Bass, barracuda biting
JIM NIEMIEC
Conditions along the coast and the off-shore islands continue to
improve and fishing should really kick into high gear by this
Memorial Day weekend. The water temp at Catalina Island jumped up to
67 degrees over the weekend but fishing was slow for white sea bass
and yellowtail, perhaps due to strong winds and the currents that
were not moving in the right direction. The Sea Hawk, operating over
night trips out of Davey’s Locker, is seeing lots of activity at San
Clemente Island on schooled up yellowtail, but the bite has yet to
really get going.
Catalina Island has been steady for bonito in the 2- to 8-pound
class, with a mix of fish along the front side of the island. The
Freelance has been heading over to the island daily on three-quarter
day trips and returning dockside with a mix of calicos, bonito, a few
barracuda and assorted rockfish. The six-pack charter boat Bongos II
has been having fair results on calicos to go along with an
occasional sea bass and yellow.
It has been tough fishing along the coast with only a few good
days being posted last week by Newport two sportfishing landings. The
water jumped a couple of degrees earlier this week and this might be
the key factor that attracts big schools of barracuda that
traditionally show up off Newport by mid-May. Bait conditions out of
Newport harbor are good with a mix of anchovies and sardines, but the
lack of squid at Catalina has skippers a little concerned about what
is going to develop for this island fishery in June.
Strong winds have hampered surf anglers along with rip tides and
smashing breakers. The peak of the corbina season is just a couple of
weeks away and with sand crabs showing up in good numbers surf
fishermen could be looking ahead to some great “catch and release”
fishing for these kings of the surf. The surf between the Balboa and
Newport piers has been kicking out some yellowfin croaker, barred
perch, a few small halibut and some sharks for anglers fishing the
incoming and outgoing tides.
Albacore have not showed up again since their first movement into
the beach earlier in the month. Multi-day boats running out of San
Diego report longfin action on fish in the 20-pound class some 200
miles below Point Loma. There were a couple of jig fish caught on
private boats within 85 miles of San Diego but no concentrations were
reported.
It’s looking more like this might be a traditional season for
albacore along the coast with the bulk of the fish showing up in late
June. Water conditions are good on the outside and when the seas
settle down a little and the strong westerly back off, sport anglers
could see dock counts on albies jump considerably.
The long-range fleet is having a very good season on huge
yellowfin tuna fishing at Hurricane Bank, located some 580 miles due
west of Cabo San Lucas. This writer made the trip down to the bank
aboard the deluxe sportfisher Excel and posted a catch of a giant
tuna weighing in at 224 pounds. Also on board was Dave Gould of
Huntington Beach who caught his biggest tuna ever that tipped the
scale at 170 pounds to go along with a couple other tuna in the
150-pound class. The Excel stayed on the fishing grounds for 9 days
and filled all the slammers with nearly 28 tons of fish caught by the
23 anglers on board. If you are wondering what to do with half-ton of
frozen tuna and wahoo Fisherman’s Canning, based out of Fisherman’s
Landing, and Moreno’s Sportsmen’s Seafood will exchange bulk fish for
cans, you can opt to purchase gourmet custom canned yellowfin and
wahoo with jalapenos and olive oil or have your catch filleted,
packaged and shipped. For information on long-range fishing phone the
Excel office at (619) 223-7493.
Looking at the fresh water lake angling scene there is a mixed
catch coming out of Irvine Lake with trout catching mixing well with
warmer water species. Big bluegill were in a biting mood last weekend
off Trout Island, while most of the trout caught were taken in deeper
water. Bass have been active on top water plugs fished early in the
morning and channel catfish have moved into the shallows where
mackerel and night crawlers are producing limits. Bob Matthews of
Costa Mesa released a 5-pound bass to top off a good morning’s trip
to Irvine Lake last week and then picked up a limit of feisty rainbow
trout trolling along the west shore after the sun hit the water.
Action at the Santa Ana River Lakes has been good for catfish but
action on trout has slowed due to warm weather. Nighttime trips to
these lakes have been productive for channel cats weighing in the
2.5- to 7-pound class.
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