Home Beer and Loathing with Capt Guy Beer and Loathing in Haiti Beer and Loathing Offshore Daytona Beer and Loathing at Cypress Cove Beer and Loathing on the Outer Banks Beer and Loathing in Walker's Channel Beer and Loathing at Walker's Cay The Inaugural Barta Blue Marlin Classic Otis Out Far and Deep The Other Side
.jpg)
To Access Capt Wiley Horton's
fishing stories click on the links above |
BigBend Sportsman Fishing Stories
Beer and Loathing
in Walker’s Channel
Capt. Tred Takes a
New Mate
By
Capt. Wiley Horton
Over the years I have heard and
read many things about Capt. Tred Barta, I can tell you this much for
sure: the boy is a Bulldog with a capital B. Shortly after last
year’s tounament, Tred’s wife of many years left him for another
man. Tred immediately went on record saying he had made a mistake by
concentrating on his fishing and hunting too much and lost the woman
he loved. He declared he was unfit to be a single man and forthwith
set out in search of new wife, taking ads out in Long Island
newspapers….

The 7th annual Barta
Blue Marlin Classic was to begin with the Captain’s meeting on
Wednesday evening, April 23rd, 2003. Looking for a leg up
on the rest of the fleet and seeking some serious R&R, the Tuner
fishing team left Ft. Pierce early Saturday morning, April 19. We
were met with winds from the NW at 15 knots and a large ground swell
generated by a low pressure system centered over Bermuda. A 45’ Ocean
sportfish towing a flats skiff ran along near us for most of the trip
in silence. The skiff spent a fair amount of the trip completely out
of the water. We arrived at the fabled Walker’s Cay at just after 12
noon, secured slip S-8 and cleared Bahamas Customs and Immigration in
time to grab a bowl of conch chowder before the Lobster Trap closed at
2pm.
This year’s crew was the same as
last year, my wife, Doris and Capt. Sam Crutchfield. A last minute
family matter once again prevented Missy Grey from joining us for the
tournament. Capt. Sam disappeared to handle some sound equipment
logistics and Doris and I climbed the hill to the Hotel to check in
and stow our baggage. There was a mix up in room assignments and we
were told to find Capt. Tred to work things out. We found Tred
relaxing by the pool. He immediately introduced us to Annie Mitchell,
his fiancé. Annie is a trim and attractive lady who appears to be as
gung ho as Tred. Like I said, the boy is a bulldog and I’m happy for
him.

After checking in, Doris, Capt.
Sam and I took off in the Tuner to catch some dinner.
Capt. Sam guided us to another of his triple secret fishing spots off
the North end of the island. There is a ledge with 20 feet of relief
off Walker’s Channel that produced several yellowtail, a nice mutton
snapper and a 22lb yellowfin grouper in about an hour. As we readied
to go, the anchor was fouled in some rocks..I tried every trick I know
to free it and was ready to cut the line when Capt. Sam asked for a
chance. I was totally unenthusiastic about his prospects but gave him
the wheel anyway. After 5 minutes of his steady coaxing, the shiny
Fortress anchor popped to the surface. It occurred to me once again
that the man in the mirror can always learn a new lesson or two.
Capt. Sam’s 40+ years in the charter business are a saltwater
encyclopedia. Back at the dock, the team separates into areas of
expertise: Sam and Doris head off to clean the fish while I am left
to rinse off the boat and make sure the beer is cold enough to
drink. I have found that if 24 hours on ice doesn’t do the trick, a
little rock salt will drop the temp pretty well. Sometimes it takes
three or four beers to get things working right.
Sam delivered the fish to the
Hotel’s restaurant and asked they serve it fried, Nassau and Almondine
styles with traditional peas and rice. Thomas Wynn, captain of the
Petrel, joined us for dinner along with his wife and two
young sons. Thomas is a boat broker during the week and runs the boat
on the weekends. With it’s big, pronounced flare up front and
tumblehome sides, the Petrel is an original fifty-three
foot Sportsman built in North Carolina by Ommie Tillet and is a
beautiful example of what a Carolina boat is all about.
