Ok more on my day now:
Head a beautifully smooth ride out from the Columbia. The one hiccup was a very dense fog bank that lasted for about 15mi or so. Thankfully my radar worked beautifully and kept me going safely in the right direction until we hit the glorious break back in to the sun.

We found the 59-61deg temp break well inside of my destination, and I knew it was there before going but had initially talked myself out of fishing it.. Well, there were a ton of birds around so we dropped lines in for about 20min to prospect with nothing to show for it. Picked back up and went a few more miles west.
Trolled about 10min before we got our first troll eat on a cedar plug. I also hooked up on my first jig cast as well as my buddy Tom getting hooked up on the jig at the same time. We lost the troll fish on the side of the boat and landed my jig fish. After my fish hit the floor I saw the fish circling the boat and eating our chum, so I grabbed the 12wt that was in the rod holder (it was trolling) and made some casts. I got one good swipe at it, then a series of refusals. Friend hooked up on a jig and lost that fish which sounded the school, so we moved on.
We covered some ground, going a ways NW until we ran in to a massive pod of dolphins in some kind of frenzy. We watched that for a bit then picked up the gear to turn around and head south a mile or two to give them some space. After setting gear in the troll spread, I see a very large floating object. I get close to inspect and see it's a massive tree stump covered in barnacles and plant life. I'd say about the size of a big crew cab truck. Obviously had been in the water for some time.
I trolled up close to have a look when we spot a boil next to the log. We stop the boat and immediately see a school of yellowtail. It was multiple groups of 10-20 fish just milling around. Some came right up to the boat and just kind of circled around doing their thing. Tom casted his jig, which was the one I had set up with a really small baitfish jig. He immediately hooked up on one. Other buddy Nick got in the bow with the fly rod and started casting the 12wt. He got follows almost every cast but never a commitment. My coltsniper jig didn't get touched. I put a swimbait out as well but nada on that too.
We got the fish to the boat and I proceed to botch about 10 gaff attempts. It's such a different shape than an albacore that I was really struggling to get purchase. I'd pull on the gaff the way I always do, and it would just bounce off or the fish would flip over. Got really frustrating. I was about to reach for the net when the line snapped right at the side of the boat. Tom yells GAFF IT! and I take one last swipe at it which finally found the mark and got it in the boat. One of my proudest moments ever

We stayed on the school for another 20mins or so and hooked and lost two more on Tom's magic jig. As you're probably noticing, this was a developing theme for the day. I NEVER lose fish out there. I don't know what was going on yesterday, but we lost fish on jigs, every type of troll lure, flies, etc. I swapped to brand new hooks on a troll lure that lost 3 in a row only to have that brand new hook break on the next hookup. It was just a fight we couldn't win. So anyways, lose two more yellowtail, which was heartbreaking. But still felt extremely fortunate to have the one we got.
The rest of the day was a display of Sea World type action with dolphins, pilot whales, close up grays, and tunafish. We got on an area with lots of jumper tuna and stayed on them for a while, doing some fun run n gun action with the jigs and fly. The fly rod unfortunately snapped the tip on its first fish while we were getting it to the side of the boat

so it didn't get to see any more action.
One thing of note: I was trolling a fly in my prop wash on a conventional setup with a Shimano Trevala rod and Avet reel. I put a long Airflo CCT 470 (basically T-28) on it so that it could emulate the fly rod presentation in the troll spread, but on a rod more suited for it. That was by far our hottest troll rod. It went off almost every time we got troll eats.
Mixed grade of fish. Biggest of the day was this one here. Not huge, but still awesome.
Ran in on this ocean at about 30-33mph. Perfect end to an incredible day.
Tap to view!
photos.app.goo.gl
