MW Mobile Blog

For friends, family and the random search engine visitor. This blog started as an experiment in mobile blogging from my Palm TREO 600, 700, Prē, HTC Evo, Samsung 5, Pixel 3, Pixel 6 Pro, Pixel 9 Pro XL. Now it serves as a simple repository of favorite activities. Expect bad golf, good fishing, great sailing, eating, drinking, adventure travel, occasional politics and anything else I find interesting along the way including, but not limited to, any of the labels listed here...

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Amazon Adventure Day 9 - "Arise Fishers of Iriri! A Flyrod Day! A Red Day! A Pacu Day!"

Catch of the Day - Harlan Catches Pacu
 Fishing Day 4:

Guide: Joao (JV)
Native Guides: Foguinho, Pebcue
Fishing Beat: 1
QOD (Quote of the Day): "We'll get a Wolf Fish on the last afternoon of the last day." - MW

Back on the river with Joao as our guide. We're now past the halfway point for our fishing days on the Iriri River. Frankly, the experience thus far has already wildly exceeded my expectations for the trip. I'm having a great time bonding with my brother and cousins. We're embedded deep in the Amazon wilderness, surrounded by wildlife everywhere we look - under the water; on land, and in the air. And we're catching more fish, different fish, and bigger fish, than I dared to expect. Great experiences all around (but not necessarily in that order).

Despite exceeding all expectations, it doesn't mean we don't want more. And now we want to catch a wolf fish. This becomes our challenge to the 3 guides we'll have over the remaining 3 days. Spoiler Alert: It doesn't happen today with JV, despite no lack of trying on his part. But we do have another great day on Iriri. 

On The Boat:


Another Peacock Bass

Another Jakunda

Another Bicuda

On The Shore: 

We put ashore and...  

JV hacks us through a jungle trail to one of the many Iriri River braids...

... and prime Wolf Fish water, where....

... we fail to catch a Wolf Fish

After lunch, motivated by some mild stimulants, we cut short our rest time and did a little wet wading. To cool off, we took a a quick dip in the river, despite Teddy's warning:
"Piranha habits are in some ways inexplicable. We saw men frequently bathing unmolested; but there are places where this is never safe, and in any place if a school of the fish appear swimmers are in danger; and a wounded man or beast is in deadly peril if piranhas are in the neighborhood. Ordinarily it appears that an unwounded man is attacked only by accident. Such accidents are rare; but they happen with sufficient frequency to justify much caution in entering water where piranhas abound." - Teddy Roosevelt, "Through the Brazilian Wilderness" 
These pics were taken a few minutes and a few feet apart:
Another large piranha today. 

And another Peacock Pose with another nice Peacock Bass

At the end of the day, we went Pacu hunting again. The Pacu is a challenging fish to catch. It is a vegetarian, eating primarily algae, nuts, berries, and leaves. So lures and flies that imitate fish and insects are generally not effective. Both yesterday and today JV put us on a Pacu boil where we could see them taking food off the surface all around the boat. I abandoned the spin rig for my backup flyrod with a green shoefly. Neither of us could entice a Pacu yesterday. Today Harlan hit paydirt and caught several. 

A pacu boil.



A pacu catch.

A pacu. 

That wraps up our fishing for the day. Time for the Heller Token Catch of the Day:

Larry's Rubber Pacu. By his own admission, a lucky catch

No wolfies but another great day on the Iriri. Important to note that in the QOD (see above), I made a bold prediction this day. Perhaps it is not so bold. These things seem just seem to happen that way. When Sigrid and I were on a dive trip in Papua New Guinea, we told our divemaster that we wanted to see Hammerhead Sharks. It was the last dive of the last day when we saw a hammerhead swim casually by us. When we were touring in Ranthambore in India, we wanted to see a wild tiger. It was on almost the last game drive on the way back to the lodge that a tiger crossed our path. I think this is called "foreshadowing". 

Anyway, can't say enough about how much I appreciate this crew...

 From L to R - JV, HW, Foguinho, Pebcue, MW

After a day like this, dinner was particularly tasty. 


Forgot to take a pic of dessert. Which was delicious. 

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