Tuna Fishing Fuel Consumption per day

Don't forget processing as well
35 tunas at 25lb/per. -4 people, one day carking and sealing, one day canning. and repeat.

i found going 6.5 kts instead of 8.5 kts to be a game changer over time. saved 40 litres during an overnight putt out.
i get the same mileage running at 22-23kts as going 8.5 kts

70 miles= 400litres. single 300 zuki 25' baha this was overnight travel out at 8.5 kts
same trip and travel out at 6.5 kts and burned 360litres.
 
We paid about $1k USD for one albacore this season. Had we ran 5 miles further west instead of turning south for 20-25 miles, we would have gotten into them with a couple other boats 🤦‍♂️
 
So jealous. I was paying $2.31 plus tax (end cost around $2.43/liter) all summer. (fishing out of Tahsis).
Would be doing back flips if I could get fuel anywhere around $2/liter.
You're not alone. I thought the same thing reading this thread. Tuna trips from Ukee about 500l at $2.40/l and $1200 per trip in fuel (not to mention the other costs).
 
100 miles round trip plus 4-5 hours of trolling, probably runs me 30 gallons. Around $250-300 depending on fuel prices.
Where did you get that fuel tank up front? Also how big is it? I only found a 40l tank for my boat.
 
One of my customers goes down to Westport each year with 10 other guys..they hire out the entire boat for a 2 day trip. He goes with Ocean Sportfishing there. He figures his per person cost is/was about $1000.00 including the Coho ferry there and back. They arrive at the boat dinner time and steam out all night. Fish from 7am until dark the first day then drift on the mark through the night...fish until boat is full next day then head in. You can spend that night on the boat at dock and head home in the am. They troll until they find a school then drift and use light tackle with live anchovies and sight fish from the side of the boat. He said they have stayed on a school for 6-8 hours on trips before having to troll again. They all come home with the biggest cooler you can buy full. You take your own microwave warmable food for the trip.
 
One of my customers goes down to Westport each year with 10 other guys..they hire out the entire boat for a 2 day trip. He goes with Ocean Sportfishing there. He figures his per person cost is/was about $1000.00 including the Coho ferry there and back. They arrive at the boat dinner time and steam out all night. Fish from 7am until dark the first day then drift on the mark through the night...fish until boat is full next day then head in. You can spend that night on the boat at dock and head home in the am. They troll until they find a school then drift and use light tackle with live anchovies and sight fish from the side of the boat. He said they have stayed on a school for 6-8 hours on trips before having to troll again. They all come home with the biggest cooler you can buy full. You take your own microwave warmable food for the trip.
They run some pretty cool outfits outta Westport. When we ran down from Bamfield and fished the Washington Tuna Classic we were considered the tuna trolling specialist.
The live baiting was awesome. All the party boats that we saw were loaded. Definitely a very cool option and a great way to try live baiting.
 
One of my customers goes down to Westport each year with 10 other guys..they hire out the entire boat for a 2 day trip. He goes with Ocean Sportfishing there. He figures his per person cost is/was about $1000.00 including the Coho ferry there and back. They arrive at the boat dinner time and steam out all night. Fish from 7am until dark the first day then drift on the mark through the night...fish until boat is full next day then head in. You can spend that night on the boat at dock and head home in the am. They troll until they find a school then drift and use light tackle with live anchovies and sight fish from the side of the boat. He said they have stayed on a school for 6-8 hours on trips before having to troll again. They all come home with the biggest cooler you can buy full. You take your own microwave warmable food for the trip.
I mean this fishing trip sounds like a dream come true! The cost per person is a good deal for two days of fishing and coming home with a cooler full of fish. It's legit awesome !
 
One of my customers goes down to Westport each year with 10 other guys..they hire out the entire boat for a 2 day trip. He goes with Ocean Sportfishing there. He figures his per person cost is/was about $1000.00 including the Coho ferry there and back. They arrive at the boat dinner time and steam out all night. Fish from 7am until dark the first day then drift on the mark through the night...fish until boat is full next day then head in. You can spend that night on the boat at dock and head home in the am. They troll until they find a school then drift and use light tackle with live anchovies and sight fish from the side of the boat. He said they have stayed on a school for 6-8 hours on trips before having to troll again. They all come home with the biggest cooler you can buy full. You take your own microwave warmable food for the trip.
I've been on a few of these trips and they are a ton of fun! Personally enjoy it more than the troll show that we are stuck with up here with no access to buying live anchovies. Of course if the school is tight enough jigging is awesome!
 
I've been on a few of these trips and they are a ton of fun! Personally enjoy it more than the troll show that we are stuck with up here with no access to buying live anchovies. Of course if the school is tight enough jigging is awesome!
Anyone ever sabiki up anchovies? Or maybe try a speed jigging program? I've never even fished for tuna. Just wondering if that's an option.
 
