Skiff fishing great fun in Newport Bay
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Newport Bay is a very productive fishery for a large variety of small
game fish and big bat rays despite being one of the busiest harbors
along the Pacific Coast during the summer recreational season.
Anglers can effectively fish the bay from public piers and docks, off
a few bulkheads, in float tubes, out of a kayak or with a bass boat,
but the best way to fish Newport Bay is in a rental skiff from the
Balboa Pavilion.
Tides were right earlier this week for this outdoor editor to
spend a morning sampling the fishing in the bay with my wife, Toni.
Doug Turin, co-owner of Pavilion Skiff Rentals, (949) 673-1434,
greeted us at the dock and passed on a few fishing tips before
helping us board one of the 14’ U-drive skiffs that have served in
the rental fleet for many seasons. Turin said, “The halibut bite has
been real steady right here in front of the Pavilion and fishermen
drifting with live anchovies or plastics around the bait receiver
between the twin jetties have been catching all kinds of fish. We had
a 15 pound halibut weighed in this past weekend and anglers report
lots of action on spotted bay bass, halibut and an occasional legal
white seabass.”
That report sounded good enough to me and after taking on a scoop
of choives, in the bait well, we headed out to the mouth of the
harbor as the sun broke through the morning fog. We were ahead of the
high tide movement and had to wait about 20 minutes before the fish
got into a feeding mood. Once the tide began to move into the bay it
triggered the feed call for all kinds of fish. There were three other
skiffs anchored up in the channel but I opted to drift along the east
jetty. Just about every anchovy was bit by some kind of fish once it
got near the bottom and often the live bait would be picked up on the
sink.
Action was wide open for all the skiffs as bent rods drew an
audience of early morning joggers on the CdM walkway. Our choice of
tackle was Daiwa light action SS1300 spinning reels spooled with
6-pound Stren mono and matched to a 6 1/2-inch rod. This combi-
nation proved very adaptable until this writer hooked into a huge bat
ray. We had been catching lots of small halibut and bass, but when I
set the hook into this bigger fish it nearly took all the line off
the reel before I could get the motor started and begin backing down
on the monster as it headed out to sea. Dodging other skiffs,
anchors, a parade of private boats and the Catalina Flyer as it
headed to Avalon, the big ray finally won the 20 minute battle when
the small hook pulled just as Toni was about to try and net it.
Having caught lots of short halibut, bass and mackerel, the scoop
of bait was exhausted so we turned to fishing plastics along docks
and off bulk heads while heading back to the Pavilion catching more
small bass along the way back. Anglers were still catching halibut
and bass off the main dock at the Pavilion as we tied up the skiff.
Turin asked about how the morning’s fishing went and my report was
petty good for just a few hours on the bay. We caught well over 35
fish and about the only kind of fish we didn’t catch was a white
seabass, croaker or shark, carefully releasing everything we caught
back into the bay to grow up a little.
Rental skiffs are available all day for $68 and $47 for a 1/2 day
including live bait. A California fishing license is required for all
anglers over the age of 16 and the Department of Fish and Game does
patrol the bay on a regular schedule. Each boat can handle four
adults and two children and life preservers are part of the package.
The Pavilion Rental Skiffs and fishing dock are open seven days a
week from 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. The old skiffs have served many fishermen
over the years and Turin, who has spent 28 years on the docks, says
that a new fleet of boats will be ready for service by the first week
of August.
The latest word on albacore is that they have moved off to the
west due to a sudden rise in water temperature. Sport boats from
Davey’s Locker and Newport Landing Sportfishing are running outside
of San Clemente Island to find the albies, but fishing has been
spotty. Hopefully the big schools of longfins, currently south of San
Diego, will move up the coast and be within easy reach of the Newport
based fleet by early next week.
There have been no reports of yellowtail being caught under
floating kelp in the channel even though there are some pockets of
73-degree water, but there have been tails hooked at both Catalina
and San Clemente. The white seabass bite that erupted this past
weekend has dropped way off. The full moon did it’s magic, producing
some of the best catches of the big croaker this season.
Water along the beach has warmed up into the low seventies and
anglers fishing from the surf and both the Newport and Balboa piers
report pretty good fishing for a mix of small fish and shovel nose
sharks on cut bait.
Youth Outdoor Safari Day held Saturday
* Southern California youngsters really enjoyed a wonderful
outdoor experience when attending the fifth annual Youth Outdoors
Safari Day at Raahauge’s Sporting Clays Complex in Norco Saturday.
The event was free to all kids 17 years of age and younger when
accompanied by an adult. The day was filled with outdoor activities
covering fishing, shooting sports, conservation, wildlife tours, rock
climbing, kayaking and concludes with a giant kids raffle. The day
was co-sponsored by the Orange and Los Angeles chapters of Safari
Club International and through donations of many sponsors and
volunteers a free lunch was served to every youngster that came to
this very popular Southland event.
Highlighting this year’s Youth Outdoor Safari Day were appearances
by Olympic Gold Medal winner Kim Rhode, trick shooting by John
Claugherty and outdoor TV host Dez Young, who had his young dog Dash
show off his hunting skills for the kids.
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