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Archive for January, 2010

PHOTO 1: Unlike so many places right now, it’s not freezing/ snowing/ raining in La Paz! Temperatures this past week ran into the high 70’s and even low 80’s. It’s more like spring-conditions rather than winter! This sunset photo was taken from town looking across the Bay to the Mogote Peninsula.

PHOTO 2: It’s not as serious as I look, but at the recent series of Sportsmen’s Shows, I was chosen to participate with a panel of “experts” to answer questions about fishing in Baja. I guess I had folks fooled as I tried to live up to the billing but I’m flanked by two great pros…on the left, you can barely see John Donovan, owner of Redrum Sportfishing in Cabo San Lucas and to the right is Felipe Valez from the famous Valdez family that has run the Spa Buenavista / Buenavista Beach Resort for so many years. Felipe is on the microphone.
Tailhunter’s next stop on the fishing/hunting outdoor trade show circuit will be Puyallup, Washington south of Seattle. The show starts Wednesday and goes to Sunday.

PHOTO 3: A school-sized roosterfish off Muertos Bay is pulled near the boat before it gets released. The fish in the 5-15 pound class are mixing it up on the shallows right now along with sierra and jack crevalle. Great light tackle and flyfishing opportunities!
MIXED SPECIES AVAILABLE FOR SURPRISINGLY GOOD WINTER FISHING
La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of January 17-24, 2009

Not many fishermen right now. Weather has been great. High 70’s in the day and relatively calm for this time of year as far as the wind is concerned.
Still lots of sierra inshore even in the bay but pretty much anywhere there’s a shallow place with a nice drop off, slow trolling the area with some live bait or a shiny lure produces strikes. We had a few roosters here and there and there could be more, but no one was really targeting them this week. It’s hard to get a good gauge of the fishing when there aren’t that many folks on the water.
For all we know offshore, there could be monster tuna or giant marlin prowling…that’s not likely in January, but who knows? Everyone we had this week wanted to check out the inshore fishing and that’s always good right now. As well as the sierra, cabrilla and snapper were also caught and a few nice pargo got broken off in the rocks.

NEXT STOP WASHINGTON

For any of you who came to see us this past week at the Sacramento CA International Sportsmans Expo at the California State Fairgrounds, it was great to see you. The show was incredible. I think most would say it was one of the best and busiests shows in recent years! It as off-the-charts and we were talking and handing out brochures from our booth as fast as folks could ask for them! We almost ran out.
By the time you’re reading this, we’ll either be on the road or set up in our booth in Puyallup, Washington which is just south of Seattle. The show starts Wednesday and goes to Sunday. Hope to see you this week!
By the way, you can follow all of our reports and travels on Facebook now as well as the Tailhunter Bar. Check it out.

That’s our story!

Joanthan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International
Website: http://www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863
.

Tailhunter Weekly Fishing Report:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm

Tailhunter YouTube Videos:
http://www.youtube.com/user/pangapirate

“When your life finally flashes before your eyes, you will have only moments to regret all the things in life you never had the courage to try.”

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PHOTO 1: Bay area resident Kwame Satterfield shows off the type of wahoo beasts that are still prowling south fo Cerralvo Island. Slow trolling dark crank baits like Rapalas and Yo-Zuris are
the ticket.

PHOTO 2: No, this isn’t Baja, but Tailhunter has been travelling the western U.S. on it’s 2010 trade show tour. We drove to the ISE show in Denver and encountered temperatures as low as 20 below zero. Driving from Denver to the ISE show this past week in San Mateo, near San Francisco, we hit snow and rain coming over the Donner Pass in the Sierras from Reno, Nevada. Tihs week we drive to the California State Fairgrounds for the Sacramento ISE show from Thursday to Sunday. We’re expecting…MORE RAIN! Anyway, come by the booth if you’re in the area and get a new brochure and DVD and book your La Paz fishing trip for 2010!

PHOTO 3: I just had to post up this photos from Rawlins, Wyoming where we stopped for gas on our way from Denver to San Mateo. Cheapest gas so far on the tour. Note the snow. The subzero weather followed us. It was five below zero that morning.

STEADY FISHING AND GOOD CONDITIONS THIS PAST WEEK OF A NICE VARIETY OF FISH!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of January 10-17, 2010

Not many anglers out right now but conditions all week were good although it’s certainly cooler with air temperatures in the mid-70’s and at night, we think it’s chilly in the upper 40’s. I guess compared to the rest of the country, we’re in a “hot zone!”

Most of our anglers this week wanted to fish inshore and did well on cabrilla up to 5 pounds although there were many “shorts” in the 1-2 pound range that were mostly released. Some pargo were hooked that might have gone 10-15 pounds, but, like most tangles with these toothy guys, the fish went straight to the rocks and most were “unintentionally” released when lines broke and frayed. Still, lots of fun. The sierra, as usual took up the slack and limits of these fish for anglers fishing both Las Arenas and La Paz were not uncommon. In fact, you could stay in La Paz Bay all day and hook sierra or catch a mess and be back by breakfast at your hotel! A few roosters and jacks were also hooked. Largest rooster went about 20 pounds. I don’t know if these fish are the tail-end of last season that never really ended or the beginning of THIS season which is an early start, but no one is complaining!