The low pressure system near
Bermuda is predicted to move off to the Northeast as the week goes
by. Sunday morning, it is producing large swells that traveled
several hundred miles before reaching the Bahamas. In the space of
one quarter of a mile, the water depth goes from one thousand feet to
two feet. As the swells pile onto the reef at the edge of the Bahama
Bank, they form enormous, cresting waves that crash over the coral.
Capt. Sam wants to try out our new outrigger spread and is anxious to
get offshore. We eat breakfast at the Hotel restaurant and head out
Walker’s Channel toward the thundering surf line that marks the reef.
There is a narrow break in the reef where only the occasional wave
will break and we are through it in a flash. Looking back, there is
only the hiss and froth of breakers as far as we can see in each
direction. The ocean becomes more orderly as the depth drops off.
As we put out our baits in eight hundred feet, the swells tower twelve
to fourteen feet over us. We begin trolling East toward Matanilla
Shoal. The wind is light but nothing is happening in the morning.
Capt. Tred has a new sponsor this
year. He is fishing from a thirty-three foot Hydrosport with twin
outboards. The boat is good looking and very fast. He is trolling to
the East several miles ahead of us and reports large schools of dorado
and tuna. After a fruitless morning, we get to Tred’s vicinity around
two pm and catch a couple of triple-headers of dorado to thirty-eight
pounds. Tred heads around the West end of Matanilla and radios back
to be careful coming through the breaking seas. We have no trouble
and cover the twenty four miles back to the island in around an
hour.
There are several more boats in
the Marina than when we left that morning. I drop Sam and Doris off
at the fish cleaning station and head back to the slip. The first
beer is crackyourteeth cold. Being cautious, I tried a couple more
while rinsing the salt off the Tuner. The Walker’s Cay
resort uses reverse-osmosis to produce some of the finest tasting
water anywhere. It will not leave hard-water spots on your canvas yet
mates on the big boats chamois their butts off every day. At
$.35/gallon, the cost of water reminds me of gasoline prices when I
was a college student. My boat rinsing chores rarely last for more
than half a beer so I have plenty of time to reflect on the day’s
events. Sam has brought some beautiful bait to the tournament
including fresh caught silver mullet for teasers and well-packed
ballyhoo from South America. The six Shimano TLD30 two-speed reels
are loaded with fresh Suffix high-vis line and have a maximum legal
wind-on leader. We have the outriggers tricked out with double
halyards and the teaser reels performed flawlessly. After three years
working together, the boat, tackle and techniques have come
together. Our bait spread looks great. If we can find some fish
during the tournament, we will be a force to be reckoned with.
If it were up to Capt. Sam we
would leave the Marina before first light every day.
He is always up at 4:30am, usually
knocking on the wall and asking ”You guys awake yet?” I like to fish
as good as anyone but this is a vacation as well as a fishing
tournament and on Monday morning, Doris and I slept until past 7am.
The agenda for the day is to do
some light tackle fishing for mutton snapper. It seems we always buy
more groceries than we need so breakfast was aboard the boat as we
left the Marina. It was the kind of day you long for while at
work….light breeze, warm sun and cooperative fish. The past few days’
Northeast wind had shoved blue water miles onto the bank. Everywhere
we went the water was crystal clear. Later in the afternoon, we
stopped off at Grand Key and visited Big Rosie’s for fuel. After the
crossing and two days of fishing, my little Volvo had consumed 102
gallons of diesel. At $3/gallon, we were in no hurry to get anywhere
and used the Tuner’s twenty-knot econo-cruise for most
of the trip.

Back at the dock a new Hydrosport
was in the adjacent slip. The owner was Jeremy Crews from Virginia.
