Santa Cruz Sportfishing Fish Report for 9-3-2009
Santa Cruz Sentinel Fish Report
by Allen Bushnell
9-3-2009
(408) 497-4170
Website
Weather conditions continue to vex local anglers. Early mornings are
usually fishable, but the winds have come up strong in the
afternoons, and it is blowing hard on the offshore tuna grounds.
Another south swell rolled through over the weekend that also put
fish off the bite.
The coming weekend should provide better fishing for inshore species,
according to Mike Schell at Bayside Marine. "Things really slowed
down over the weekend with the swell. I think the rockfish and the
halibut head to deeper water when the swell comes up." Schell reports
a few scattered halibut are being caught, especially off the North
Coast pocket beaches. Thought the counts are low, the fish tend to
be of the larger variety. "I weighed in a halibut today at 40
pounds," Schell said on Thursday. The big fish was caught somewhere
between Natural Bridges and Davenport. This is the time of year for
big flatties off the North Coast. Look for flat sandy areas along
the kelp bed edges, in water from 40-70 feet deep. Live bait is
always preferable when fishing for halibut, though whole squid,
frozen anchovies or herring and even lures like swimbaits or
megabaits can fool that trophy fish.
The swell affected fishing near Capitola as well. Rockfish counts
are down from the reefs near Pleasure Point. Hopefully the numbers
will go back up as the ocean settles through the coming weekend.
There were a number of success stories from the Capitola Wharf this
week, however. A few small, but legal halibut were caught from the
wharf in the past few days, and striped bass continue to come over
the rail as anglers soak live sardines from the wharf. One bonus
this week is the large pod of bottlenose dolphins visiting our
nearshore area. The large cetaceans really put on a show of
splashing and leaping from the water as they feed on our abundant
schools of sardines.
Albacore hunters are pleased to see the warm water currents inching
closer to port. The warm water is now about 25 miles offshore. High
winds offshore are keeping most boats at the dock, but when anglers
can sneak out, they should find fish. The warm water currents are
very stable, and boats from Morro Bay up to Ft. Bragg are getting
albacore whenever conditions permit. When the current weather pattern
stabilizes, we expect to see some high scores and outstanding tuna
fishing relatively close to home.
Kudos to Ernie Nunez from Nor Cal Kayak Anglers for his North Coast
Derby win last Sunday. Nunez paddled his Ocean Kayak Scupper Pro
from Davenport Landing to the Scott's Creek area. Fishing 70 feet of
water, Nunez beat the odds and hooked a 30-inch halibut, which proved
to be the largest fish caught for the day by any of the 20 kayak
anglers participating in the Derby.
Bushnell can also be heard on The Let's Go Fishing Radio Show,
Thursdays at 7pm on KSCO Radio 1080AM. Send your photos, comments or
questions to scruzfishing@yahoo.com
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