species. By this time the afternoon was drifting on, and as the tide had dropped to an extend we could no longer cross to the east and Mayas Dugong, we had to motor up north, past the sand banks, round the point and back down the other side. It would be along run and conditions up on the north point had not improved with some pretty gnarly waves. Brendon guided us through with huge skill and precision and soon Mayas Dugong was in sight. We tried our luck on the sailfish again, and although we did not raise one the four us we treated to a long distance show as Tim P raised, hooked and landed his first ever sailfish on a fly. From where we sat we could see the fish bound across the surface like and greyhound and watched its acrobatics with awe. That evening fresh sashimi was on the menu from the yellowfin caught the day before‌ oh yes! But watch out for that Wasabi... It’s mighty strong! That evening the motley crew were treated to an extraordinary sunset, even for the Seychelles.
Day 5 – Bumpies and GTs Things were changing... firstly I was greeted on the back deck by Joern dressed as a giant banana… something you don’t see every day… He had been awarded the banana suit the previous night at dinner for some infraction on the flats. The sun was out, the wind had dropped significantly and I was heading out with the awesome team of Tim Babich, John and Jim. Finally the group could start fishing south toward Cerf Island now that conditions allowed it. There is a huge drainage system there simply known as Epic. The day before Epic had performed, so our intrepid band ran south hoping to re-create the experience. Tim expertly guided the tender boat through the impressive surf and up onto the flats. We began by hunting around the pots and cuts on the flat edge while we waited for the tide to push. We saw a few fish, but nothing connected. Tim moved us further in to where the big channel of Epic slides up onto the flats abruptly. We immediately encountered fish hanging on the edge on some rays and John hooked and landed one GT while Jim hit a big yellow lipped emperor. Then we saw the first large greeny blue paddles appear up on the flat. Bumpies. Through the course of the week so far the large groups of bumpies we normally see had not been there off the back of the neap tide, but now the tidal phase was moving to springs in the latter half of the week they began to reappear. This was the first big group I had seen and as John had never fished for them we put him up. This as one of the species on his bucket list for this trip, so as he made his way up, Jim and I stayed near the edge. He made a cast as they approached with Tim at his side. As he kept tension with the fly they came to close and spooked away. The guys followed them down the flat and John continued putting shots in front of them. Shortly afterwards the school erupted and John was hooked up! The line tore off the reel as the rod bucked and dipped and the bumpy headed for the channel with the rest of the herd. Sadly this one cut him off, but shortly afterwards John and I found the school in deeper water by the channel edge. Jim and Tim had headed up the flat in search of the squadron of rays that had been spotted previously.
John cast beautifully to the school as it milled around a coral head over some white sand. The fly sunk and as he kept tension I saw one fish move over and tilt down on the fly. John set the hook and then all hell broke loose. We were already standing up to our chests, so I began to back him slowly up and out of the area as the fish piled off into the deep channel with the school. I have to say I was somewhat crossing my fingers as I was thinking the chances of
this battle going well were slim. At the same time I heard a yell from Tim and saw that Jim was also hooked up. It transpired that they had indeed found the squadron of some 15 large rays and all around them were GTs hoovering up any fleeing crustaceans or baitfish. Jim had cast at one particular fish which had peeled off and slammed the fly. By this stage John and I had backed up some 20 yards from the lip of the channel and his bumpy had separated from the school. Shortly after that he managed to persuade it to come back up on to the flat by applying as much pressure as he dared. It was now or never, so I dropped my rod and began smashing my way through the thigh depth water back to the boat to get the net. Landing bumpies without a net is tough and I really wanted to get John this first fish. I finally made it back to the boat, glancing over my shoulder every few minutes to gauge how he was getting on. I scrabbled around the focsle and emerged triumphant with the net before jumping over the side and heading back to the battling John. At the same time Jim had nearly beaten his GT and Tim was moving out to intercept it. John by this stage finally had some semblance of control on the flats bison he was attached to and I moved out towards the fish. As it came towards me I dropped the net into the water and gently raised it as the fish came over it. In the bag! John looked at me ecstatic but completely knackered. Tim by this stage had got a hold of Jim’s GT and brought it down towards us. I went for the camera. This is the first time I have ever experienced two anglers doubling up on a bumpy and a GT. What an experience!
