How do you guys stand this cold???

Finished up yesterday and left the 90+ degree heat of exotic Panama, shoulda' stayed

Sometimes you do things that you wish you hadn't (I do anyways)...not this time, when opportunity knocked in mid december for this trip I thought about it for about 2 hours then sent off my fishing piggy bank to Lost Coast Excursions for a package deal that Robbo was hosting for them, time flew and I left just about the time that the weather went south here... good timing

packed one small backpack(no socks just flip-flops) and a bag of jigs along with a fair amount of promo items (swimbaits) hand delivered to me by northwest fishing icon Buzz Ramsey and bailed out for seatac then atlanta then PANAMA!!
I think the reason I fish the way I do is that it makes me a kid again and I felt pretty green hitting the airport in a central american country, but it went down easy and we roamed the streets of downtown at midnight of our first night in town, PanaVegas as Robbo calls it, they have it all. fun.
Lost Coast had it all arranged with a van picking us up for the quatro hora van ride out through santiago to the *end of the road* cool little town on a river estuary where the little panga style boat would take us out to the big boat.
Had a few beers here as it got dark then we finally bailed in for the 5 mile ride out, got very little sleep with all night activity while the crew was prepping the boat for the ride out in the early AM.
That's a 20' koffler they use as a runabout while cruising the islands for surfing and diving sitting on the back deck, the big vessel is a retired crab boat from the north sea (her sister ship used to be on deadliest catch) they retrofitted her for cruising and now she's living the good life, there were 6 of us on board but they normally need 10.
Reach our distination and headed for the ranger station on Coiba island to pick up permits...sorry Sol, can't skip the island tour
There was another group on a dive tour picking up permits at the same time..on the ride back to the boat Captain Frank chided me for not inviting a couple of the sweeties back...D'oh!
Our Captain, Frank....32 years old and certified to captain super tankers, intelligent articulate and funny, a genuine good guy just taking a working vacation and running the Lost Coast Explorer for a couple of months.
hang loose
Met Marlin Captain Bartolo in the bay by the ranger station that morning and headed out for some inshore casting, Robbo and I made the wise choice of bringing some quality gear and tackle...
Jigs, poppers and swim baits were in short supply out there, so the mate Alberto made himself at home rummaging through our bag and found the shimano butterfly jigs to his liking...we tied them on and I was hit on the first cast, didn't stick...kept casting to a rip line and was chased by some giant (5 foot) wahoo that kept shying off at the boat, we covered water quickly, Bartolo and his entire family, uncles, cousins, father...everyone are captains and have been forever, so he seemed to know when a spot was futile and would not really say anything like "reel 'em up" he would just go....trying to run over your line as you raced to get it in.
Made a long run to the outside of Coiba and started casting to wash rocks with poppers, seeing giant flashes chasing after whatever we tossed with a few misses but no hookups, the excitement was building.
Finally I get smashed on a surface popper...probably the most exciting fishing in that clear water, hard work too, casting that heavy rig as far as you're able then reeling as fast as you can while ripping and jerking the rod tip to get the right action on it, nailed a nice Bluejack that give a helluva fight for their size....Robbo followed that one up with this neon specimen, they really do look like this with colors looking *plugged in* (thanks Gilly)
Headed back in for dinner then a quick trip back out with the Captain for some close by action....1st cast one of the crew hooks *something big* on a popper, it was peeling line off of Robbos heavy duty giant spinning real at a crazy pace and the dude just keep tightening the drag, in my head I'm saying WTF? I should have been saying it out loud cause on about the third twist it breaks, bad deal...poppers are about 25 buck and there is no store for replacements, he handed back the rod and that was that. I got a cute little barracuda on a popper, then robbo gets hit as his cast hits the water, almost like the fish was wating with an open mouth, a few head shakes and a tug...then some heavy swings and it just comes in easy....wonder why?
...and that was just the 1st day!
I'll pick up the story of going out for billfish manana.
Adios
Stam