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THE PLACE ![]() Approximately 100 miles in a straight line from Belém (capital of the State of Para), Mexiana is one of the biggest fluvial islands of the world, with approximately 100,000 hectares.The island is completely uninhabited, with the exception of a very pleasant lodge, the Marajó Park Resort, where the comfort and commodity of air-conditioned apartments are only supplanted by the fine food and drinks enriched with regional flavors. THE
SAMURAI FISHING TECHNIQUES
It
is very funny seeing Japanese fisherman at work. They yell
like samurais in the old Japanese movies, and act like a
“Go” theater impersonators: Dekai, Dekai,
means, “the fish is big”.
Or Monsta, Monsta (it is a monster). But
their cries are not
a simple yell like you or me would give. The body talk, the
facial expression, the fighting posture they manage to do,
really remember me one the Akiro Kurosawa movies. They hold
their rods, as the old warriors used their katanas (swords) After
a long fight with a stubborn fish, the war cry taihen
desune together with a big mouth showing fierce
teeth, wide eyes and arched eyes brows, means that he is
getting tired with the fight. And
when they loose the fish, a black veil closes their faces,
and after some seconds, an ear splitting Dame da explodes
in the air. I will not translate it. But I heard the same
kind of words when an American truck driver got mad with his
girl friend. Besides
those moments, they are the most quiet and peaceful of all
clients. They almost do not talk, seldom stop fishing, even
for food or drink brakes. If it is an 8-hour trip, they fish
8 hours continuously. Except
when the fish hits the bait and starts the theater.
Our
standard fishing day, had the following schedule: At
6 am, the van would take us in a 10 minute ride to the river
“Urubu” and we were loaded in a mother boat that would
carry us to different channels in one of the 5 lakes around
the hotel. In
the lakes we were transferred in pairs to small boats
already supplied with local deck hands, bait, ice chest, and
propelled with electric motors. At noon the mother boat
would came back to pick us up, and we were taken to a
stilt-house in the middle of the lake. Then a meal was
served and some of us would take a nap. But not the
Japanese...they kept on fishing for piranas for later
use as live baits. At 2.30 pm we would go back to the lake
and stay fishing until 5.30 when the mother boat would
collect us and ride 25 minutes back to the hotel. THE
FISH
The pirarucu (Arapaima gigas) is the biggest fish with scales in Brazilian waters. It can reach more than 200 pounds. The name Pirarucu in Indian means “red fish” because its tail has big red spots. The “IGFA All Tackle World Record” is 149 pound. To hook a pirarucu is very simple. The lake channels are generally no wider than 30 feet. So you need to make only short casts along the margins; but you really need casting skills to keep your bait from getting tangled in the abundant floating vegetation the locals call “muruare.”
It
is very useful to have a good Dacron leader because the
first thing the pirarucu does after being hooked is to run
under the “muruare.” Then if your line does not
immediately break, and the fish has not tangled himself and
stays put, you will need a lot of patience. Pass your boat
through the “muruare” using a machete until you locate
where your leader is and then grab it. The average size of
the fish we caught in four days, were between 20 and 30
pounds. The biggest was one 65 pound fish, almost 5
½ feet
in length. All fish were released. But
many of then were found floating dead next day. The big # 7
hooks used, when swallowed by the fish, turn themselves at
killing instruments. Next time I will try circle hooks.
I am sure that the survival rate will increase
considerably.
So the Japanese would not touch live baits anymore. They changed for artificial and caught many pirarucus using Yosuri, surface and mid-water lures.
Due
to the success of the use of artificial lures, I think that
flyfishing will have a great potential there. Note: After writing this article I went back to Mexiana, and used only circle hooks. The survival rate was 99%.
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Copyright ©2012, by PESCARTE
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