Jeremy and his grandson joined us for dinner that evening at the Conch
Pearl Restaurant. He founded CruiseAir back in the fifties and
recently started up a new company, LectroTab, that makes electric trim
tabs for boats of all sizes. Jeremy did a good job selling his
product so expect to see a pair of LectroTabs on my boat before long.
After dinner, we helped Tred et al stuff captain’s bags for the
tournament.
Tuesday dawned bright and clear
and we decided to head out front and troll to the southeast toward
Stranger’s Cay. We had good luck there a couple of years ago. Around
15 miles from Walker’s, my analog cell phone rang and I was able to
forget vacation for most of the morning. After the last call, I
turned that thing off for the rest of the trip. In a long day of
trolling, we found a lot of sargassum and some cold water. South was
not the direction we would fish during this year’s marlin tournament.
The highlight of the day was a floating pallet that had three dozen
five to ten pound tripletail hovering about it. We pulled in the
trolling rods and had great sport on six-pound tackle, keeping four
for the dinner table. Capt. Sam borrowed a fryer and cooked some of
the best fish I’ve ever wrapped my mouth around. By the time we
headed to the room, the Marina was virtually full.
Wednesday is usually a light day.
The Captain’s Meeting kicks off around four pm so we headed out to
catch some bottom fish and planned to be back by noon. One of the
neatest things about the BBMC is the kids. In our seven years there,
we’ve literally watched several children grow into young adults.
Patrick Snipes, an 11 year old we’ve seen for the past five years had
watched us come in with nice bottom fish and wanted to go this
morning. Patrick was fishing with his father, Ted, and brother,
Taylor, aboard the DeDe Dumpling. We took him to the
drop off Walker’s Channel and put him on three muttons to 14 pounds
using 10 pound tackle. I think we have a friend for life.

The Captain’s Meeting at the BBMC
is a laid back affair with most of the time spent renewing
acquaintances. Tred has created a tournament with a wonderful
atmosphere and takes a little time to crow. He has returned entry
fees to over five hundred boats this year. He predicts this little
tournament in the Bahamas will net over one million dollars for the
IGFA Junior Angler program by the end of this seventh tournament. The
Marina, with 82 official slips, has just over one hundred boats
crammed into every available space. Tred once again welcomes some of
the best captains, mates and anglers in the world. I look around and
see several folks nodding as if he’s talking about them. I’m sure
he’s not talking about me.
“You awake yet?” Its quarter to
five in the morning and Sam is ready to go. I promise to be at the
boat before seven and pull the pillow over my head to muffle the
sound. A rum front snuck up on yours truly during the Captain’s
Meeting and Sam’s voice has a nails-on-chalkboard quality to it. A
quick shower and three Advils later, things are looking better. I am
a believer in a better life through chemistry. We had decided to fish
the Northeast hump the previous evening until Capt. Sam got a look at
a fax from Roffer’s. It showed a big warm water eddy around twenty
miles north of the island and that’s where we headed. Lines in is
at eight am. When we came off plane, there was sargassum in every
direction and the water temp had dropped four degrees. I don’t mind
fishing in grass if you’re getting bites but this was almost
unfishable. Another boat asked where we were and Sam replied, “Two
thousand feet of weeds with scattered water!” After thirty minutes of
frustration, we pulled the baits and headed back toward the humps.
By eight forty five, Tred has
released a blue marlin. We put the baits back out just off the hump
and in ten minutes we’re hooked up to a white marlin. Sam runs the
boat, Doris handles the rod and I admire their work until its time for
a long arm to grab the leader. Release time is well under five
minutes and the Tuner is on the leader board. Suddenly
there are several other boats around the hump. Tred appears off the
starboard side and trolls west alongside us. I hear Sam mutter “What
the hell!” and turn in time to see an enormous explosion of white
water behind Tred’s boat. Tred comes on the radio to announce the
hookup and is barely understandable, he’s so excited. Tred says the
fish is easily in the four to five hundred pound class. We have a
ringside seat to watch as the Makaira alternately spins,
runs and backs down trying to gain line on the fish. Early in the
fight, Tred jumps overboard to unwrap the thirty-pound test line from
one or both of the props. This is an important point later in the
tournament. Tred released the fish after thirty minutes, estimating
it a four hundred and fifty pounds. It appeared to be every bit that
large from what I saw. His two blue marlin releases have Tred in the
lead with one thousand points. We finish the day catching three
yellowfin tuna near the break in the reef called Walker’s Channel and
two of the larger boats follow us to the dock using Capt. Sam’s
patented shortcut.