Anyone ever sabiki up anchovies? Or maybe try a speed jigging program? I've never even fished for tuna. Just wondering if that's an option.
No, I’ve never seen anchovies out there. Only bait I’ve seen is sarry
 
100 miles round trip plus 4-5 hours of trolling, probably runs me 30 gallons. Around $250-300 depending on fuel prices.
Hmmm maybe I have to rethink my pre perception you go out 100 miles in that boat ?
How is it ? what safety gear and electronics do you have do you go by yourself or buddy boat
I have so many questions I’ve been thinking bigger boat equals safer and buddy boat’s safest way to go
I think twin engines incase you hit something or have failures am I just over thinking this !
I know when I go in my logging truck I like to pack spares of all air line fixes and winter gear in case of engine fail and freezing temp
So I’m thinking on the ocean in a boat I need to drag a spare boat lol not really but you know what I mean lol and know I see you go out that far in that !!!!
Please explain
 
I've been reading and talking about tuna: gear, spreads, troll speed, bait stops, jigging, safety, ice, water temps, chlorophyll, fuel, ice, fish storage, etc. for 15 years. I'm still not ready to go in my own boat as a first trip. Keep learning.
 
Hmmm maybe I have to rethink my pre perception you go out 100 miles in that boat ?
How is it ? what safety gear and electronics do you have do you go by yourself or buddy boat
I have so many questions I’ve been thinking bigger boat equals safer and buddy boat’s safest way to go
I think twin engines incase you hit something or have failures am I just over thinking this !
I know when I go in my logging truck I like to pack spares of all air line fixes and winter gear in case of engine fail and freezing temp
So I’m thinking on the ocean in a boat I need to drag a spare boat lol not really but you know what I mean lol and know I see you go out that far in that !!!!
Please explain
First thing, just because I do it doesn't mean anyone else should. Your risk tolerance may vary.

100 miles referred to round trip distance, 40 miles off shore plus a bunch of trolling. Furthest out I've gone is 55 miles.

It's fine, further just takes longer, more fuel etc. There are interesting birds and some times unique whales to be seen. Saw a huge leatherback turtle off Brooks one trip. I'm very cautious about weather conditions. I only go on really nice days.

Safety gear: Dry suit worn the whole time (exposure/hypothermia is a serious risk), PLB in the pocket, foam life jacket not an inflatable, handheld VHF, fixed mount VHF, Class B+ AIS transceiver, two chart plotters, fixed and hand held compass, I tie off to the leaning post with a short enough rope to not go past the transom when fishing.

I'm usually alone in the boat, but have gone out with one friend who works on the west coast in small boats professionally. I have not gone out with a buddy boat.

I agree, everything else being equal, a bigger boat is probably safer. A buddy boat is a very good idea and definitely safer than going alone. Twin engines, also safer. Knowing your boat, how to fix things, having common spares, tools and materials is a good idea. The boat I use is self bailing and foam filled so won't sink, but could still capsize. Might be able to swamp it in the right conditions as well, but it does have a pretty low transom to let water out provided you can power up and lift the bow. Fuel, I carry 85 gallons, so burn a half tank or less. Tons of reserve. I rely on the kicker in case the main dies. I suspect it would be a very very bad scene even with the kicker if the weather picked up at the same time. Some things like a failed alternator are covered by running two very large batteries. Boat will run for a full day on batteries alone. Make sure your equipment is in good condition. I put all new power and systems in my boat to improve it's reliability. Take extra food and water in case you get stuck out there.

Couple philosophical points. The difference between what is possible and what people are comfortable with can be huge. Before getting the whaler I ran around the west coast in a 14' soft bottom zodiac with a 20 horse on it. Biggest trip in that thing was over 600km in 10 days up and down the west side of the Charlottes from Tasu to Port Louise. Plenty of people run all over the coast in 12' aluminum boats with 9.9's. I had friends that used to go to Rose Harbour from Queen Charlotte in one. I know of one guy that went from Bowen to Queen Charlotte in one. There's a lot of talk about whether something is safe or not. From my perspective that's an inaccurate way of seeing the world. Many things are very unsafe, but nothing is absolutely safe. There's always risk, it's a matter of how much and whether a person cares about it. I worked with a guy that almost choked to death on a lamb chop eating dinner by himself at home. He had to heimlich himself on the corner of the kitchen counter. He totally, 100% could not breath. He for sure would have died had he not thrown himself against the counter. For me it's about being prepared, knowing what you are comfortable with and try not to put others into situations they aren't comfortable or prepared for.
 
We trailer a boat down to Westport every year for 8 years or so. Usually ran out less than 40 miles. American fuel prices helped. They stopped selling live bait to non guides a few years ago so we quit going. It was fun but kind of over it now. There was a boat in Winter Harbor last July selling 3 fish for $60. Not bad size.
 
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