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Live from Louisiana

Jackalope

Dignitary Member
Staff member
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View attachment 196280
What in the Alabama fuck! Who opens the chip bag from the bottom? 😂

Look at that idiot. His stupid ass is probably friends with a guy who would go 45 miles from the ramp with a crusty ass fuel water separater and not even a screwdriver on the boat. 😅😅 Had a great time man. I'm just messing with you, you have a nice ass boat bud.
 
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Jackalope

Dignitary Member
Staff member
39,066
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Nicky sent me a text Wednesday evening asking if I wanted to do some snapper fishing Thursday offshore. Meeting at his house at 4 for the drive down to Venice LA where we'd put in. I was up at 2 and left the house at 2:30 for the 1h 15 min drive to his place in Slidell. It was him, his wife, another couple, and me for the 2 hour drive down to Venice.

We launched about 7:30 and headed out for the 30-mile run down the remainder of the MS River before it empties into the gulf where the waters open up and the horizon is dotted with oil and gas production platforms.

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15 miles offshore past the mouth of the river is the first rig. We pulled up and got to business. The current was ripping by the rig that sat in about 380-400 feet of water. The fish were about 180 feet down which required a 12-16 oz lead just to get down to them without your bait being blown a hundred yards down current first.

At the first rig, we hooked up on quite a few of what was likely some big amberjacks that effortlessly broke us off within 30 seconds of hookup. 65lb braid to a 65lb fluro leader and they'd peel off line until they could get you wrapped in the rig and pop off. I bet we tied 20 hooks on that first rig and had two red snapper to show for it. We were getting our asses beat but it was a beautiful day and the waves were pretty flat at less than a foot.

We tried up down left and right of the rig. We decided to do a drift so Nicky cut off the spot lock on the trolling motor and we drifted by pretty quickly. After we got down current of the rig he hopped behind the console and pushed the throttle. Nothing. At some point, the engine went down and we couldn't hear it over the sound of the rig. A couple of attempts to get it cranked and we realized we were adrift 15 miles offshore with nothing between us and the Yucatan or Cuba but open water and a pending hurricane. I mentioned that we need to get back up to the rig and tie off. Nicky handed his buddy Eric the trolling motor controller and that motor was giving it max power. In the wind and current, we were making maybe 1/4 mph and the rig was about 100 yards off.

We both went to work trying to figure it out, we had a crank but no start, somehow it lost prime and the primer bulb was soft with zero squish. We narrowed it down, hopefully, to the fuel water separator filter. He undid the hose clamp at the primer bulb, cut the exit line off the separator and ran the line directly to the motor bypassing the filter. The primer bulb had squish and it primed up, turned the key and she fired up.

From there we ran about 9 miles east and the motor ran like a champ. Confident we fixed it we decided to stay out and keep trying. We didn't have much luck at 2nd rig but did catch some vermillion snapper and Nicky caught a lane snapper.

We decided to head back to the original rig because there was a guy there that was catching who was sitting on the X. When we got back they were just finishing up and we slipped in the hole behind them. It was on like Donkey Kong. We couldn't keep 5 rods down because everyone was getting hooked up. In the last 1.5 hours, we boated 10-12 back to back. The trolling motor wouldn't hold so we took turns motoring about 100 yards up then drifting back to within about 20 yards of the rig. Bump it in gear and do it again.

It had been a long day and everyone was spent so we decided to head back to the ramp. The trolling motor decided we had one more challenge to deal with. It was dead dead and wouldn't rise up and fold. Nicky pulled the mount and tied it to the deck.

2 hour drive to his place and we pulled in the drive at about 8pm, sprayed the boat and bait holds down, unpacked, and iced the fish. I rolled put about 10 an had another 1.5 hours and got to the house at 11:45. After a shower my head hit the pillow 23 hours after it left it the night before.