The auction was Thursday evening
under the big yellow striped tent and Capt. Sam was in rare form as
the auctioneer. Eight artists including Guy Harvey, Carey Chen and
Carin Stevens were present and completed original works during the
tournament for auction. Even in this down economy, over one hundred
and twenty-five thousand dollars was raised on the art and other
donated items to push the tournament’s donations to the IGFA Junior
Angler program to over one million dollars during its seven year
history.
Friday we ate breakfast on the
boat and were out of the marina by seven thirty. At eight am we
dropped the baits in right where we got the bite the day before.
At nine thirty, Tred reports
releasing a white marlin. The boy is white hot and looking for more.
We are in the same general area and troll by to congratulate the
Makaira. As we pass twenty yards apart, Tred hold up three
fingers and points to the water. Without using the radio, he is
telling us he has seen more fish here. Just after ten, a decent
marlin crashes our short right rigger and spits the hook. Sam drops
back several times and while he is working, a smaller blue grabs the
long rigger and hooks up immediately. He looked to be around sixty
pounds, perfect for a release tournament, and we get him in quickly.
A blue marlin release is worth five hundred points. Added to the two
hundred for our white and we’re suddenly in third place. A few
minutes later, a nice fish hits the long rigger. Sam drops back four
times and each time the marlin inhales the bait but does not hook up.
Finally he leaves to attend to other matters. When the line is reeled
in, the hook point has buried in the ballyhoo’s head leaving no way
for a hookset. Its hard to bitch about the two that got away, but
either fish would have won the tournament for us. As the day wore on,
the wind picked up from the Southwest and made the ride in a bumpy
experience.
There are two other boats from
Gainesville in the tournament, Larry Newman’s End of the Line
and Jerry McCoy’s First Look. They are slipped next to
each other on the North dock and have set up camp with freezers,
coolers, picnic tables, grills, fryers and a well used blender.
Dubbed Skeeter’s South, we spent considerable time enjoying the fine
cuisine and refreshments served well into the night. Next year we may
try to get a slip closer to these guys.
Saturday morning thunder woke me
up a little after four. Capt. Sam got up at four thirty. I told Sam
I was not interested in fishing in lightning. He grunted and said,
“See ya at the boat.” Around five thirty a band of thunderstorms
shook the hotel. I went back to sleep and woke up a little after
seven. The sky was still very dark and rain was coming in sheets.
After a shower, Doris and I dashed across the courtyard to the
restaurant. The pungent smell of strong coffee greeted us. Several
teams were already seated eating breakfast. Dean Travis Clark and the
WorldCat team joined us at a large table and Capt. Sam appeared
walking up the hill from the Marina under a table umbrella. Sam
confirmed that Tred had called the tournament until eleven am in order
to evaluate the weather. .After breakfast, we sat aboard the
DeDe Dumpling and listened to Ted, Thomas and Capt.Sam tell
tall fishing tales. At ten am Tred came by and said we were about to
get a lull in the weather but there was some very bad weather coming
behind it. His plan was to call the day’s fishing off at the eleven
am announcement. We heartily agreed. The wind died out and the rain
stopped shortly afterward. At eleven, we were still talking on Ted’s
boat when Tred came on the radio and declared lines in, the weather
was going South of us and we would count fish until lines out at three
pm.

We scrambled to the Tuner
and headed out of the Marina before most other boats heard the news.
