Outdoors: White seabass and yellowtail show at islands
Jim Niemiec
Good fishing conditions kicked in to produce a banner week of
fishing for the local sport fleet running out of Davey’s Locker, Newport
Landing Sportfishing and bay-based six-pack sportfishers.
There was a wide-open bite on white seabass this past week as boats
limited out early on seabass ranging in weight from 17 to 40 pounds. Most
of the action took place on the back side of Catalina Island with the
bulk of the catch coming on live squid fished with a sliding sinker rig.
There were also anglers hooking big croaker on white jigs tipped with
dead squid and few fishermen found hungry whites eager to jump on a
white-skirted jig head and a chunk of squid.
Anglers aboard the Pacific Star, the new deluxe sportfisher now
operating out of Davey’s Locker, had full limits on Tuesday and were
heading back to the beach early after topping off the catch with some
barracuda and calico bass.
One of the happy anglers on board this fast-day boat on a recent trip
was Bob Chapman, of Newport Beach, who decked a 38-pound seabass. Captain
Mike Bullard of Newport will be running the sport boat out to the islands
and channel water this season and has openings for two-day trips for the
albacore season when heading out to fish high spots in the outer waters.
The fast six-pack charter boats Bongos II & III and Captain Hook also
got into the seabass action at Catalina with most trips producing limit
fishing for all anglers on board. I was one of the lucky anglers that
fished with Captain Richard Ruffini of Costa Mesa on board the Bongos II
in action this past week.
Captain Ruffini waited for the seabass to get into a biting mood and
then moved into four fathoms of water, at a place the experienced skipper
called the “Junk Pile,” and the bite exploded.
Mike Contino, of Newport Beach, was one of the first to get hooked up,
followed by second mate Chandler Bell of Newport and then came this
angler who landed a 20-pounder croaker on 15-pound mono. The bite was so
hot that the captain put a jig out and got bit on the sink, while Orange
County angler Dennis Tossieng sacked a 22-pounder and Mike Shorsbree, on
a busman’s holiday from decking for Bongos Sportfishing, had a hot stick
and ended the trip by catching a 25-pound seabass.
When limits were accounted for, two other boats were called into the
bite and before we were heading home after handing off a couple of scoops
of live squid to the Pacific Star to help anglers limit out on seabass.
There are also breezing yellowtail showing on both the back and front
side of the island and as soon as the water warms up a couple of degrees
there should be good fishing for forktails, barracuda, calico bass and
bonito on the lee side of the island.
The best yellowtail fishing is taking place at San Clemente Island
where there are lots of schooled up yellows feeding along kelp beds and
off rocky points. According to Dean Plant, at Angler’s Center in Newport
Beach, the tails are big fish averaging better than 20 pounds.
The bite has been on and off depending on currents, but there are
plenty of fish around the outer island to produce some good scores for
skippers willing to anchor in tight and wait on the fish to move up a
chum line.
Along the coast, sand bass fish has been pretty good, with near limits
being posted on some half-day trips to the shallow water reefs off
Newport, Laguna and up along the Huntington Beach flats. These sandies
are legal, but on the smaller side of the scale, with most of the fish
being sacked weighing in the 1 1/2 to 3 pound class. Bigger sand bass
should move into hard-bottom areas along the coast later this month and
greatly enhance this fishery.
The first sport caught albacore of the 2001 summer season was landed
this past weekend. It was a fluke catch about 15 miles off the northern
coast of Baja by an angler fishing a kelp patty for yellowtail. The
longfin hit a jig that was dropped down under a school of yellowtail.
Water conditions below San Diego are good and schools of albies and
bluefin tuna could be within one day range before the end of the month.
According to Captain Buzz Brizendine, owner/operator of the newly
re-powered sportfisher, Prowler, operating out of Fisherman’s Landing,
this weekend could mark the start of the off shore blue water fishing
season. The Prowler will be heading out on scouting trips to the outer
waters in hopes of locating albacore, bluefin tuna or breezing schools of
yellowtail.
Locally, fresh water lake fishing is in a transition from cold water
fisheries to warm water activities. Trout are still very active at Irvine
Lake on lures and Berkley Power Bait, while Oso Lake has maintained
excellent bass fishing, the Santa Ana River Lakes will rely on stocking
channel catfish to keep their regulars content while fishing accessible
shore line and some of the nearby small public county lakes will be
planting small catchable catfish during the hot summer months.
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