Such an awesome trip with awesome people, and Nicky too. 🤣
 
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triple_duece

Ragin Cajun.
9,489
159
Joe did great, although I had my hands full with the other three 😂 with tying terminal gear the whole day. I don’t mind though, it’s what I usually do as I love seeing everyone enjoying what I love. Thanks for helping out in what seemed like a crisis at the moment. Joe you’re welcome to fish w me anytime. But it did feel like I had 3 Dustin’s on my boat 😂
 
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giles

Cull buck specialist
Supporting Member
Hey that happens to everyone a time or two in their life. Happened to me once. Now I don’t depend on anyone to help me w my boat. Have a routine and don’t depend on anyone and the mishaps don’t surprise you.
I feel the same way about setting up and breaking down my camper. Just leave me alone for a few, lol.
 

triple_duece

Ragin Cajun.
9,489
159
Looks like a great trip!!
A little drama never hurts
Drama in open waters is a big no go with me. You can’t control everything, but you can control maintenance which I overlooked my fuel/water separator. Never had a problem w my motor and had it out a bunch of times this year. Luckily cool heads and determination along with prior problem fixing situations prevailed.

For the record the day before the trip Joe jinxed us asking if I had an epirb or a device to call the coast guard. Told him I don’t plan on needing it and I have a VHF radio and don’t put that on me Ricky bobby!
 

Jackalope

Dignitary Member
Staff member
39,066
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Drama in open waters is a big no go with me. You can’t control everything, but you can control maintenance which I overlooked my fuel/water separator. Never had a problem w my motor and had it out a bunch of times this year. Luckily cool heads and determination along with prior problem fixing situations prevailed.

For the record the day before the trip Joe jinxed us asking if I had an epirb or a device to call the coast guard. Told him I don’t plan on needing it and I have a VHF radio and don’t put that on me Ricky bobby!

I completely agree. I see people around here buying boats that have zero business being on the water. It's nice to be on a boat where someone else knows shit and two heads can prevail.

And hey don't put that on me 🤣 You know like I do that shit can go south quick. VHF is great if you're afloat and still have power. Fire, electrical issues, rapid sinking, not so much. And once you're in the water it's a big where's Waldo game where hopefully the DSC button worked before going in. Boat or no boat my ass wants a way to call that big red and white sky taxi to come get our ass and pinpoint our exact location. Its a cheap piece of mind brother.
 

Jackalope

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Definitely a ballsy move having no communication that far out lol!
He has a VHF radio with antenna and DSC function. We could have hailed anther vessel and likely the CG on ch 13. Or tied off to the rig and someone would have towed us in. In the scope of potential problems it wasn't a big problem.

After my kayak incident and seeing first hand how quickly things can go to shit on the water, I want everything stacked in our corner, from best case to absolute worst we're coming home.
 

"J"

Git Off My Lawn
Supporting Member
58,789
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North Carolina
He has a VHF radio with antenna and DSC function. We could have hailed anther vessel and likely the CG on ch 13. Or tied off to the rig and someone would have towed us in. In the scope of potential problems it wasn't a big problem.

After my kayak incident and seeing first hand how quickly things can go to shit on the water, I want everything stacked in our corner, from best case to absolute worst we're coming home.
Agreed 💯 with this! We both know how fast 💩 can go sideways….. Luckily we can both enlighten folks who need it.
 

Jackalope

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Staff member
39,066
274
Agreed 💯 with this! We both know how fast 💩 can go sideways….. Luckily we can both enlighten folks who need it.

Nicky is a smart dude that knows his way around a vessel. I'd fish with him anytime without a care. I'm just overly neurotic about backup plans. I spent much of my career in disaster preparedness and contingency planning so its on the brain. 🤣 I think doctors call it anxiety. 🤣
 

triple_duece

Ragin Cajun.
9,489
159
Nicky is a smart dude that knows his way around a vessel. I'd fish with him anytime without a care. I'm just overly neurotic about backup plans. I spent much of my career in disaster preparedness and contingency planning so its on the brain. 🤣 I think doctors call it anxiety. 🤣
You 100% right about safety and backups, I was just giving you a hard time. I too lived as a commercial fisherman and fireman/rescue/water rescue/special ops/chief of operations. I seen a lot and lived through a lot. I bet 90% of calls are due to negligence, drinking and inexperience on the water. All 3 of those is no worries to me because that’s not who I am. Deep inside and I’m anal about safety and operate accordingly. Fastest I drove was like 36 when my boat does 55. Also it’s better on gas at almost 4$ a gallon.