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GETTIN’
FISHY IN FIJI
MATAVA RESORT – KADAVU, FIJI
By Bill Boyce
WATCH THE VIDEO ONLINE
PART ONE – PART
TWO

To anyone who has traveled the world in search of fine fishing locations,
an un-deniable fact we keep contending with at so many of these
destinations is .. Paradise Lost.. Paradise Lost… Paradise
Lost. For we have all been to places we dreamed could never exist,
and once there, had the most insane adventure, vying to return as
soon as humanly possible. But when we did make that much anticipated
pilgrimage back to paradise.. It was indeed .. Lost. Typically due
to over development, to people who for one reason or another just
don’t seem to belong there. You know the scenario, we fishy
type people in our shorts, and industry related T-shirts, keep getting
replaced by the dreaded “suit and tie on the beach”
look. Or worse yet, the bald guy clad in Bermuda shorts, with white
sox, black polished wing tips, and a big obnoxious woven hat with
MEXICO sewed across the front of it. Tell tale signs that your “secret
spot” is a little less a secret, and more likely the hottest
new time share condo destination.
Well, I just returned from a filming expedition of a new travel
/ fishing series called IGFA Angler’s Digest TV on the remote
Fijian island of Kadavu. From the moment my Top Siders touched the
ground, I knew I had found a special place. A place sooooo different
from any other I had ever been. One which gave me the immediate
imminent feeling that I will soon be truly experiencing… Paradise
Found…!!! The 40 minute skiff ride from the small air strip
that services Kadavu was an adventure unto itself. Passing thru
stunningly clear waters where the pristine virgin coral reefs pass
just a few feet under the flat bottomed hull.
Going thru reef passages where the current is flowing. Giving me
visions of giant trevally, and bluefin trevally lining up to brutally
beat down any un-suspecting baitfish, un-lucky enough to find itself
within eye shot of these fantastic predators. As my mind wonders,
my focus suddenly becomes the verdant green rain forested slopes
that cover the North side of Kadavu, where large colorful parrots
are seen transecting the coconut trees. Secluded white sand beaches
pass by that look right out of a Hawaiian Tropic Tan ad. The only
thing missing are the bikini clad women waving at me as if from
a float in the Rose Parade on New Years morning.
The only signs of human life are a few small villages where native
Fijians reside in communities no larger than a few hundred people.
Amazingly friendly, hospitable people I might add with exponential
emphasis.
People so removed from our uptight materialistic worlds that they
have no need for petty jealousy of “keeping up with the Jones’s”.
Their continuous laughter, and the perpetual smiles plastered to
their faces will make you wonder what planet they are from, or better
yet, which one we all need to visit for a reality check.
THE MATAVA RESORT

The remote Matava
Resort is located in a scenic little bay where several stilted,
thatched roof bures (rooms), cling to the hillside.
Each with inspirational ocean views and the distant sound of waves
ending their oceanic journey on the Astrolabe Barrier Reef. The
hospitable staff kicks the whole experience up several notches and
from the time you arrive, you get the sudden sensation that you
never want to leave.
FISHING IN PARADISE
Little was known of what type of fishing to expect other than a
smattering of yellowfin tuna, wahoo, dolphin, sails, and perhaps
a marlin of various colors and stripes. But since we never really
hear much about Fiji offshore, we assume it is not a place to spend
much time, money, or effort in pursuit of the ultimate blue water
experience. Boy was I WRONG..!!! From the first glance at the British
Nav Charts presented to me by IGFA Captain Adrian “MEGA”
Watts, I knew we were in fishy territory. The Astrolabe Reef runs
over 125 miles around the Northern edge of Kadavu Island. Plenty
of openings, channels, and inlets are geologically placed to allow
a good mixing of inshore reef forage species to venture out and
beyond the outer reef drop off. Placing them in the beady eyes of
all the above mentioned predators who hang on those walls like wolves
waiting for Little Red Riding Hood. The beautiful thing about the
geography of the reef and the surrounding islands, is that a lee
can always be found where fishing can commence in relatively quiet
seas.
Our trip was made in July, considered the Fijian winter. The Fijian
island group consists of 310 islands, and is located in the Southern
Hemisphere. To be exact, 19 degrees south of the equator. Though
not considered the rainy season, it is a season where North Westerly
trade winds can blow for several days at a time, making the act
of fishing the front side of the Astrolabe a bumpy affair. We had
some of those winds, but all were less that 20 knots and seas were
less that 4’. Hell, whose kidding who.. That is an awesome
day off the Texas coast, the North East canyons, and the Caribbean
in general..!!!
