PHOTO 10: Just to show the variety, Grant Darby didn’t quite know what this was, but everyone told him it tasted good! It’s a coveted pompano…cousin to roosterfish, jack crevalle, amberjack, permit and yellowtail. These tough fighters are holding just off the deeper ends of the sandy beaches. Grant got this off the Punta Arenas lighthouse. The next day using 17 pound test and light rigs, he and his son-in-law fought 4 sailfish (“like feeding hungry dogs!”) able to release two and donating the meat of the other two to families when they could not be revived.
PHOTO 11: We’re just not supposed to be gettting dorado of this quality this time of the year, but John Bolton, our amigo from the San Luis Obispo area holds the proof.
PHOTO 12: She is just too fun! Becky Solee from Portland never seems to stop laughing and smiling, especially when she’s fishing and evenmoreso when she pulls up a big dog-tooth like this one she got fishing with Captain Adolfo in shallow water where the big boys have moved in. Becky and her husband, Bob, also got cabrilla, snapper and big roosterfish as well.
IT FEELS LIKE SUMMERTIME AS WARM WATER PELAGIC SPECIES ROLL IN TO MIX WITH INSHORE BRUISERS!
La Paz / Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of May 3-10, 2009
I guess this week I can almost let the this week’s pictures do the talking and end it right there!
It’s really summertime fishing right now. Waters are warm and so is the air and the fishing has so much variety to offer that as one of our clients said, “When I put a bait in the water, I never know what’s going to bite! Every hour it seemed like we caught something different. Over 4 days of fishing we got over 12 different species from roosterfish to pargo.”
And that pretty much sums it up. The warmer waters have brought in the blue water species like dorado, sailfish, blue marlin and blackmarlin. Wahoo also keep popping up every few days as well. About the only blue water fish we haven’t seen is tuna, but every few days someone keeps jumping in with a story of breezing tuna that are going to fast to jump on. (Flash…just as we were going to report on this, we did get some tuna off Cerralvo Island…more to come!)
However, the cooler waters are still around as well so, as you can see we’re still getting these HUGE pargo (dog tooth, pargo liso and barred pargo). We’re also still getting good numbers of sierra along the beaches, pompano, giant jack crevalle and the roosterfish…heck…20-80 pound fish!
You can still have a bad day…don’t get me wrong…it’s still fishing, but if you spend a few days with us here, it would be difficult NOT to get fish. It’s like standing in a rainstorm…you gotta figure you’ll get rained on. It’s like that with fishing right now. You’re gonna get bit if you have a rod with bait in the water. Really, the ONLY time someone seems to have a slow day is when they make a bad choice.
For instance, maybe the wahoo go off at South Island so the next day EVERYONE charges out there and the wahoo get lock jaw so a bunch of boats have low counts. It looks like a bad day. But, the boats who say…went after roosterfish all come back raving about wide-open bite on the beach! Since we mostly release roosters, again, the fish counts look low. So, you just have to read between the lines.
Fishing out’ve Muertos/Las Arenas provides the most variety. Big and small roosterfish, dorado, sailfish, marlin, sierra, pargo, snapper, amberjack and cabrilla are on the chew. If you fish with our La Paz fleet the waters are still on the cooler side so there are more yellowtail between 10 and 40 pounds, pargo and also large roosterfish in the 20-50 pound class.
It’s sure not a bad time to be down here!
That’s our story!
Jonathan and Jill
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