Albacore, bluefin tuna biting
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JIM NIEMIEC
Albacore and bluefin tuna showed in the dock counts over the weekend
for a few sport boats and private yachts heading to off shore waters
out of San Diego. The season kicked off late last week as calm seas
allowed boats to venture out some 80 miles to the fishing grounds but
the winds picked up and shut off what had been a pretty decent early
bite on albies in the 15- to 18-pound class and a few toad bluefin
weighing to 40 pounds.
According to the latest fishing reports called in by Captain Buzz
Brizendine, owner/operator of the sportfisher Prowler, boats were
fishing an area 65 to 85 miles on a 175-degree course out of Point
Loma. Some of the boats posted some double digit scores on quality
longfins along with a few small yellowtail. Water conditions are
fishable with some slop, good color and water temps ranging in the 60
to 62.5 degree range.
As to the future of the pelagic tuna bite getting better or even
moving up the coast to reachable fishing waters for fast sport boats
running out of Newport, it’s all going to be weather related. If the
winds continue to blow, and they are predicted for outer waters this
weekend, then it will make it tough on boats to spot puddlers and
breezing schools of tuna. Windy conditions also make it rough to
swing on meter marks and keep trolling feathers in the water.
No one is making the call on whether these albacore, bluefin and
skipjack are hold over fish from last season, just a few small
schools that moved up off Baja Norte or perhaps an early migration of
fish that has moved into coastal waters from the west. Most veteran
captains are holding off making a prediction for this early in the
year as they wait to see what happens to this off shore fishery once
the northwesterlies blow through.
The Cat Special, made a trip over to San Clemente Island this past
weekend and anglers got into a very good showing of large yellowtail.
Captain Kenny Wager of Balboa, keyed in on diving birds over big
schools of breezing yellows and with a tank full of live squid it
didn’t take too long before rods were bent over with multiple
hookups. According Wager the hookups were equally split with fish
taken on squid and iron cast for a surface bite and on the yo-yo.
Yellows weighing in the 25- to 36-pound class were hooked and many
lost when bigger fish broke lines and spooled anglers who were not
rigged properly. Local anglers on board the deluxe over night
sportfisher who sacked big yellows included: Chris Climer from Costa
Mesa who decked his first ever yellowtail that scaled 26 pounds and
local area angler Rick Grande with a 25.5-pound tail. In other action
around the island when the yellow bite died down saw some deep water
rockfish action in 30 to 40 fathoms of water. Vince Cornett of Costa
Mesa sacked a 10 pound sheepshead and Steve Chumly of Huntington
Beach brought a legal halibut to gaff as the Cat Special headed back
to Newport.
Rock cod fishing continues good for the half and three quarter day
boats making daily trips to coastal reefs and high spots from both
Davey’s Locker and Newport Landing Sportfishing. Limits of rockfish
and whitefish are making up the bulk of the catch, but gunny sacks
are also being filled with tasty sculpin, red snapper, sheepshead and
ling cod.
The surface bite has been slow along the coast and at Catalina
Island with only a pick bite on calico bass and very few white
seabass being caught by anglers aboard sport boats fishing the
backside of the island. Hopefully, it’s only a matter of time and
little warmer water that will trigger the long awaited croaker bite
at Catalina.
Newport bay has cleared up from its algae problems and the water
is clean. Reports from anglers renting skiffs at the Balboa Pavilion
and float tubers are that there is a pretty good bite on spotted bay
bass around docks and moorings and that small (sub-legal) halibut are
stacking up inside the jetties. Small anchovies are the bait of
choice for halibut while fishermen casting soft plastics around
underwater structures are getting lots of attention from aggressive
spotties.
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