No worries for us as we were under the skillful guidance of Capt.
Adrian, aboard the BITE ME, a solid 31’ twin diesel, Aussie
built DEEP V sportfisher. A sister ship to the popular Black Watch
platform. Adrian’s knowledge of the reef is legendary and
the boat currently holds 19 Fijian line class records. His soulful
mate, Joe Tuku also shares “god like status” and is
great in the pit.
In the act of filming a show, quantity can often over ride quality,
when fishing an area. People watching these shows want to be entertained
with fish being caught. In Adrian’s case, quality is always
his mindset. This time of year, the waters cool to a range of 74
– 76, and the wahoo and sailfish are most active. They were
our target species. The heaviest outfit we fished were 30’s
but most were 16 – 20’s, with a great day spent fishing
the 8, and that will have it’s own happy ending later in the
story.

HOO’S NEXT
The run to the drop off is less than 20 minutes and in route, many
amazing tropical islands, virgin reefs and quality surf breaks are
within a stones throw. In fact, retired Kiwi surf pro, Ian Thompson
calls Kadavu his home and does surf and dive charters from his beautiful
sailboat and bayside homestead. Once outside the reef, yet still
within ear shot of the breakers, the lines are set and the pattern
established for a combination of a sailfish / wahoo encounter. Adrian
constantly monitors the meter, and every time a bait ball is seen,
we in the pit are alerted. Within seconds… ZING.. POW.. Two
leaping wahoo are seen no less than 12 feet in the air, and come
crashing down on our skipping garfish (ballyhoo) baits. Line is
peeling from two reels there is no mistaking, these are 40 + lb.
“scissor heads”. These speedsters are part of a “wolf
pack”, and Adrian smiles with the confidence of a field general
as he mutters “we found the enemy”. For the next two
hours we are covered up with skying wahoo. Giving us an aerial show,
the likes of which I have never witnessed in my life. Our topside
cameraman, Dolores Peralta captured some absolutely SICK footage
of this phenomenon, and I had to get my still cameras in the game
as well. It got to the point where we wished we had brought out
our crash helmets..!!
The smallest wahoo we caught was 25 lbs., the largest hooked, well
over 80+. My guest angler for the show was world renowned Cam
Sigler Jr. A fly fishing guru who felt compelled to fish light
tippet class IGFA records. After seeing this aerial attack in progress,
he knew he had his hands full. He was successful in landing wahoo
on the 20 lb. tippet, but the speedy strikes and toothy scissors
proved tough going for the 6 lb. attempts.
DOUBLE TROUBLE
Sailfish are a perennial resident of the Astrolabe reef but prefer
the cooler waters of the Fijian winters. As the tide came off high,
Adrian had a sneaky suspicion that sails would come up for us. We
worked a few bait marks on the meter and just like clock work..Up
they came. “Long left.. Long left.. Sailfish on the skip bait”.
I grabbed the rod as the sail pumped its tail to get on the bait.
Knowing we had double “J” hook rigs for the wahoo action,
I was prepared to immediately set upon the bite. A second after
the grab I came tight and so did the line. The sailfish took off
for a back flip or two, and I stepped back in the pit to keep it
all tight. Just at that second, the other line on the left side
came snapping from its Black’s release clip and I did what
any other “rod hog” would do in that situation. I grabbed
that stick with my left arm and set up hard on it too. “Yahoo..
We got two” was the blood curdling scream as both sails are
now criss crossing the horizon and getting with the program. It
wasn’t rocket science to now realize I can’t even turn
a handle with two rods lit up in my hands, and mate Joe wasted no
time coming to my rescue. His became a Palm Beach release, and mine
was tagged and released for the show. We saw three more sails that
day.
In fact, we raised sails everyday. Sometimes just one, other times
multiples. Nice fish, 80 to 100 lb. fish, with more vigor than displayed
by the typical Central American variety. More like a Floridian sailfish,
but of more size. They were chewing the lures too. We had a black,
purple, and silver Star Lure that was getting crushed all week.
Our biggest fear was loosing it to the tooth filled gums of the
wahoo, barracuda, and huge barred Spanish mackerel in the vicinity.