After this the guys pressed me to fish, so I dutifully took the front of the bow and Tim putted us back along the inside lagoon edge. With the light falling from the left the entire flat to the right was lit up and we could see for hundreds of yards. Twice we stopped to jump out and chase GTs on the back of rays and twice I had fish give chase and come short or miss the fly. There are days when this just happens and I was having one of them. As we resumed our trajectory, coming straight at me was a huge bow wave and at first I thought it must be another monster turtle. As it got closer Tim yelled from the back that it was a GT and I needed to get ready. I stripped line off, checked the line on the deck and waited… closer... closer... I lifted the Zephrus 12# rod and began to cast. The line flowed out of the rings and the fly sang to target and dropped. I gave one extra hard strip to counter act the motion of the boat and the fish charged, planed, eyeballed me, and smashed the Olive Semper. I set the hook and cleared the line which took seconds before the reel began to sing… loudly. That fish was well over a metre – my unicorn moment had arrived. As I desperately tried to gain some control the fish veered off the flat and dived for the lagoon that was littered with coral heads. I watched in resignation as it threaded its way through them like knitting. Before I even a chance to slack off the drag everything went solid and I knew the battle was over. A silence lingered over the boat. There really is nothing you can say or do other than pick yourself up and go again. The day was not over yet… As we ran up north towards Mayas Dugong we came to an edge of reef pock marked with coral heads and clear blue water. It was like an aquarium! The “Red Menace” of bohar snapper were everywhere but out of nowhere charged a huge GT at Jim’s fly. It hit the fly before we really knew what was happening… especially Jim! As the evening sun began to drop and flood the flats with orange light Jim battled on his Hardy Zephrus 11#. The Fortuna reel was doing its job and slowly he gained on the fish. We saw silver in the water, and after one last massive effort we hauled a massive 105 cm GT into the boat. What a way to finish! Home for tea and medals… We arrived back onboard to a subtle hubbub that something had happened but no one wanted to say anything. Joern and Maria fishing with Brummy and Tim Babich had found a huge school of permit. Maria had hooked and landed a stunning permit of approximately 13 lbs! What a day.
Day 6 – Cerf Island The last day dawned, clear and bright and there was a real feeling of excitement in the air. Until Brummy and Steve turned up on deck wearing camo morph suits… I have no words. This was Steve’s birthday and they were celebrating in style! John was out of action after sustaining some damage the day before, so David, Tim and I headed to the deep south around Cerf Island. Cerf is a stunning sand island intersected by channels and whole areas we don’t get access to very often. Tim took us to an area he had just discovered and was busy exploring; a series of saltwater lagoons connected to the deep water by a “river” that then connected the lagoons. We motored up the river and moored on the edge of the first lagoon before hopping out and staking out for a while. The tide was pushing and soon fish, turtles and rays began to use the channel to get up to the deeper lagoons. Perfect spot to intercept. We saw a couple of fish that weren’t playing ball, some big grouper but nothing else, so we moved. Dropping down the channel Tim headed for open sea before swinging south and round the southern edge of Cerf Island. After chugging through some greenish warm water it was like someone had turned on a tap as it gave way to crystal clear azure water coming from the western ocean. This is possibly one of the most stunning places to fish in the whole world and with the light the way it was I put down the rod and picked up the camera. There is a time and a place and this had to be recorded. The channel at the south western end comes off the white sand and at the right stage of tide it’s possible to wade out on the sand and station yourself on the edge to intercept sharks and GTs coming in from the ocean to access the flats. This channel leads down to the coral heads and drop off of South Point – where beasts live. David was further out and I took station looking due south in case a fish came up that way. Tim spotted a big GT coming up the channel and David began to cast. Not an easy feat as he was already at chest level. The cast was solid, the fly landed and the GT spurred itself to attack mode and devoured the fly. David’s reel was throwing up spray as the handle spun through the water like a small propeller. As the battle came to its conclusion I grabbed the camera and waded over. It was a stunning blue/ silver fish fresh off the ocean which we quickly released. What a place to catch it! That fish will go down in the annals of my mind. We grabbed lunch before cruising up the western side of Cerf to the channels.
Again I found myself on the front deck, scanning. The water was crystal clear and visibility was awesome. A big fish appeared to the right heading in our direction, obviously attracted by the noise. At first I thought it was a big GT but the shape and movement was wrong. It was a monster barracuda, about five feet long. Love those things. I cast the black hollow fly at it and twitched. It turned to investigate and as I stripped it kept pace, eventually almost balancing the fly on its nose. I gave it one more fast strip and…it turned away and sidled off like a disgruntled cat. Real shame, I really thought it was going to eat! Tim and I looked at each other scratching our heads. We spent the remainder of the afternoon hunting in and out of the channels of surf and although we saw a few more GTs could
not tempt them. Time to motor across the inside of the lagoon and headed back for the last time. That evening while having a few beers and uploading images to my Ipad I had a request from Jim to Airdrop a pic. I accepted and then was face to face with a total behemoth. On their way home they had stopped at one area for one last cast. After three drifts a monster from the deep appeared and attached itself to Jim. The swell had been tough, but with Wesley’s excellent skills along with Joern and Maria’s encouragement Jim had brought to the boat a 128 cm fish, trumping his previous 105 cm. Wow. It had been a special day to finish on and the last night party was a good one. It’s very hard when writing a report for this destination to include everything as there are so many elements that happen. Other fish that must be mention were a cracking 110 cm GT from Brummy in the surf on the first day, countless GTs and other species by Steve who also landed a massive fish on his birthday, another 102 cm GT and some huge grouper from Joern, Tim’s first trigger, and Fred’s dogtoothed tuna that made is reel smoke. A mention should also be made of Peter O’s son Tom, thrown in the deep end. He nailed it, landing a good number of GTs, big bonefish and a huge boha. He also put up with all of us with good grace! With some many experiences where do you draw the line? We landed 65 GTs that week with five over one metre. We lost a lot and also tangled with many other species, each one with its own story. As always a huge thank you to the guides of FlyCastaway, Kevin, Nella and crew on the Mayas Dugong for looking after us so well. As always fishing Providence is a huge learning curve. Every experience is different and this was no exception. I am already looking forward to go back to school next year.
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