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Deep Sea Filipina Pea!

πŸ“… 2025-07-11⏱ 19:44
πŸ“… 2025-07-11 Β |Β  ⏱️ 19:44 Β |Β  πŸ‘οΈ 61.4K views Β |Β  πŸ‘ 5.2K likes Β |Β  πŸ’¬ 1.5K comments

Pea takes viewers on a deep-sea fishing trip out of Orange Beach, Alabama aboard a 36-foot Cape Horn boat. She's joined by Captain Bill, Captain Eigor (who she says looks like Bjorn Ironside from Vikings), first mate Rob, and 12-year-old Nicholas, the captain's son. The trip targets deep-water species at nearly 500 feet, and Pea battles seasickness along the way.

The boat and setup ​

  • 36-foot Cape Horn with two 300-horsepower V8 engines β€” Captain Bill notes each engine is roughly twice as powerful as a typical car
  • Deep V hull design, cruising speed around 25-30 mph (capable of 50 but too rough at that speed on open water)
  • Trip departs at 4:00 a.m. β€” Pea notes she's a night owl and not normally up this early
  • Using electric reels instead of manual ones because at the depths they're fishing (nearly 500 feet), hand-cranking a big fish to the surface would destroy your arms β€” Captain Bill says you'd get one fish and be done

Deep-drop fishing technique ​

  • Fishing at 493 feet of water (169 meters on the reel) β€” complete darkness at that depth
  • Rigs use 250 lb mainline, 150 lb fluorocarbon leaders, massive hooks (2, 3, or 5 hooks per rig), and a 5 lb lead weight to keep it straight up and down
  • All gear uses glow-in-the-dark elements β€” glow squid sleeves, glow beads, and a green strobe light at the end
  • Rob explains the bioluminescence strategy: at depth, living squid have phosphorescence and change colors, so the glow gear mimics a school of bait to attract predators
  • Squid is the primary bait because it's the main diet for everything from scorpion fish to swordfish and tuna

Trolling for pelagic fish ​

  • On the 2.5-hour trip back, they plan to troll big lines behind the boat for pelagic fish (tuna, swordfish)
  • Captain Bill shares that tuna are warm-blooded, can swim 50 mph underwater, and are literally hot to the touch when caught β€” "if it was a cold day, you could warm yourself with them"
  • They produce so much heat they melt ice in the cooler and require constant re-icing
  • Trolling rods can cost up to $5,000 each

The catch ​

  • Scorpion fish β€” in the same family as lionfish, poisonous spines, but delicious; lives in complete darkness yet has bright colors and huge eyes
  • Red snapper β€” beautiful fish, must be 16 inches to keep, limit of two per person per year; red snapper season is open and it's a big part of the fishery
  • Snowy grouper β€” named for the snowflake-like markings; when pulled up from depth, the pressure change causes its stomach to invert and push out of its body (air inside expands as it rises)
  • Yellow edge grouper β€” named for the yellow edging on its features
  • White snapper β€” Rob says these are prolific and hard to get away from; they're everywhere in these waters
  • Rob notes that deep-water fish grow incredibly slowly β€” a fish "this big" could be 50 years old, but they're the best-tasting fish available

Fish cleaning ​

  • First mate Rob demonstrates filleting technique: don't scale the fish, cut along a natural open area, take sides off, then remove the skin after, and do a final check for bones
  • Rob says he learned speed-filleting as a deckhand, cleaning hundreds of pounds of fish per day and having fillet races with other deckhands

Seasickness strikes Pea ​

  • Pea gets noticeably seasick as the trip progresses
  • Captain Bill's advice on the best remedy: "Land." Then: "Basically, everybody gets used to it within 24 hours... but we're only going to be out here for about 10"
  • Bill's seasickness humor: "The good news is you're not going to die. The bad news is you're not going to die."
  • Bill torments her by describing greasy barbecue pork dripping off the bun β€” Pea is not amused
  • The seasickness ultimately cuts the trip short

The crew ​

  • Captain Bill β€” organized the trip, knowledgeable about the boat and gear
  • Captain Eigor β€” the boat's captain, whom Pea compares to Bjorn Ironside from the TV show Vikings
  • Nicholas (Captain Eigor's 12-year-old son) β€” been driving the boat since age 5-6, has a YouTube fishing channel called "Doc Boys" with his friends
  • First mate Rob β€” handles the rigs, does the filleting, former charter deckhand
  • The charter company is Orange Beach Addiction (orangebeachaddiction.com), under the umbrella company Orange Beach Water Sports

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