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Adrian was quick to inform us that we were off peak marlin season
that runs from March to August and the most prolific species found
off Matava Resort are blues. This is when tonnage of schoolie size
yellowfin make their annual appearance in these waters and it is
no secret they are the “flavor-ite” snack of offshore
blue marlin. The blues can run 150 – 600 on average. Most
are fished within 10 miles of the reef at the 1,000 fathom curve.
There is a very fishy bank about 35 miles from Matava
Resort which holds great numbers of pelagics at times too, but
Adrian explained that the fishing is so good off the usual local
spots that a 35 mile run is often not warranted.
Black marlin are found here from July thru November, and the occasional
striped marlin are seen from June to August. While both of these
species are occasionally caught, most are not of the sizes found
in say New Zealand and Australia.
OTHER FISH, OTHER GAMES
As previously mentioned, yellowfin do frequent these waters year
round with the majority of their run appearing in April thru August.
The average size yellowfin are the schoolie 15 to 30 lb. class fish,
but the resort’s “bragging board” had several
recent photos of yellowfin over the “Ben Franklin Line”,
100 pounds plus. Another brute scombrid species found in Fiji are
the dog tooth tuna. These are insane fighters, and sport a set of
chompers that would make a Doberman pincher proud. They come into
Kadavu from June thru October, but we caught none. Adrian simply
said, “You’ll just have to come back”. They too
can reach the BFL.
Large dolphin are also a year round resident, and can reach 60 +
pounds in these waters. A fish that can be a pest almost anywhere
in the world it is found, but must be respected, is the great barracuda.
No un-suspecting lure in the pattern is ever safe from these devious
critters, and our trip was no exception. We caught several that
went to 50 lbs.
Another fish with a dental enriched mouth is the barred Spanish
mackerel. Not any resemblance of a Spanish mackerel we might find
in U.S. waters, these “mackies” look more similar to
our kingfish, with their steely blue coloration, but these fish
have more pronounced vertical banding prevalent along their sides.
They can reach upwards of 50 + pounds and their teeth make a wahoo’s
look like flat gums..!!! They are a highly prized food fish and
few, if any are ever released.
While these pelagics can keep you busy for an entire vacation. Don’t
cut yourself short of the inshore experience of surface plugging
for bluefin trevally and giant trevally (GTs). We did this for less
than an hour one day, and caught two respectable 30 lb.GTs. We had
a 70 lb. GT take the plug and follow it to the exhaust ports on
the BITE ME..!! In hind site, I am glad we didn’t hook it
as it would have no doubt found the coral below and been stuck with
a treble hooked hood ornament on it face for awhile. You could however
come prepared with tackle to handle this fishery, and spent countless
hours pursuing these reef warriors. Adrian informed us that the
Oct. thru March time slot is when the weather calms on the front
side of the reef, thus allowing the Bite Me to fish in tighter to
the reef patrol zone.
SOME RECORDS DO FALL
On the last day, we had honed this wahoo fishery down to the point
that some light tackle world record fishing was in order. Adrian
found the wolf pack, and farther off the reef than on previous days.
That would be an advantage. We rigged up the 8 lb. stick to IGFA
specs and went into the fight. Looking for a 57 pound wahoo to break
the current IGFA line class record would not be hard to find, catching
it will be another story. Not 30 minutes into our quest, I got a
nice 25 lb. hoo as a warm up. Then it hit. A wahoo as thick as a
log came up on the short bait, and Richard Chudy, the pit placed
cameraman caught it all on tape. Easily a 60+ lb. fish, we knew
this was the one. An hour and twenty minutes into the fight, and
it finally started working up. It had made well over a dozen sizzling
runs that put the 8 lb. string, and my will to the test, but this
could finally signal “game over”. From the depths, it
got to the point where my spool was filled and the fish was no more
than 50 feet from leader, nearing “deep color”. Then
it happened. A violent head shake was felt and then slack line.
My heart stopped.. My words un-repeatable.. It had again found its
freedom. It had merely come un-buttoned. The line, knots, or tackle
never failed. What failed was the large sharp hooks never fully
penetrated the hard metal head of this fish on 2 – 3 lbs.
of drag. Not to be stopped, we put lines out once again as the sun
was finding the horizon, and immediately hooked up another sizable
wahoo. A world record it was not, but a Fiji record it was to become.
Thirty five minutes later a 38.25 lb. wahoo came to the gaff and
Captain Adrian Watts had his 19th Fijian record and I had my victory
as well.