At eleven thirty, we put out the baits in eight hundred feet and
headed toward our spot. By twelve we were about eight miles off the
island. The wind steadily picked back up out of the South until it
was singing through the spreader wires. The sea went from a
three-foot swell to a solid six feet in what seemed like seconds. We
turned into the wind and back toward the island. There was a lot of
speculation on the radio as to how hard it was blowing. A clipped
voice with a British accent came on saying it was a sustained
thirty-five knots at the oil platform with gusts well over fifty. I
told Sam screw the fish, I’m headed for dirt. He wondered aloud what
took me so long. We are now seven miles from the island headed South
into the teeth of the wind. We can’t get to the protection of the
reef and have to come in through Walker’s Channel. The tide is
running onto the bank and against the wind. In six hundred feet, the
waves are seven feet and growing. Capt. Sam predicts it will get
better when we reach shallow water. In eighty feet, the opposing
forces of the wind and water create seemingly square waves eight feet
tall and eight feet apart. We have yet to reel in the baits or lift
the riggers. In twenty feet of water, I come as close as I’ve ever
come to taking a wave over the bow. We have to turn and troll beam to
with every gust bringing a waterfall over the top of the boat. This
is another dimension in fun I am not anxious to experience again.
After an hour and a half, we reached the lee of the island and got the
riggers and rods squared away. At 2:30pm we were sitting in the
Lobster Trap eating conch chowder and listening to everyone else
bitching and moaning via my handheld vhf. Sneaky Pete,
a sixty-five foot Viking, has caught two sailfish and broken one of
his triple spreader outriggers in the process. A thirty-one foot
Yellowfin has taken several waves over the bow. They are briefly
awash before regaining buoyancy. We hear later that the two boats,
pushing hardest that morning to declare lines in, don’t even leave the
dock. It takes an extra long time to rinse the salt off the boat
although I used very little water in the process. Most of the time is
spent regaining my land legs and drinking a few beers, opposing
actions to be sure.
At the BBMC, the International
Game Fish Association rules are relaxed slightly allowing rods to be
passed once and assistance to be given to junior and small fry
anglers. There are tons of trophies to be handed out and Tred is
hoarse from talking too much but that will not deter him. The awards
party started early, at six pm. Tred’s first order of business is
clearing up a misunderstanding. When he entered the water on the
first day of fishing to clear the line from the props, the angler was
not a junior or small fry. He counted the marlin and was in first
place. The angler was Annie’s son Ian. Ian is eighteen, but looks
far younger. This was a clear rules violation and to his credit, Tred
pointed out the mistake and disqualified the fish. The first and
second place boats each had two blue marlin releases. Makaira
and Tuner tied for third place overall with a white and
blue marlin release each, the tie going to Tred on time. Doris won
first place in the ladies division. My original entry form seven
years ago had my three objectives listed in order: 1) have fun, 2)
leave some money behind for the Junior angler’s program and 3) beat
Capt. Tred at his own tournament. We were tied at three each going
into this year and Tred squeaked by on time. Wait til next year!
Arrrrrgh.

Once again the Walker’s Cay Resort
and Marina was a hospitable and comfortable place to hold a
tournament. Since downturn in tourism following Sept. 11, the natives
have come to more fully recognize and appreciate the value of visiting
strangers. Besides….we’re a fun group, not caught up in the tension
of fishing for big money. Thanks to Capt. Sam, I have learned a lot
about fishing in the islands and some pretty cool navigational
techniques. GPS numbers are nice but he has an uncanny knack for
triangulating us through rocky passages and directly onto fish.
Capt. Tred’s tournament has become a haven for manufacturers, magazine
writers and marine artists. It could very well be the blueprint for
tournaments of the future as people fish for the fun of fishing and
enjoying each other’s company. It reminds me a lot of our own Big
Bend Bashes on a grand scale and in an exotic locale. I’ll be
back….
From a series of fishing stories submitted by Capt Wiley Horton
copyright Capt Wiley Horton
|