The days passed pretty quickly when you're onboard having fun and chasing fish. However, we did do the touristy thing with visits to uninhabited isles and even the village isles. Both presented quite an experience to first time visitors and helped made the trip whole. 
 
The calm seas thus far made the trip a comfy one but it was only when the wind picked up a little towards the end that we got into better topwater action. The slight chop gave the fish more confidence to feed on the surface, and we had a few blinding sessions over the last two days with double, triple and even quadruple hook-ups. 
 

 All aboard the dinghy, our reef transport

 Gin-clear waters coupled with great weather, nothing else mattered

 Isla Paradiso!

As simple as getting your first cast in, to the first pod u spot!

 Second cast and the reward was a ncie Bonefish, on Keitech 2" Soft Plastic

 Released like all others

Freight trained by a reef bully on ultralight outfit

 3kg odd Bluefin Trevally - bruiser of the flats and an achievement on such light gear

We visited more than one island, this one was another bonefish hangout

 The epitome of fishing

 We cast to pods of cruising Bluefins and caught plenty

 They weren't big but were great fun nonetheless

 A hard fighting Emperor, an occasional flats visitor

 We spent some time chasing reefies too - this one an aggressive Snapper on a topwater lure

 Another to add to the species-list - a Paddle-tail Snapper
It fought harder than expected, reminds me of a Mangrove Jack

 Topwater lures like this Jackson Risk Bait accounted for many groupers too, this one a pretty sizable Coronation Trout

 Small Seriola from the depths

 Back to popping action, we encountered GTs on a daily basis

 Some fought harder and longer

 A teenager - they give a good account

 Island village of Kurendhoo

 Sunsets were unadulterated

 Battered harbour wall which bore the grunt of the 2006 Tsunami

 Inside the harbour all was pristine

 1st cast the next mornin' - teenager GT on a Shakure

 Jigging brought us more Cods

 Slightly molested Amberjack suggested some bigger predators were in the vicinity

 Dinner was never short of a fresh supply

 They came in all shapes, sizes and colours

And they never stopped biting

 Popping presented another surprise, this guy was headed for Sri Lanka

 It was Sailfish season and this frisky one duly oblidged

 Flat seas created a great panorama

 Good sized Sail of about 50kgs, on a MuraMura chugger

 It was back to GT action after that distraction

 They took all manner of popper types

 Proccession of Cod never ceased

 And some Yellowfin thrown in for good measure

 A Dogtooth Snapper - nasty teeth!

 The sights reminded you of where you were daily

 The guys enjoyed some bottom bashing at night
Nice Long-nose Emperor

 Monster sized Red Bass

 Mean-looking Green Jobfish

 Bigeye Trevallies were a fish a cast on light jigs and small poppers

 Dogtooth Tuna even got into the action with light jigs

 The Bigfoot worked well throughout the trip

 The biggest GT of the trip - about 30kgs 

 Bigger fish started to show up later in the trip

 This one in the twenties

 There were no escaping the sharks, which were a constant nuisance

 But we still managed the odd good fish like this Amberjack

 The biggest Rosy Jobfish I've personally seen - over 10kgs
Taken on the new Shout! Shab Shab jig

 GTs on jigs as well

 Fat Red Bass on FCL Ebipop 140

 Small to medium GTs ruled the reefs and weren't afraid to smash big offerings

 They lined up to make the day a happening one for surface action

 'Any bigger?'

 Black Jacks were a beautiful fish to look at

 And they live in mad depths
We spent the last session pulling up small to medium sized critters from the deep, 
but no one was complaining for it had been quite a week

 Civilization
 
Looks surreal dude. Flats looks amazing. You organising any more trips there?
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