On Course
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Jim Niemiec
Salt water fishing remains very good for anglers heading out to
channel waters in quest of big albacore, huge bluefin tuna, yellowtail
and marlin.
The fishing scene continued to improve all week with the better
weather conditions that allowed sport boats and private yachts to fish
high spots around San Clemente Island and other outer waters.
The weather could change to roughen up the seas for a few days, but
the long range outlook for the remainder of the month looks like the seas
will be cooperative and those rough water westerlies will back off.
Anglers on board the all-day boat “Thunderbird” enjoyed great albacore
fishing earlier in the week. Steve Park landed a 39-pound longfin to top
all anglers on board with the boat returning to the dock with nearly 100
albies.
The charter boat “Rising Star” got into a couple of hot stops on the
tuna grounds and that’s the boat that Paul Russell of Costa Mesa and John
DeWitt of Huntington Beach were fishing on when they both caught several
longfins weighing in the 24- to 30-pound class.
According to spokesman Eric Wiethorn at Davey’s Locker, fishing has
been excellent all week long. “The all-day boats have found huge schools
of albies, while the “Freelance has been racking up good scores on calico
bass at Catalina Island,” Wiethorn said.
Skipper Norris Tapp called in with full limits of calico bass on
Sunday for all anglers on board in what was described as one of the best
calico bass bites at the island in years with a full boil off the stern
as the bass hit every bait that hit the water.
The deluxe six pack charter boat “Bongos III” has been fishing
albacore, tuna and yellowtail daily.
In action earlier this week, Captain Shariff Mohammed of Costa Mesa
headed the fast sportfisher out past the 43 Fathom spot and nearly filled
the boat with fish.
Newport Beach angler Dick Swan was on board the boat and caught
hundreds of pounds of big albacore and many quality yellowtail weighing
in the 15 to 20-pound class taken from under a floating kelp paddy.
Bongos Sportfishing, based next to the Crab Cooker in Newport has
limited openings on charter trips for those looking to reach the fishing
grounds in a hurry and be back to the dock by 5 p.m.
There is great albacore and bluefin tuna fishing available for anglers
booking multi-day trips.
The deluxe, long-range sportfisher, “Searcher,” operating out of
Fisherman’s Landing in San Diego has been returning to the dock with
slammers full of tuna and longfins.
Captain Art Taylor is very optimistic about the remainder of the
season with plenty of fish stacked up in huge schools which are currently
holding off Baja Norte.
These fish should migrate through Newport’s off-shore waters right
after the full moon phase is complete.
With Harbor area resident George Konami of Irvine on a three-day trip
on the “Searcher” last week, it produced a five-hour stop on bluefin
tuna, all weighing in the 40- to 60-pound class.
It was the kind of fishing that only can be enjoyed when you are on a
boat and have time to fish a sundowner.
Finally, the water has warmed up to get striped marlin into a feeding
mood. There were nearly a dozen spikebills landed since the bite started
last Saturday.
According to Dean Plant over at Angler’s Center in Newport Beach,
marlin are stacked up pretty good between the 277 Spot and the east end
of San Clemente Island.
Big-game anglers can expect to see a movement of marlin on to the 14
Mile Bank and off Avalon before Labor Day.
Local anglers are looking at a fair season that was kicked off last
week when Larry Kennison of Balboa Island, fishing aboard his sportfisher
“Desperate Otter,” weighed in a 123-pound marlin at the Avalon Tuna Club
for the first fish of the season caught in channel waters.
There is a great white shark watch going on in the channel.
Seems that a spotter plane (used by commercial sword fisherman to
locate fish from the air) has spotted big groups of white sharks circling
high spots in the channel.
There have even been a few of the giant sharks showing up off the
beaches between Laguna and Oceanside.
Stay tuned for more information on the shark picture as it develops
during the next couple of weeks.
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