Penn Zane Grey Invitational Day 2 Updates - Last Updated 09/16 6:20 AM
Today’s Releases - Updated List:
Scrambler: 6 releases (+1 boated 174 pounds)
Exta Sea: 6 releases (+1 boated 195 pounds)
Bandit: 5 releases
Gambler: 4 releases
Ruckus: 4 releases
C Bandit: 4 releases
Chaser: 3 releases
Shannon Rose: 2 releases
Out of Range: 1 release
Acero Azul: 1 release
Good Karma: 1 release (+1 boated)
PLAY BY PLAY:
Exta Sea - Bob and Marilyn hooked the same fish which was DQ’d by rule but then hooked and released another fish at 10:28.
Scrambler has a double - 10:42 AM PDT in F3
Bandit hooked up at 10:56 AM PDT in F3 - Jig Fish
Scrambler had a double in F3 at 10:42 AM - released one still fighting the other.
Bandit hooked up at 10:56 in F3 - Jig Fish
Bandit hooked up again at 11:21
Good Karma hooked up at 11:21 as well - Bob Jr is the angler
Bandit release at 11:28
Gambler hooked up at 11:29 in F3.
Chaser hooked up at 11:41
Gambler released a fish at 11:48
Scrambler has another release at 11:53
Good Karma released a fish at 11:54
Exta Sea release at 12:24
Chaser released their fish at 12:28
Good Karma hooked up at 12:34 in F3.
Scrambler is on a double at 12:40.
Ruckus hooked up at 12:45 in F3.
Good Karma boated their fish at 12:48.
Shannon Rose has a double going at 12:55
Scrambler released first fish of Double Header at 1:10….still working the 2nd fish.
Scrambler just finished up the double, releasing their 4th fish of the day!
Shannon Rose just released their first fish of the double at 1:20.
Gambler hooked up at 1:25
Ruckus just released their fish at 1:27.
C Bandit hooked up at 1:32.
Shannon Rose has released their second fish!
The Bandit has a double going - 1:38
Bandit lost one fish…still fighting second fish.
Chaser hooked up, Jimmy Kingsmill on bait at 1:50.
Gambler released their fish at 1:54.
Scrambler on a double - Mike Stotesbury and John Miller in F 3 bait fish.
C Bandit released their fish at 2 p.m.
Bandit still hooked up along with Scrambler on their double
Chaser Released their Fish
Ruckus hooked up 2:08
Bandit released their fish
Exta Sea Hooked up in F 3
Chaser hooked up at 2:25 PM
Ruckus is now on a double
Exta Sea is on a double
Exta Sea released one fish at 2:32
Chaser releasing a fish at 2:34.
Exta Sea has boated the second fish of the double.
Ruckus release at 2:50
Gambler hooked up at 2:56.
Scrambler release at 3:14… still fighting another fish.
C Bandit hooked up at 3:15
Gambler Release at 3:15.
C Bandit now has a double.
Good Karma hooked up at 3:20
Ruckus release at 3:25
Good Karma - wrong kind…
Exta Sea is on a double… again!
Exta Sea down to one.
Scrambler hooked up again while fighting the second fish of the double…
Scrambler boated a fish and is still fighting another.
Scrambler released their fish at 3:58 - 6 releases and 1 boated fish today for Scrambler
Lines out - still have the C Bandit fighting two fish and the Exta Sea battling one.
Exta Sea release at 4:03.
C Bandit release at 4:08
Scrambler put up a 174 lb striped marlin
Good Karma put up a 154 lb striped marlin - didn’t make min weight of 165 lb
Exta Sea - 195 lb striped marlin

Marine Wildlife Artist David A. Wirth has been commissioned to create custom, handmade awards for the California Billfish Series Marlin Tournaments. The total value of these awards will exceed $15,000, and are an excellent addition to the tournament series.
Each tournament in the series will have its own unique sculpture design, and each team member on the top three teams at each event will receive one of these handsome pieces.

Hand carved marlin head trophy for the Crow's Nest Catalina Classic
The Awards for the Crow’s Nest Catalina Classic will be Billfish Head Trophy, hand carved from Southern California Black Walnut, resting on a base of Fossil Coral from the Florida Keys.

Hand Carved marlin circle hook design trophy for the Penn Zane Grey Invitational
The awards for the Penn Zane Grey Invitational Marlin Tournament will be an original design of a Marlin Head incorporated into a Circle Hook Trophy carved from specially selected Florida Keys West Indy Mahogany resting on a base of Florida Keys Fossil Coral.

Traditional Hawiian Circle Hook Awards for the Crow's Nest Avalon Billfish Classic
The awards for the Crows Nest Avalon Billfish Classic will be a traditional Hawaiian Style Circle Hook, Hand carved from light colored Oregon Poplar resting on a beautiful Mahogany Base.
David A. Wirth is well known in the marine art community. In 2006, The IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame and Museum chose David as their Featured Artist. Much of David’s art can be found on display and for sale at his The Keys to Life Studio of Art in Islamorada, FL. Other places his art is displayed include the IGFA World Fishing Center Fishing Hall of Fame and Museum in Dania, Florida, as well as The Rain Barrel Artist Village, the Redbone Gallery, and Halliday’s Treasure Gallery in Islamorada. In Maui, you will find David’s sculpture in the Rick Steininger Gallery and The Whaler’s Locker. David has been featured in such publications as Worldwide Angler, and Wildlife Art Magazine.
David will be attending the Crow’s Nest Avalon Billfish Classic and Catalina Classic displaying his art.
Fraser Volpe, the recognized leader in marine gyroscopic stabilized binoculars (or gyros as they are regularly called by local anglers), has long been a sponsor of the California Billfish Series marlin tournaments. This year, a set of Fraser Volpe Stedi-Eye Mariner stabilized binoculars will be one of the four mega raffle drawings for the Crow’s Nest Avalon Billfish Classic Marlin Tournament.

