Fishing Thailand

cmc

AH veteran
Joined
Sep 18, 2013
Messages
110
Reaction score
128
Location
Texas
Website
cafesandcampfires.com
Media
12
My wife loves visiting Thailand, she was born in the US but has family there so on the last trip I scheduled four days of fishing and it’s some of the most amazing fishing anywhere I think. Thailand is kind of the Wild West as far as importing fish apparently because there are fish from all over the world in these lakes. We also did some wild river fishing that took us through some pretty amazing country. I would recommend it to anybody who loves fishing. We stationed out of Bangkok and fished in areas within a couple hours drive. Bangkok is a pretty amazing city if you like cities. People are great, food is beyond great, easy to get around and cheap. Here’s a few pics. I think we caught 17 different species total between the two of us in 4 days.
1_E8_AE648-423_E-4_FDB-_BF90-_B1_D6306_C68_CC.jpg 2_EDD4_D5_E-920_E-4_EF9-9_A3_B-_D8_CD0_BA99_E7_A.jpg 43_E94_E67-26_AC-4779-8763-_D42_C71900_B5_D.jpg 47_BA90_CA-_F0_A9-46_A7-_B04_A-05_F8390_A56_AD.jpg 66_ADB1_A6-_E8_D9-47_DD-9983-1_C8_EF6560_A18.jpg 85_FA0_CC4-87_B6-4195-_B876-_CA5_FB0_ECAF80.jpg 17823_EC8-249_B-4_E84-9_BEA-1_AFF9_C05249_A.jpg




 
Last edited by a moderator:
Those are some monsters.
Pretty incredible variety of species.
Thanks for sharing the adventure.
 
  • Like
Reactions: cmc
Love the variety. Some big fish too. I have only been to Thailand 1 time and wished I had time to fish. Didn't make the time and now I can see that I should of. Thanks for sharing.
Bruce
 
  • Like
Reactions: cmc
Definitely a cool adventure! Thanks for posting.
 
  • Like
Reactions: cmc
Congrats!!! Some nice ones there, thanks for sharing!
 
  • Like
Reactions: cmc
Excellent.
Thanks again for posting this.
Out of curiosity, what tackle/bait were the catfish caught with?
 
  • Like
Reactions: cmc
Excellent.
Thanks again for posting this.
Out of curiosity, what tackle/bait were the catfish caught with?
The Mekongs which are the top pic and the one my wife is holding were caught on a dough bait made from bread and rice meal, they are not meat eaters. The meal was mixed with bread as a binder and made into a huge ball and the hooks are on short leaders outside the ball with small pieces of bread on them. The idea is when the huge fish inhale to get to the dough the hook being lighter goes in first and hooks the fish.

The amazon redtail, black and white one, was on half a chicken and the choa phraya catfish, bottom pic, and the Asian red tail, second pic, were both caught using a live walking catfish about 16” long.

The gear as you can expect is pretty big, huge spinning reels with 50 pound braid and very short stout rods. All the guides there seem to prefer a short rod I assume because casting distances are short you don’t need the longer rods. The choa phraya catfish was a battle that lasted over half an hour and these are probably the fastest catfish I’ve ever fought. Each species has a different style of fight and it didn’t take long to learn by the fight what I had hooked. The only thing that really surprised me was the pacu, not pictured, I’ve caught a lot of species of salt and fresh water fish and the big pacu covered water faster than anything I’ve ever hooked. They swap directions and run like no fish I’ve fought. The fight didn’t last that long but covered water more than any fish.

All the carp species were caught with some form of dough or pack bait usually rice meal or some kind of fish pellet mixed. Most of the carp fought like any other carp Ive caught here in the US. They fight hard and have stamina. The Juliens Pride Golden carp, the striped one pictured, had the hardest initial strike of any carp. Your rod would go from dead still to losing feet of line in seconds. The gear for the smaller carp species was standard spinning gear with medium heavy rods that any bass fisherman would have.
 
Okay full disclosure, I was actually a little more than curious :ROFLMAO:
It's really neat to get a peek into a part of the world we don't often see.
Thanks.

I share your affinity for these fish with shoulders. My interest might actually border on addiction l.o.l.

carp.jpg
catfish.jpg
 
Okay full disclosure, I was actually a little more than curious :ROFLMAO:
It's really neat to get a peek into a part of the world we don't often see.
Thanks.

I share your affinity for these fish with shoulders. My interest might actually border on addiction l.o.l.

View attachment 213745 View attachment 213746
:D That’s awesome. If big catfish and carp are your thing then Thailand would be paradise. We caught a couple carp species I didn’t even know existed and the Thai guide only knew the names in Thai so I had to look them up. There are dozens of native catfish species from a couple pounds to Mekongs which can go upwards of 300.
 
Very cool. Without River Monsters I wouldn't know a lot of these fish existed. I have reeled in quite a few carp on an arrow though.
 
Very cool trip!
 
Yeah, that would be more than a little fun.

Thanks for sharing something different with us!
 
  • Like
Reactions: cmc

Forum statistics

Threads
54,181
Messages
1,147,980
Members
93,732
Latest member
GennieHowe
 

 

 

Latest profile posts

sgtsabai wrote on Tanks's profile.
Business is the only way to fly. I'm headed to SA August 25. I'm hoping that business isn't an arm and a leg. If you don't mind, what airline and the cost for your trip. Mine will be convoluted. I'll be flying into the states to pick up my 416 Rigby as Thailand doesn't allow firearms (pay no attention to the daily shootings and killings) so I'll have 2 very long trips.
Vonfergus wrote on JamesJ's profile.
I am interested in the Double
Nick BOWKER HUNTING SOUTH AFRICA wrote on EGS-HQ's profile.
Hi EGS

I read your thread with interest. Would you mind sending me that PDF? May I put it on my website?

Rob
85lc wrote on Douglas Johnson's profile.
Please send a list of books and prices.
 
Top