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We must have looked pretty strange, trolling down the harbour in Pittwater, Broken Bay, (just north of Sydney) with riggers out, four 30lb Penn Internationals in the rod holders, and a full pattern of our favorite marlin lures performing at the end of the lines.

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But there was a method to our madness; we were preparing to set up the pattern we would use for the up and coming, N.S.W. Interclub Tournament. We had entered the tournament with one thing firmly embedded in our minds; we were going to win.

It was 1986, and Colin Grimes, now Wombat. (Wonder who called him that?) and myself had hand selected two young crewmen, who had plenty of promise to join us as the winning team. Their names were Steve Haygarth (Hoggy) and Mark Stephenson (Statue). The boys had done plenty of fishing in the past, but were a little new to the marlin game. Wombat and I had done a few seasons on the deck in Cairns as professional crewmen, and we were keen to teach the boys how it should be done. On our first team meeting it was decided that even though our weekend fishing was for enjoyment and relaxation, we would run the boat as if we were paid professional crew. We emphasized we would still have plenty of fun (and we certainly did) but a certain amount of commitment had to be given by the boys. So Team Splashdown was formed.

After considerable preparation the boys are confident, Hoggie & Statue know we are ready to win.

Tackle preparation was set-aside for half a day every Saturday, but with a couple of beers thrown in, it often got dragged out to a full day. Systems got put into place, and we developed a program that became quite regimented. Of course things back then were a little different to these days, available tackle and cost factors made the use of a little ingenuity essential. Our tackle was 30lb (15kg) that's all we had; the choice of line was Amilan, or Tortue. Leader was a well-known brand called fishermen, with 250lb breaking strain (that's all that was available). Our choice of lures was a mixture of Seven Strand, Striker, and early Pakulas. Once every blue moon one of us would take out a personal loan and buy a Hawaiian import. I think at our peak we only owned 4 imports, and our total lure arsenal would be considered a joke, with what boats carry today. With so few lures, every one was thoroughly tested in the harbour, and a decision made on where the lures performed best.

We experimented with boat speed, and noted the change in the lures action, all in the calm of the bay, we got it very refined. Once we established the optimum position and speed for our spread, we used dental floss and whipped loops on the line at the set distance for the tag line bands, and also marked the flat lines with a tidy dental floss whipping. Every rod had a rod holder it belonged to and that rod had the same lure on it every time.

Boat speed was kept at the lowest possible speed that the lure would work to our satisfaction in the calm, which gave us some tolerance when surfing down sea. We established this successful pattern, and our results were becoming quite impressive. If a lure was lost, (which occasionally did happen with 15kg and 250lb leader), we went to great lengths to replace the lure with one that was identical. We were pretty negative on crimping mono back then so the 12/0 hooks were snelled, and a perfection loop was used at the snap end. We had pre-measured 29ft of replacement leaders, with perfection loops, so as the leader could be replaced after every fish, or if it got slightly damaged from missed strikes. The boys refined their skills to a point, that they where capable of snelling a couple of pre -sharpened hooks onto the leader in one minute, so no valuable time was lost getting the hot lure back in the water.

Three of the original Splashdown team a long way from the interclub, but Winnin & Grinnin just the same.

Hoggy and Statue and Splashdown owner Ian Bryant, were great anglers, so the two boys and Ian did the rod work. Wombat loved the leader, and gaff, and I was in charge of the two big petrol Mercruisers. We broke all records for petrol consumption back then, much to Ian's despair, he elected to supply the boat and pay for the fuel, if we supplied the crew and tackle. We had to be successful or our deal may have come to a grinding halt.

The week prior to the big tournament we were out in the bay, we had new line on all the fully serviced reels, and were setting distances to our successful speed, and fine tuning the whole program. Splashdown was cleaned and polished, there was a place for everything and everything was in its place. We emphasized to the boys that, was how it had to remain through the day, keeping the boat tidy at all times. They had to have most of the cleaning chores done before we got back to the weigh station, even to the point of cleaning the transom of soot, just before we docked.

Splashdown was taken to Port Stephens on the Wednesday before the first weekend of the tournament. We got set in our berth, gave the boat a tub, and the man with all the fur, and myself, headed for the Country Club for a cold beer. Hoggy and Statue were not arriving till Friday night after work, and Ian had to go back to Sydney to make some more money to pay for the fuel we used just getting there. The boat and tackle was all ready, nothing left to do, we had prepared well. With the relaxed feeling of knowing we were all squared away, instead of the one cold beer we decided to have another. At 11:00 pm Wombat and yours truly, casually left the Country Club.

Continued...

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