All anglers entered in this event will have an entry in to this drawing, and the other three mega raffle drawings as well.
With a retail value of around $5,000, the Fraser Volpe Stedi-Eye Mariners are one of the most sought after prizes in the series. They offer the highest scan rate and greatest field of view of any gyro available, and reduce up to 98% of image motion. They are able to operate continuously for up to 12 hours on 2 “AA” batteries, and have optional adapter to allow for power to be provided form a standard cigarette lighter outlet. They are buoyant, easy to operate, and a set or more can be found aboard most every serious tournament boat in the tournaments. The reason is clear; the 14 X magnification allow teams to scan a field that is 74 meters wide at 1,000 meters range. In other words, these gyros allow teams to cover an incredible amount of water, searching for fish and other signs of life.

Gyros can help your team spot sleepers from a mile away
How important are gyroscopic stabilized binoculars to top offshore captains? At a recent offshore fishing seminar Steve Lassley and Pete Groesbeck of Team Bad Company were asked if they had to choose between turning off all of their electronics or putting away their gyros, what would they do? Steve and Pete were stumped. The honest answer is that their gyros are at least as important to them as their GPS, chart plotter, side scanning sonar, fathometer, and all the other high tech gadgets on the bridge.

Steve Lassley and Pete Groesbeck puting the Fraser Volpe Gyros to good use aboard Bad Company
It depends on the day, but generally speaking catching fish in Southern California is completely dependent on seeing them first, and gyros increase your odds exponentially. When asked what percentage of fish they caught were first spotted in the gyros, Lassley and Groesbeck estimated about 80-90%. Those that didn’t get spotted were either located on the side scanning sonar (very small percentage for local stripers), or were jig bites.

Gyros are even more important when just the tips of the tails are showing
Why are they so important? A simple geometry lesson will make it crystal clear. Take a sheet of paper, and randomly make three dots on that sheet with a marking pen. Now suppose the piece of paper represents a “chart” of the water you are fishing, with a scale of 1 inch = 1 mile. Make believe each dot represents a marlin on the surface. Now close your eyes and draw 3 straight lines anywhere across the “chart” (see figure 1).

The three dots, represent marlin, the three lines your boats path. and the circles the area of water covered using regular bioculars vs. gyros.
These lines represent your boats path trolling through the area. Odds are these lines do not touch any of the dots, but they do come within an inch from at least one of them.
Now think about how far away your crew is able to spot a marlin consistently. For most crews, with bare eyes a sleeper or tailer more that 150 yards away will likely go unnoticed. With a good set of 7 X 50 binoculars, you can be generous to your crew and triple that. Let’s assume your crew is using binoculars and scanning all around the boat. That means that at any given time you are covering a circle with a diameter of 900 yards, or .51 miles (about ½ inch on our chart). That means that if you took an item like a dime that is about ½ inches across, and passed it down each line, any fish covered by the dime would be found by your crew. Any fish not covered would be missed.
Now consider a crew following the exact same path using gyros. This crew has the ability to spot fish a mile or more from the boat. This boat will cover a circle with a diameter of 2 miles, 4 times more water than the boat using regular binoculars, and 12 times more water than a boat looking with bare eyes. If you took an item with a 2 inch diameter, like a salt shaker or roll of tape, and passed that down the same 3 lines, it is clear how much more water is covered, including all 3 fish in our example for the crew using gyros, while the crew using binoculars covered the exact same water and missed them all.

Gyro's aren't just for the big boys. Boats of all sizes benefit from the use of gyros.
Now just having a set or two of gyros on your boat will not guarantee you will find fish. You still need to be diligent about using them, and using them properly. That means having your boat set up so that the crew using gyros have the ability to scan without obstruction form stanchions, antennae, or bridge enclosures.

Note the chair mounted on the hard top providing an unobstructed view and a resting place for the spotters arms.
The spotting stations need to be set up so the crew can rest their arms while they hold the gyros to their eyes for hours on end. Once a fish is spotted, the spotter needs to be able to communicate with the helmsman and other crew members to steer the boat close enough to the fish that other crew men can spot the fish with their eyes before the gyro man can take his eyes off. This is easier said than done, even for top crews.

Sauries showering on the surface are an excellent sign of feeding marlin, and are easy to spot from a distance using gyros.
Besides spotting fish, the gyros can be used to spot bait, birds, kelps, current rips, and other signs of life or lack thereof. They can also be used to keep an eye on other boats to see if they are finding fish. For safety purposes, they can aid in spotting boats or crews in distress, or navigational hazards such as partially submerged objects. They also come in handy when checking out the wildlife at local beaches while on anchor or on the mooring in Avalon.


































