I post reports as they come in, so here I am, three weeks later, finally writing something. Fishing report? Not so much. Mostly a place keeper. But, while I'm here, a few things...
Friends of the report have been doing okay, close to limits of Dungeness, in the outer bay in relatively shallow water. They've been servicing their traps at four to eight day intervals and there's been no "jumbos!" claim, just dinner. The commercial guys are getting about $8 a pound at the dock which is an economic indicator of two things: Market interest and availability of product. Low catch rates plus high demand equals a situation approaching (but not even close) to the chicken egg situation (ducks, be afraid). My guess is that the guys going home with crab are taking many that aren't commercial legal. That's fine, but we all dream for jumbos. It's the same work to clean a jumbo crab and a barely sport legal crab, and it's not no work; there's some effort. Is it worth it? Heck yes, but at the end of the job we all would like a larger pile of crab meat. So the big pile isn't happening, but crab is there for the catching and eating. Just bring something else to eat, too.
This year's salmon season looks like it's going to be a lot like last year's salmon season. The seasonn won't be determined until mid-April, but forecasts will be released on Thursday. Returns to the rivers have already been shared by the PFMC and they aren't awesome. In the Sac system, as expected, returns to the one river it counts (the Sac proper) were appalling yet again. Everybody else killed it. Trucked fish lived and river fish died. I'm sure that there's no significance to that similarly appalling correlation. How could just the difference of going down a river make that much of a change? Maybe it's the lack of water. And that's water that ain't coming back. You can fight it, but you ain't gonna win unless you're Elon. Money talks, and if you're reading this, well, might as well shut up. Adults are talking about water. We need to get more trucked, factory fish, fin clipped, because the fight for water in the river has been lost. No matter what your politics are, when Gavin and Trump can agree on a thing like draining the river, well, that thing is a done deal. Done. Stick a fork in it. Let's figure out another way to go fishing, because natural born fish are goners. Also, when guys that are so different can agree on something so contentious, how different are they?
Since halibut seems likely to be the main menu item yet again this season, I guess we should speak about them for a moment. The halibut bite in Tomales Bay seems to follow San Francisco Bay's bite by six to eight weeks. So far, it sounds like the bite hasn't started in SFB, so ... maybe later. For those new to the early season fishery, the farther back the better when it starts, as the bay warms from back to front, and warmth is the key for biters. Halibut can be in super cold water but they tend to bite when it's warm and they're happy, so... Simple math: Fish when they bite and you'll catch more. They're coming. Just not yet. But just know that I'm feening for a fish hard, so when it happens I and then you will know.
1 comment:
It's great to see a new fishing report even if it's not on the super bright side. Your "takes" and thoughts on some "whys" are valuable, thoughtful contributions.
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