old270hunter
Well-known member
Ditto. What Jim said and more for long range 8-10 day trips. Insane logistics to move fish long distance is an understatement too. Unless you live nearby, have a pickup truck and have everything needed to process, you will have to use a processor and it won't be cheap. There is no possible way to move fish in a rental car, etc and you can't clean on docks or parking lot. Now some boats will just let you borrow gear free of charge, such as the Excel. You just have to pay for the reel fills and any terminal tackle, leaders, lures, etc. None of that is cheap. I've fished with guys that did that on that boat, but it does not save a whole lot due to reel fills.From that, it sounds like a cheaper LR trip would be more economical than a 3-day, based on the tackle I would need to rent or purchase that is included- from what I understand- in the LR trip price.
As far as processing- I’m pretty handy with a knife, and just need a place to do it. Are there public/community fish cleaning stations? Can I just find a flat spot on the docks, or is that a big “no”?
The cost of a check-bag one way covers a decent enough breaking knife, so pass on traveling with that. Return trip would be: purchase cheapest coolers at Walmart, fill with ice and salt to brine/superchill dressed carcasses, then drain water for flight- maybe use wrapped dry ice and ship overnight. If the tuna are big, then look into big plastic bags and cutting into loins, just something to keep the meat dry. But I think I’d rather be the ridiculous idiot that flies with (or ships) whole fish cores. I had the odd thought to check with local seafood places and see if they have spare room on a trip with their shipping method of choice, kinda like people will for Alaska moose.
Or I could just be woefully unprepared for this nightmare of logistics, physical torture, and seasickness, and have a disaster of a trip- physically and financially. Oh well, I’m at least a year out from this.
What would be your recommendation for a newbie with zero tackle or this kind of experience for the trip?
If you've never done this, you will be shocked at overall cost for an 8-10 day. Figure 500 per day just to book the trip. 80 per day in tip. Soda/Beer/water 30-40 per day. Reel fills and terminal, depends on the size of the rig and the fish that tore it up, but I'd allocate at least a couple/3 hundred bucks even if the boat just loans you gear. If you need rental gear, for sure you will need 100, 80, 60, and 40 rigs at a bare minimum, and you may also need to refill those too. I've done several 8 day trips, and the 4 rigs I mentioned is what I bring after seeing what I used on the first couple. I've refilled reels on board a few times. These are minimum expenses. Now let's talk processing. Figure $1.75 per pound to process at the whole fish's weight, not the actual filet weight. To get back to the dock with 300-400lbs of whole fish is no big deal at all on an 8-10 day, and I'd say that is light. (5) 30lb yellowtail and (2) 100lb BFT/YFT just came in at 350lbs on a late spring trip . Or a couple/three wahoo, maybe a dorado or 3 and (1) 200lb YFT puts you in that same overall weight range too or more on a summer/fall trip. Odds are that you might have a couple more or bigger. Overnight shipping is next, and that is insane. I live close enough so I can just go pick it up, but I'm still not thrilled about the cost to process 350-400lbs of fish. So let's say you book an 8 day for 4k. That's a 7-8k trip at the end.
Here is the advice I'd give to anyone trying their hand at an 8-10 day and zero gear or experience. Don't do it straight out of the gate. Take a vacation to Southern Cal somewhere between Orange County and San Diego. Go fishing on the 1 day overnight boats out of San Diego, Dana Point, Newport, or Long Beach. Spend a week in late summer/early fall doing maybe 3 of those trips and learn the ropes, rail and boat etiquette, costs and the how to's. It's a lot lower cost, and you can figure out if you might want to go on a longer trip. See if you even like it. These 1 day overnight trips are still awesome in my opinion, but it's too much for some people at the same time. There is no way I'd recommend an 8-10 day for somebody that has not been even local overnight offshore. Even a 2 day straight out of the gate might be too much with no experience. I have been on trips where seas are pretty big for 3 or 4 days straight (nobody will come pick you up and the boat will not turn around either), and I've been on trips where its pretty calm the whole trip, and everywhere in between. It's a dice roll. Probably best to dip the toes in first.