First, the pictures. These were taken on Saturday and sent in by Mike C. "Fished the back of the bay by Inverness. We got the two nice leopards and the baby sand shark. Had two other nice fish hook up that ultimately bit through our line. We had many strikes but it was a devil of a time getting a proper hook up."
Second, today's report. I didn't see any salmon brought in but it sounds like there were a few caught, just not by boats from here. There were a few picked up in scattered locations in 50 to 90 feet of water and it sounds like a pretty fair bite for a few commercial boats out in 200' of water in front of Elephant. "Pretty fair bite" being relative to the fact that they haven't been catching very many at all. The halibut bite was better but not more consistent. Catches ranged from 0 to 5 fish, with the highest and lowest numbers coming from the area around Hog.
Just wait for the big school to move down from gualala gonna b WFO I hope
ReplyDeleteWhat's the best way to clean and cook the shark
ReplyDeleteWhat's the best way to clean and cook the shark
ReplyDeleteAfter years of sturgeon fishing I've learned the best recipe for shark is to soak it in milk, then tequila and lime. Then put piece of shark on a piece of sheet rock and BBQ. Once done toss the shark and eat the sheet rock. Haha
ReplyDeleteAfter years of sturgeon fishing I've learned the best recipe for shark is to soak it in milk, then tequila and lime. Then put piece of shark on a piece of sheet rock and BBQ. Once done toss the shark and eat the sheet rock. Haha
ReplyDeleteTenderize with an mallet. Now eat the sheetrock
ReplyDeleteSharks not a target species once caught a 50 inch Leppard at salt pt. Shocked the shit out of me was after Cabazon off the rocks. Any way gutted that bitch right there well the sea gulls loved eating the dozens of baby sharks but it was ass.
ReplyDelete