A bit late report here... Huge amounts of cod is along the Norwegian coast right now and me and the team are back from a week trip. we rented a cabin and boat in soroya, Norway. Biggest cod was around the 20kg mark... probably 200 cod were caught between 10 and 20 kilos... estimated a total of 6000 pounds of cod fished in total for 4 days fishing so pretty good. too bad the big ones didn't show up... the week before they landed a 90 pounder!!! ;D
(http://i869.photobucket.com/albums/ab256/hafnor/IMG_4722.jpg)
(http://i869.photobucket.com/albums/ab256/hafnor/IMG_4723.jpg)
(http://i869.photobucket.com/albums/ab256/hafnor/IMG_4725.jpg)
(http://i869.photobucket.com/albums/ab256/hafnor/IMG_4726.jpg)
(http://i869.photobucket.com/albums/ab256/hafnor/IMG_4755.jpg)
(http://i869.photobucket.com/albums/ab256/hafnor/IMG_4756.jpg)
(http://i869.photobucket.com/albums/ab256/hafnor/IMG_4757.jpg)
(http://i869.photobucket.com/albums/ab256/hafnor/IMG_4772.jpg)
Hafnor: great report. I never saw a cod up close like that. My other comment is Brrrrrr. :) Dominick
thank you Dominick! they taste great too!:)
Great pics. Thank you.
What tackle where you using? lure or bait? Do they fight hard?
That kind of fishing is just too cold for me, so I will have to live it out vicariously from you pictures! ;D
Looks like fun, but probably too cold considering I like fishing in 80 deg. F weather.
Great report Thor - and some cracker fish.
Looks like Lee would be right at home there. ;) ;D
Cheers for sharing, Justin
I hate to say it, but up here in Alaska, when we catch a cod, it almost always ends up as bait. A fresh cod filet is just about the best halibut bait you can get. I know they are good on the table -- some people like it more than halibut and there is a huge commercial fishery for cod in Alaska -- but I much prefer halibut. Halibut fight quite a bit more too. Still, it would be great fun to fish in Norway. Someday, perhaps.
open ally boat,oh boy!
nice pics
Very nice shots! Without you guys, us Italians wouldn't have any Baccala' (dried cod) for our Christmas traditions.
Quote from: hafnor on April 19, 2012, 05:28:03 PM
thank you Dominick! they taste great too!:)
I agree except for lutefisk. See Sal's (Alto Mare) comments about baccala. Great tasting when you get the right amount of salt rinsed out. I have Swedish friends that have that dish of french fried potatoes and cod fish at Christmas (I don't know what the dish is called). The dish is interesting and I can see eating it once a year. The fishy taste of cod and sweetish taste of fried potatoes went together okay. Then there is lutefisk. My wife had some Norwegian friends who invited us to experience lutefisk. I pulled up in their driveway and I thought I had arrived at fish packing plant. I managed a few bites and have to say once you get passed the smell it did not taste all that bad. On the other hand she could have been a lousy cook. ;D Dominick
Nice to see you trying out some Norwegian old dishes. Lutefisk is for the experienced ones and take a while getting used to. I think it is okay but not crazy for for it! ;D
Nice cod, it looks cold too.
Seattle (Ballard) has a large scandinvian population, in fact the May 17th parade is the largest outside of Norway, lutefish is what separates the true believers from the rest of us. Looks like some great fishing and some great eats....
Thor,
You guys are hard core.... Even with the snow flying and freezing temps the fish are still hittin' the decks!
Awesome stuff,
Dom
brrrrrr, nice catch though. thanks for shating, tight lines.
6,000 pounds for 4 days of fishing ???? You guys rock !!!
Thanks for the report and pics from the cold side of the planet.
yes, the fishing is astonoshing... huge amounts and huge specimens!
Quote from: Max Doubt on April 24, 2012, 12:39:45 AM
6,000 pounds for 4 days of fishing ???? You guys rock !!!
Thanks for the report and pics from the cold side of the planet.
You need to fish just one trip every five years and eat cod between. ::)