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I haven't really weighed the amount of meat I get off each one. But I think it's something like 30-40% of the bodyweight ( that's trimmed loins).How many pounds do you get off the average albacore?
And is there any chance of catching a blue fin? I've heard that they run underneath the schools of albacore

That sounds about right. I still have a lot in the freezer that I need to eat/give away!If I recall correctly, @adamcu280 got about 45 lbs from 5 1/2 albacore last year. In my limited experience the tuna were typical size ( except for one peanut).
You have a recipe for this?I've started smoking last years tuna. Makes pretty good snacks.
Wow Even, wish I was your neighbor.
Using 2-hook flies sounds good from a hookup standpoint but sketchy when dealing with freshly gaffed fish in the middle of a hot bite.How much are folks fishing stinger flies, especially while trolling? Anyone tried a two hook fly, front + stinger? I never do a two hook setup with salmon because of frequent shaker/bycatch/unclipped encounters, but would have no compunctions fishing it for tuna.
I'll 2nd that. Never moving again though. The abandoned property next door to us needs his energy and attention.Wow Evan, wish I was your neighbor.
Ok, that’s really helpful, because fouling was my other big concern. I’m not one of those people who can tie foul-free flies it seems. I pretty much exclusively fish a stinger clouser for coho because I get so tired of worrying about fouling on every cast. If you’re telling me that going 100% stinger is an option, I’m gonna run with that! Except for maybe 3-10 small thin profile flies that I can gum up pretty good with epoxy around the hook.I have almost solely been using stinger only flies the past couple years. Mostly because my flies were occasionally fouling on the front hook, especially when casting. I found some times when I wasn't getting bit on the troll, or seeing tuna reject my fly on a retrieve, it was because a few hairs were fouled on the hook. So I went to stinger only to insure I didn't have to worry about fouling when casting.
There are short strikes happening, even with the stinger, so I don't think the stinger itself is going to convert those short strikes into hookups.
Ok, that’s really helpful, because fouling was my other big concern. I’m not one of those people who can tie foul-free flies it seems. I pretty much exclusively fish a stinger clouser for coho because I get so tired of worrying about fouling on every cast. If you’re telling me that going 100% stinger is an option, I’m gonna run with that! Except for maybe 3-10 small thin profile flies that I can gum up pretty good with epoxy around the hook.
Considering how metal jigs work, a spinning fly wouldn't even begin to bother me.I hate a spinning or rolling fly on the tuna grounds. If it doesn't swim right to my eye, and I get even one refusal or short strike or something, I am cutting that f*cker off, because I can't stand wondering if that's the reason I'm not hooking up.
Maybe @SilverFly will post up some of his ties. Or you can go and search them out. He has a way of tying the materials super high on the hook so it essentially cannot foul, and you can feel very confident that no materials are getting in the hook gap and interfering with hookups.
Mmm. That's nice.Considering how metal jigs work, a spinning fly wouldn't even begin to bother me.
