School’s in!
- Share via
Deep sea fishing kicked into high gear earlier this week with good
catches of albacore, bluefin tuna and dorado being reported by the
sport fleet and private yachts fishing mid-channel waters and around
San Clemente Island.
Fishing conditions were prime all week long as a marine layer
moved in and kept the seas calm, which allowed skippers to locate
breezing schools of tuna, shut down on good sonar marks and locate
floating kelp.
Davey’s Locker spokesman Captain Norris Tapp reported that all the
boats running out of the landing are returning dockside with good
counts. The all-day boats are scoring on good numbers of albacore and
tuna, while the 1/2-, 3/4-and twilight trips are producing some
fair fishing for calico and sand bass.
Giant squid have stayed around a lot longer than expected and have
produced a big mess on the streets of Balboa when anglers, who have
forgotten to bring wheel barrows, drag gunny sacks of very inky squid
on the boardwalk and across major intersections.
Some locals are also complaining about the stains and the stink,
but the odds are that the schools of squid will soon head to deeper
water and this fishery will slowly dry up.
Albies are mixed in size, ranging from the size of footballs to
30-pounders.
With so-so bait available fishing has been up and down on a daily
basis for most boats heading out to the fishing grounds.
Robert Hedrick of Costa Mesa decked a 24-pound longfin tuna while
fishing aboard the 62-foot charter boat Caliber, running out of
Davey’s Locker in Balboa, to top off a good catch of albies earlier
this week.
Moving south a little, the bite on albacore and bluefin has been
consistent for most anglers.
Tom Kelleher of Corona del Mar took his uncle, Pete, who was
visiting from Tucson, on an all-day trip aboard the deluxe
sportfisher Prowler, operating out of Fisherman’s Landing in San
Diego.
Kelleher decked a big albie hooked on bait, unbuttoned a couple of
other tuna and his uncle got to pump on a 25-pound bluefin before it
finally came up and was expertly gaffed by crew member Craig West.
Captain Kenny Knight of Newport Beach headed the Pescador, a
44-foot Pacifica, to the 289 spot where he sighted a tailing striped
marlin. Doug Daniels of Huntington Beach owns the boat and cast a
live mackerel to the billfish that swung on the bait.
The fish was successfully brought to leader and released, which
earned the boat the first fish flag for the season from the Balboa
Angling Club.
There are reports of lots of swordfish in the channel, some as
close as three miles off Dana Point, and veteran billfish anglers are
looking forward to an awesome season.
There was a 257-pound marlin caught earlier this week off
Oceanside, which is a big fish for this early in the season.
With the water temp in the high 60s, and on some high spots
reaching into the low 70s, it looks as though anglers who have trips
planned over the upcoming Labor Day weekend are in for some very good
fishing out of Newport.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.