DON'T JUST STAY ABOVE THE WATER
The worst thing you can do for yourself in visiting Matava
Resort is NOT to go scuba, or at the very least, snorkeling.
Just adjacent to the resort are stunningly beautiful coral reefs
teeming with tropical fish, jacks, sea anemones covered with the
ever popular “NEMO” clown fish.
The resort has an excellent dive center with all the gear you need
to have comfortable dives, with a competent dive staff, and clean
air service. Being one who can’t stay dry for to long, I abused
their services with delight, and the diving was nothing short of
world class. Coral more teeming than that found even on the Great
Barrier Reef, and a quantity of tropical fish that rivaled anywhere
in the world. Large mantas frequent the reefs, and the coral is
home turf to lionfish, triggerfish, clownfish, snappers, and even
spawning aggregations of 50 lb. groupers, which greeted us all week.
The visibility was rarely less than 100’ and at times over
200’. Bring your underwater cameras, or you will only have
yourself to blame for your stupidity.

You know, as an American, every time I return from our treasured
Alaska. I feel so good knowing we still have a place that remote
and pristine within America’s borders. When I got back on
the Pacific Airways 747, and lifted off from Nadi airport in Fiji
on my flight back to Los Angeles. I could only smile from ear to
ear, and thank god that we as inhabitants of this world, still have
a place like Kadavu… on this planet. Go there, and you will
thank me for putting you in Paradise found.

GETTING THERE
Daily flights from Los Angeles to Nadi, Fiji are available on Air
New Zealand, Qantas Airways, and Pacific Airways. Flights typically
leave from LAX in the late PM and this allows for plenty of time
for connections within the U.S. The ten hour flight to Fiji is direct,
and land in the early morning in Nadi. Inter island connections
are available via Pacific Sun or Fiji air, and both run daily flights
to Kadavu. Once on Kadavu, the Matava Resort will have a truck ready
to pick you up at the airport, and take you to a calm beach where
a skiff will be waiting to take you to paradise.
The Matava Resort is an all inclusive resort where breakfast, lunch,
and dinners, are included in the vacation package. Several package
options are available, starting as low as $450 U.S. for a 5 night,
non diver package, up to a 7 night, 5 days diving with 2 tank dives
/ day for $900 U.S.
Fishing charters packages can vary as to the total number of days
fishing and if you want the 31’ Bite Me offshore boat, or
the smaller skiff for fishing poppers inshore. A combo of these
boat trips is also available upon request. Just go to www.matava.com
for more information. They can handle the booking of al your flights
from the U.S. as well as the Fiji inter island transfers.
FISHING SEASONS
|
SPECIES |
SEASONS |
BEST MONTHS |
Black Marlin |
Jul-Nov |
Aug-Sept |
Blue Marlin |
All year |
Oct-Nov |
Striped Marlin |
Jun-Aug |
July |
Sailfish |
May-Sept |
July-Aug |
Wahoo |
May-Sept |
July-Aug |
Yellow Fin Tuna |
Apr-Aug |
June & Jan |
Dog Tooth Tuna |
Jun-Oct |
July |
Mahi Mahi |
All year |
|
Spanish Mack |
Oct-Mar |
Nov |
Giant Trevally |
Oct-Mar |
Feb-Mar |
Barracuda |
Oct-Mar |
Feb |
Although billfish have seasons, the waters around Kadavu Island
are so oceanic that billfish, especially blue marlin, are caught
year round. There are two Yellowfin tuna runs. One in June and one
in December. This means that Yellowfin are around for most of the
year.
THE WEATHER
A strong trade wind can limit the small game boat to Kadavu has
a typical tropical climate with the winter months being May to September
and the summer being October to April.
Summertime is usually characterized by calm settled weather with
blue skies during the early part of the day, cloud bubbling up over
the island in the afternoon and the occasional evening shower. The
air temperature generally reaches a peak of about 32 degrees in
February / March with the water temperature reaching 30.
In winter time, Fiji experiences the SE trade winds. These trades
vary in strength from a light breeze to a 20kt blow and usually
last about 5 days fishing inside the barrier reef however the big
game boat simply fishes the sheltered side of the island. The air
temperature generally reaches a low of about 20 degrees in August
/ September with the water temperature about 24 degrees at its lowest.
For more information www.matava.com
or contact them by email at:
info@Matava.com
Or call them at:
+(679) 3336 222
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