Sunday, September 30, 2012
Joseph Mason caught this 24 pound salmon and 24 inch lingcod today in front of Bird Rock. Scott Mason assisted in the capture. Another boat returned with four 10 pound lingcod from "the Point Reyes area." The one boat that went for albacore started at 42 and 26 and caught six fish in twenty minutes at 45 and 31. They said the weather was unpleasant on the tuna grounds to start but improved all day.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Friday, September 28, 2012
Tuna counts today are good, "as many as we wanted." That was 18 for one boat and 25+ for another. There's word of a dorado hooked and "released." The numbers I heard were 42 and 26. Salmon on the beach, at least 5 caught between the three boats I talked to. The salmon were out in 50 to 110 feet, depending on who you spoke with and where the jellyfish were.
Cameron Vogler caught his first albacore yesterday. That was the only fish for our boat, but other boats scored well. Fish numbers I heard of ran from one (me) to close to limits. The other two boats out of the Landing had 11 and 18. Most of the fish were caught at 37 45 by 123 32 and 37 39 by 123 26 and mostly early and late with some scratch fishing midday. There was some midday action at the Gumdrop. There were a few salmon and halibut caught on Ten Mile yesterday, at least three of which were taken at the old lifesaving station. Rockfishing was a bit slow until you went further south with more schoolies showing up at Elephant.
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
The water is kind of sloppy outside today but there's talk of a tuna run tomorrow. At least,there's a couple of guys thinking about running out, probably down to 37 40 by 123 21. The nearshore fishing has been on the slow side for most of the fishermen here. A few salmon, decent rockfishing, but no halibut to speak of. I did read an article in the paper today about a new bait to try. I don't think I'm quite desperate enough to use it, but if you want to try it the link is here.
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Herman Rinkel caught limits of salmon and rockfish yesterday, the rockfish (mostly blues and blacks) and a salmon from Elephant reef and the other salmon from the Trees. Another boat, one that had caught squid three days in a row, tried for the squid at Buoy 2 but found nothing. Back to looking for them, I guess.
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Friday, September 21, 2012
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Here's Gil Mels and Ted Anderson with some more of Thursday's tuna. Yesterday's tuna mission was not as fruitful, with one boat catching five and another, returning at 10PM, with one. The weather was not good offshore
Scott Alexander of Rocklin caught this 27 pound salmon yesterday while trolling.
Chase Conley of Healdsburg speared this 36 pound halibut on the bar today. There were a few others shot and seen on the bar by the group of divers. Fishermen scored a few more halibut off of Dillon Beach today, at least two of which were caught on jigs. Finally a few halibut to report.
Friday, September 14, 2012
The two boats that went for albacore today caught "as many as we could hold." The Due Regard reported two six way hookups. The numbers were N38 48 by W123 42. Salmon fishing was OK with fish coming from the Point/Bird area, 40 to 60 feet of water near the north parking lot, and a couple at Elephant. Again, no halibut that I heard of. Rockfishing was slow at Point Reyes.
Thursday, September 13, 2012
The albacore guys caught today. I heard of 15 to 16 fish to a boat and 25 to 35 pound fish. 50 miles or so out, I didn't catch all the numbers but it sounded like 37 45 by 123 42 or so. Salmon numbers were not as good but were OK. The salmon were in the usual spots as well as a few in 30 feet off of the north parking lot on Ten Mile.
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Good weather is forecast for the next few days, so if you haven't got your fill of salmon yet, here's your opportunity. They're still biting from buoy "2" down to the Trees in 50 to 70 feet of water, mostly on the bottom but some are coming up high now. It's typical late season action with nothing going on for an hour or two, then you get a little flurry of action, then nothing again. Keeping the hooks in their mouths is also challenging. Getting a halibut to put the hooks in its mouth is even more challenging this year. It should be prime time for halibut now but nobody told the flatfish. Lots of sand sole are on the beach, so maybe they could be tiny replacements. There's a few boats running for albacore tomorrow. Report to follow.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Sunday, September 9, 2012
The Merle Lawson Memorial Salmon Derby was held yesterday in some pretty rough water. The winners were: Jake Showaker, 1st place, 24 pounds; Roger Remington, 2nd place, 24 pounds; and Rich Chapin, 3rd place, 23.5 pounds. Tied weights went to the first fish weighed in, so Jake's early finish put him on top. About 25 boats fished in unpleasant conditions at best, with some of the boats scooping waves over their bows while trolling. Hooking a fish was difficult and actually putting one in the boat without going in the drink yourself was a major challenge. Due to the skill of the competitors (and a bit of luck) nobody got hurt and quite a few fish made it into the boats. There was a raffle at the dinner afterwards with prizes donated by Diekmann's General Store, Dillon Beach Resort, Outdoor Pro Shop, Roseberry Construction, and the Lawson family. Thanks to everyone that came out, and hopefully we can do it again next year.
Friday, September 7, 2012
Paul Page caught this 22 and this 19 pound salmon today while mooching in an undisclosed location. He caught them both early, then tried for halibut for three hours without a bite. A pair of divers speared two limits of halibut on the bar and saw another 5 fish, so the flat ones may finally be showing back up.
Craig Wilson of Colorado caught this 42 pound white sea bass yesterday while salmon fishing. Lots of salmon were caught yesterday as well, mostly in the Tomales Point to the Trees area in 35 to 70 feet of water, both by trolling and mooching. Mooching may have had an edge with a few more caught. I fished Ten Mile and saw 8 salmon jump (one was 20+ pounds) and caught 4 salmon to 26 pounds. The two "hot spots" were the north parking lot (3 salmon and a halibut) and the Keyholes. Elephant and the Keyholes definitely had more bait than anywhere else on the beach.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Monday, September 3, 2012
Here's what some of those salmon looked like. These were caught Friday in the Tomales Point to the Trees area and ran 23 and 18 pounds. There was an 8 pound fish but that was one too many to hold so it didn't get in the photo. If you have fish pictures (preferably of fish caught near here) send them to lawsonslanding@gmail.com with a little info and I'll get them posted.
Sunday, September 2, 2012
Some boats did well today, a few caught nothing, but most boats had 1 or 2 salmon. The salmon came from the usual places as well as off of Elephant and Ten Mile. The depths remained the same except that some of the salmon at Elephant were at the top and the beach fish were as shallow as you'd dare. A couple of halibut from Ten Mile.
Saturday, September 1, 2012
There were some nice fish landed today but not as many fish per boat as yesterday. Jellyfish and seaweed moved in to "good spot" today making fishing a lot more complicated. The Keyholes had a few fish without the complications. Divers found a few halibut on the bar today. A boat out rockfishing the shallows near Tomales Point reported slow fishing but saw a few salmon on the surface and a pair of large great white sharks (do they come in any other size?).
No halibut that I heard about yesterday but good salmon counts. The salmon were, again, from the buoy to below the Trees and especially on the reef edges in 50 to 70 feet. If you're not catching and not losing gear then you need to get closer to the bottom. I'm not just saying that because we sell gear (well, maybe a little) but because it works. Greens, glow-in-the-dark and UV seem to be killers on the baitholders. Flashers and dodgers will work but in my opinion are too expensive to leave on the bottom. Luckily, the fish will bite without the shiny stuff.