Wednesday, April 10, 2024

 

    Finally, a fishing report! Better, a catching report. Gage says the halibut are biting! Actually, Gage says this halibut bit, but no others in a few hours of trolling way back in the bay. So the one friendly one is gone. It is still early, and based upon the bite in San Francisco Bay, our good bite is still four to six weeks away, but there's hope! Just not much hope. It bodes well for May halibut fishing, though. 
     Salmon season has officially been settled by the PFMC. The first line of the press release: "The Pacific Fishery Management Council has adopted recommendations for ocean salmon fishing along the Pacific west coast in 2024. The seasons provide recreational and commercial opportunities in northern areas of the coast but include significant reductions and closures in southern portions of the coast to achieve conservation goals for goals for both Chinook and coho salmon stocks." The "significant reductions and closures" in the case of California is just closure. It gives a bit more meaning to a single  halibut caught in the bay, as that is our future this year, it seems. And rockfish, and stripers, and bluefin, maybe, when the time is right. So maybe next year for salmon, if enough waster was allowed to flow in the rivers at the right time to allow enough smolts to make it to San Francisco Bay. So, maybe 2025? 

6 comments:

Duckin44 said...

Atta boy Gage. That ain't no nursery size fish.

Tyeebones said...

Good news is Oregon gets a full ocean season. Opens May 16.

Wiley said...

Luckydog · Apr 12, 2024 at 9:27 PM · Replies: 12
Can anybody tell me why Oregon gets a lengthy season and Ca gets none and yet they are fishing on the same stock of fish


https://brookingsfishing.com/report...or-brookings-2-fish-day-limits-may-16-aug-31/...

Copied from coastside

oldtimer said...

Healthier populations, more of them! I've spent a little time on the Oregon Coast and it seemed crab were everywhere and super available even to shore crabbers. From the shore, they mostly used a castable clam type closing trap instead of snares. Some wade into bays and used garden rakes to "rake them in". Videos are out there; "Oregon Life". The mouth of Siletz Bay is one very productive and busy spot!

Butcher said...

Wiley said...
Luckydog · Apr 12, 2024 at 9:27 PM · Replies: 12
Can anybody tell me why Oregon gets a lengthy season and Ca gets none and yet they are fishing on the same stock of fish

http://www.xerces.org/sites/default/files/inline-images/Haagen-Dazs-Drone-650.jpg

http://www.xerces.org/sites/default/files/inline-images/peter%20albright%20woolf%20farming_0.jpg

Willy Vogler said...

Gentlemen, the simple answer is that Oregon gets a full season and a good shot at what would have been our fish because of the "best available science". It may not seem good or fair or any other pleasant adjective but it is "the best available". It's like when you want a nice double IPA but all you have in the fridge is a Natty Light. The Natty ain't good, but it's the best available.