Offshore happenings spark Labor Day
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JIM NIEMIEC
Labor Day weekenders should be able to find plenty to do outdoors.
Fair weather is predicted for the beaches and fishing might be the
perfect type of recreation to end the summer season. Marlin showed
again between Catalina and San Clemente islands after becoming nearly
a no-show during the full moon. Yellowtail and Dorado are being found
under some of the floating kelp patties in the channel, white seabass
and calicos are biting at San Clemente Island and off shore waters
are still producing some pretty good scores on albacore and tuna. The
water along the coast is warm and full of small bonito and mackerel
while the surf line has been pretty consistent for barred perch,
yellowfin croaker and small leopard sharks.
This writer teamed up with Drew Lawler of Bay Shores and local
angler Bill DePriest aboard Lawler’s deluxe sportfisher, Escape, to
compete in the Church Mouse Marlin tournament earlier in the week.
Even though we didn’t get a spikebill to jump on any of the five
marlin lures trolled off the stern of the 38-footer, we covered a lot
of good looking water that should produce pretty fair marlin fishing
over the holiday period. There were at least a dozen fish released
during the tournament and that’s not a very high number for the 89
boats that competed, but the event did raise money for the kids of
Catalina Island.
The EAL sonic lure, manufactured by Sevenstrand, has been the
hottest marlin lure of the season. The new lure gives off actual
acoustical sounds that are emitted by frightened baitfish and
Sevenstrand engineers incorporated this same resonance into a
computer chip and designed a big fishing lure around the unit.
According to the specs the lure attracts billfish from meters around
when trolled off the stern of a sportfisher. The cost of an EAL No. 7
is $249, a smaller version lists for $199 and batteries, lasting for
six to eight hours, sell for $10. Many local anglers are hearing
about the lure, so J.D. at J.D.’s Big Game Tackle on Balboa Island is
renting EAL lures by the day. For more details on this lure or for an
update on fishing conditions in the channel call J.D. at (949)
723-0883.
Offshore fishing has been good for big albacore and schooled up
yellowfin tuna between the 43 Fathom spot and Airplane Bank for boats
making runs to the outer waters. There is still a ton of fish holding
off Baja Norte, which only means good things for Newport’s fleet of
overnight sportfishers. The Bongos II, captained by Skip Driggers,
has been mixing trips to off shore high spots and the islands with
equal success returning daily to the dock at Davey’s Locker with
albacore, tuna, Dorado, big yellowtail, white seabass and lots of
legal calico bass.
Captain Drew Cosgrove of Newport Beach headed the Sweet Thing, a
35-foot Cabo, out to the warm waters off Clemente and scored on
yellowtail for his anglers. On board was Rob Meinhardt of Newport who
reeled in a 25-pound yellowtail, released a number of smaller
forktails and then topped off the day by landing a 23-pound halibut
that bit a sardine as the Cabo drifted just off Salt Creek.
Surf fishing should continue to be good all along the Newport
coast. The water temperature is holding at 68 degrees, there are
plenty of sand crabs for bait and fish are biting best just before
low tide. Strong currents during the full moon moved the bait along
the beach a little too fast last weekend, but these conditions should
back off and there are some pretty good tides coming up to fish early
in the morning and late in the evening according to the tide book.
Fishing off the East Cape has been wide open for sailfish,
yellowfin tuna, Dorado and blue marlin. The water temperature is
currently holding at 87 degrees and there is plenty of bait to hold
billfish and exotics along the resort beach well into the hurricane
season. My wife, Toni, and I were invited down by Esaul Valdez to
spend a few days fishing out of Hotel Buena Vista Beach Resort. The
timing couldn’t have been better as a wide-open bite on Pacific
sailfish exploded just a few miles off the white beach. All the fast
sportfishers in the Buena Vista fleet returned to the dock with
“catch and release” flags waving in the warm breeze. Even though blue
marlin fishing was on the slow side, there were still good numbers of
striped marlin in the area and big schools of yellowfin and Dorado
were fished within a 20-minute run from the resort. For information
on heading down to the East Cape to tap these prolific fishing
grounds contact the resort at (800) 752-3555.
California Coastal Clean Up Day is slated for Sept. 18 and
everyone should plan to spend some time along the beaches to help
pick up trash and other debris that has drifted ashore. Conservation
groups, businesses and concerned individuals are supporting this
effort. People will be gathering along Pacific beaches early Saturday
morning but official clean up hours are from 9 a.m. until noon. To
find out more about how you can participate in this worthwhile effort
to enhance our beautiful beaches log on to their website at
www.coastforyou.org.
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