Albacore within range
Jim Niemiec
Schools of albacore moved into the outer channel waters this week and
provided pretty good early season action for party boats and private
yachts running out of Newport Harbor. Captain Norris Tapp at Davey’s
Locker in Balboa reported that the overnight sportfisher “Tail Chaser”
fished an area just southwest of San Clemente Island returning to the
dock with a dozen albies. The fish were within 55 miles of the coast in
an area known as the 181 spot. This area showed lots of bait, good color
and the right water temperature to hold fish for awhile.
Todd Garrett of Newport Beach was one of the lucky anglers to be on
board the “Tail Chaser,” captained by Bill Gorham of Newport, when a jig
strike stopped the boat. With plenty of good hook bait in the live well,
Garrett cast off the stern and got bit and landed a 17-pound longfin for
top fish honors of the day.
With schools of albacore staging off Baja Norte it looks like it could
be a good long season for local anglers fishing on sport boats out of
Davey’s Locker, Newport Landing Sportfishing and Bongos Sportfishing
Charters. The “Pacific Star” will be scheduling overnight trips with
limited loads out of the Pavilion while Newport Landing has already
started booking trips on the “Ultra,” a 50-footer that can accommodate
fish and anglers on its extended day trips to outer waters.
Both Catalina and San Clemente islands continue to produce for
anglers. Paul Chadwell of Newport Beach decked a 25-pound yellowtail
while fishing on the “Pacific Star” at San Clemente during a pretty good
pick on the yellows with squid for bait. Catalina has slowed a little for
white seabass due to fewer squid and nasty weather on the back side.
There are reports of yellowtail boiling in the chum line, but few hookups
have been reported by the sport fleet.
Locally, along the beach, barracuda are playing hide and seek. One day
big schools pop up off the oil rigs and Huntington flats producing limit
fishing on logs with the catch being made equally well on jigs and live
bait, while other days offer up limited catches. Sergio Fainzstein of
Costa Mesa fished on the 3/4-day boat “Freelance” earlier this week and
topped off his catch of big barracuda with an 8 1/2-pounder caught on a
blue and white jig cast into a school of breezing barries outside the
offshore oil rigs.
Good word on fishing is coming up from Cabo. The water temperature is
holding in the low 80s and blue water game fish have moved into calm
waters along Baja’s east coast.
Calm waters produced catches of dorado weighing to 50 pounds and a
number of striped marlin weighing up to 125 pounds that were released
while fishing on board fast sportfishers of the Amateur fleet. Lures and
live bait accounted equally for each day’s catch. Harbor area anglers
heading down to Cabo for a summertime fishing trip need to take note that
Alaska Airlines no longer allows fresh fish to be packed in ice for the
flight home.
Seems you will need to find dry ice somewhere in Cabo or at other
resorts along the East Cape, but no locations or prices were available at
the airport prior to the flight back to LAX.
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