The best fish I can remember all share one commonality — I never saw them.

Maybe it is because they can’t be mastered, they just got lucky, or maybe I erred (Yup, me. It happens!). But one way or another, the battle ended with them swimming away, and me laughing and saluting them.

Major fishing seasons just ended on Dec. 31. The great part about winter, however, is the spare time, while maintaining gear and preparing rigs for the coming season, available to reminisce about the adventures of the past season and the most memorable fish.

While most strikes begin with a tap-tap-tap on the rod tip, or perhaps a briefly screaming reel clicker, strikes from the best fish of all seem to start with a sudden deep bend of the rod and a steady powerful pull.

I love feeling the staccato beat of the tail as the fish surges away. Instinct makes me spread my stance, double-check my drag setting and apply some muscle, recognizing that this is going to take awhile.

That’s perfectly all right. There are few things I’d rather be doing than pulling back on a hard-pulling fish. This even beats making a large deposit at the bank (another rare occurrence).

I’ll always remember the look on the face of a particularly enjoyable passenger. Brad was a butcher from Wisconsin who regaled me with tales of his vast fishing experiences and prowess for hours on end.

Seemingly on queue — right in the middle of one of his endless stories that all seemed to end with him winning — his rod bent deeply, nearly pulling him off his feet.

He managed to get into a fighting stance before being yanked overboard, and then stared in total astonishment at his reel while a hundred yards of heavy mono line paid quickly out against a tight drag.
 
The butcher looked up to the bridge and said to me, “Forget everything I said. I guess I don’t know nothin! What do I do?!”

“Bend that rod and make him work for it” was my first advice as it had been on many occasions when people needed to learn quickly how to fight a very large fish.

I credit the butcher with trying, but it was too late. That fish was a long way off and had managed to wrap the line around an underwater obstruction.
 
The result was a frayed end on some well-stretched mono line. “Well, no worries.” I told him. “Let’s just re-rig and then you can go hook another one.” That feller just kept shaking his head … for hours.

When my charter passengers lose big fish, I console them with sage words, “The best thing about the one that gets away is it can be any kind and any size you want. I’m just here to back up your story.”
 
The 2023 fishing seasons just ended, and I can’t wait for the 2024 season to begin.

Capt. David Bacon is a boating safety consultant and expert witness, with a background in high-tech industries and charter boat ownership and operation. He teaches classes for Santa Barbara City College and, with a lifelong interest in wildlife, writes outdoors columns for Noozhawk and other publications. The opinions expressed are his own.