Thursday, April 16, 2026

 

     Regular viewers of this report will recognize this hand, if not this particular fish. This picture is from yesterday, about an hour before the turn of the tide. Yes, the redtails are biting. If you suspected that there may be complications, yes, most of the fish being caught from the beach are jacksmelt and walleye perch. But, clearly, there are walleyes (at least one is confirmed, photographed, and released) and I'm told there was more than one caught and less than a limit. There have been some stripers caught off of Sand Point  (Sand Nub? There ain't much point there). I tried from a boat today, thinking that I'd have more options and a better chance of success. Not so. There were a few birds diving when I got there but they quit and bailed out. An hour after I left the day beach out to the bar (the shark pit to surfers) went off with birds pounding the water over several acres for 90 minutes. Brutal. From the surf line out to to the bar there were birds happily gobbling up baitfish. I think the bait is coming in. Early. It's an early year. When I launched the water was 58º, which is scalding in April. I'm starting to think that the quotas for salmon may not be met, as hot water equals few salmon caught. My early suggestion for this season: If you're not beating your weights against the rocks or mud you'll not have to worry about cleaning salmon blood off your boat. For salmon, deeper is colder, and colder is happier, to a point. Also, structure is food when school bait can't be found. We shall see. All will be revealed, but only on the timeline reality chooses. 
    Crabbing in the bay? Really bad, or pretty good, depending on who you talk to. Strangely, the people saying it's good seem happier. Maybe they're just happy people. Maybe good things happen to people that think good things will happen for them. Or, luck. Probably, success brings smiles. But mostly inside the bay has been really hard to catch. Some are being caught, and few fishermen are doing very well, but mostly people are trying and not catching. But. A not insignificant number of the crab being caught are hollow, pretty Hollywood crab, which means that they just molted. Soon, large enough crab will be appearing in your traps or hoops, as they have made completed their change.. 

Sunday, April 12, 2026

 There's a salmon season this year! Not the one you want, but hopefully the one you need. What does that mean here? Well, not much or a lot, depending on a lot of variables. The San Francisco season, which includes Bodega and Tomales Bays, will be from June 27 to July 22, and August 1 to August 31, depending on the outcome of the 34,900 fish limit for the area. Early limits equals early closure, so be careful what you wish for. I always want to do better than the boats around me, but this year the competition is on for real. Cool. That seems like a big number but when you see how many fish were caught in a few days last year the number gets smaller. Maybe more days equals less effort? Pro. bably not  after three years of pretty much no season at all. There's a separate season in September but i fear that this year's prediction for a super-El Nino may screw up a September and October salmon season. For catching salmon, at least. Smart people are calling for a repeat of 2015. San Diego sportboats are just now catching August fish in April, namely yellowfin tuna and dorado,. Seems like the guys that are paying attention might be right. White seabass! Bluefin! Even a few very scattered yellowtail! What a year! I've never learned as much about fishing as I did in 2015, and I learned not nearly enough. I didn't know what I was seeing most of the time. Pay attention to what is going on around you. Read SoCal fishing discussion boards. We will be SoCal. Learn it. I'll give tips but I ain't gonna give up everything I learn. Why should I steal your joy from learning the same things? This year is a big opportunity. Treat it as such. 

   This poor little feller washed up on Dillon Beach today. This young California sea lion died of something probably besides a shark, but was nibbled on nonetheless. How do you know you don't like it until you've tasted it? Well, now we know. If it ain't wiggling it ain't as yummy. Or so it would seem. But those are teeth marks. So surfers, beware. We all know that Uncle Bigbite is out there, and he's been noshy lately, but this year he's been really hungry. Please don't be that guy. Or this guy in the picture. 


Saturday, April 11, 2026

     There was another striper caught off of the Sand Point yesterday, by a fly fisherman if I heard correctly. Gage tried yesterday evening and caught nothing. It is fishing, and surf fishing at that. Not much else going on here but the rain this weekend.  But elsewhere...

    So, rumors of a "super El Niño" this year are growing, although an actual ENSO positive situation remains to be seen. It is forecast but has yet to resolve. The Blob is here and is warming waters, mostly by preventing most of the onshore winds of spring. There's been some windy days this year but not nearly as many as normal. It's kinda cool. SoCal water gurus are calling for a repeat of 2015. If you are unfamiliar with the importance of this, read this report from 2015 from July through October. Lots of white seabass. And similar things are happening this year. Yesterday the Shogun long range boat out of San Diego caught yellowfin on day one of a three day trip. Today they caught a dorado. These are August fish, if you're lucky. April seems awful early for August fish. Maybe this is 2015 redux. Salmon sucked in 2015. We needed this last year. Well, like someone once said, you can't always get what you want, but sometimes you get what you need.

Friday, April 10, 2026

 


Gage and I tried for halibut yesterday, trolling 40 to 60 feet of water on McClure's and the Keyholes for four hours for no bites. We left and went rockfishing off of Ten Mile. First stop we found schooling fish and limited on nice canaries within five minutes. Vermilion limits took another ten minutes. Then we moved around a bunch looking for schoolies as we are picky and school fish clean easier than the spiky devils. Another hour and we quit with seven black rockfish and three lingcod to join the orange fish and returned more than we kept, mostly browns, coppers, canaries and vermilion. We stopped by the sand point (what's left of it) and tried for stripers for no bites but heard later that one was caught from shore there just before we arrived.  

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

 


I didn't check my email before I posted last night and missed this report from Danielle Magenheimer: "21 inch Striper caught by swim bait over the weekend ".  Finally a surf striper. That's two fish pictures in two weeks. It's busting wide open! Or something.  Good work on the fish. There aren't many of them, yet.