It’s surprising that at this time of the year, we’re still seeing pelgagic blue water species in our area. We’re still getting the occasional dorado, wahoo..and yes…even marlin. The fish aren’t far offshore either. We try not to build up anyone’s expectations when they come down this time of the year since it’s winter and these species aren’t common at this time of the year. However, when our anglers go out expecting to catch some seabass or sierra and come back with half the boat box stuffed with dorado or they tell me they hooked a wahoo or tuna…that’s bonus and frosting on the cake! I just have to think that there’s still some fingers of warm water in the area. Certainly, the fact that there’s good stocks of sardines all over doesn’t hurt!

TAILHUNTER ROLLS INTO SACRAMENTO THIS WEEK

At the time you’re reading this, we’ll have torn down our booth at the San Mateo Expo Center and will be rolling towards Sacramento. We’ll be at the California State Fairgrounds for the International Sportsmens Expo that starts Thursday and goes to Sunday. Hope to see you!

That’s our story!
Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International
Website: http://www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863
.

Tailhunter Weekly Fishing Report:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm

Tailhunter YouTube Videos:
http://www.youtube.com/user/pangapirate

“When your life finally flashes before your eyes, you will have only moments to regret all the things in life you never had the courage to try.”

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PHOTO: The view down the aisle and some of the vendors earlier in January at the Colorado Convention Center for the International Sportmens Exposition

THOSE THE WOLVES PULLED DOWN

Originally Published the Week of January 19, 2010 in Western Outdoor News

At the time you’re reading this, we’ll probably be in Sacramento at the California State Fairgrounds in our booth talking fishing with everyone at the International Sportsmens Expo. Great to see so many folks. So far, we’ve been in Denver and also San Mateo just outside of San Francisco.

On a sad note, you can tell it’s been a tough year for alot of outfitters, guides, charter operators and vendors. So many booths are just gone. So many friends who run operations from Mexico to Alaska and Canada to South Africa either canceled or we hear are out of business. Poof. Good friends that the wolves pulled down. Like the Garth Brooks song. Like so many others in this economy.

I hadn’t expected that. Normally, when we hit the road to visit all of these fishing and hunting shows we get to visit our own clients and hopefully sign up new ones. However, it’s also an opportunity to visit with other vendors in the same businesses.

We don’t see each other for a year as we all run off to our various operations and points on the compass. Lodges in the Arctic. Fishing camps in the Amazon. Turkey callers in Kansas. Salmon charters on the Kenai and yes, other Baja operators as well.

Instead, it’s obvious that there are fewer of us out there on the convention room floor. That’s a shame. Not for our sakes. That’s sad enough as it is, but most of us know we’re knuckleheads for trying to stake our living on the whims of nature, weather, fish and animals. It’s not an easy life. Nothing is guaranteed. And most of the guys and gals I know in this business are as resilient, tough and resourceful as any I have ever met.

That’s why they do what they do. They take people fishing in big waters; tramp through the woods leading pack animals with rifles on their shoulders; lead white-water survival camps in the Himalayas or scuba dive with sharks in Baja. They cut trees to build wilderness lodges; know how to use chewing gum to fix a boat engine; actually do know how to construct an igloo and rub two sticks together to make a fire!

The real tragedy is actually on the other end. Western Outdoor News Editor, Pat McDonell wrote about it several issues ago when he commented about the loss of Los Angeles Times outdoor writer, Pete Thomas and other outdoor writers who have had their jobs eliminated recently.

We’re not only losing our outdoors. We’re losing our access to the outdoors. We’re losing the writers who created and reported the visions and kept us in touch from our offices and homes. And, judging from what I see at the outdoor shows, we’re also losing the operators who put us at ground zero as well.

For so many of us who grew up in the last few decades, the outdoors and the outdoor lifestyles we found as our recreation were part of our psyche. Our dads and parents took us out because that’s what their parents did for them.

I understand the tragedy and economics and the times in which we live.

But as Pat brought up, the outdoors are an important part of who we are and, at least for many in my generation and the generations preceding, it helped formulate who we are and what we became.

I wanted to be Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett. I can still sing the theme songs to those TV shows! I wanted to get in that Range Rover with Marlin Perkins on Mutual of Omaha and make Jim get out and get chased by the charging rhino.

I wanted to be dive with Lloyd Bridges in “Sea Hunt.” I read Field and Stream and cut out pictures when I was in grade school. I did a “show and tell” in front of Sister Jane and my 3rd grade class taken from a story in Sports Afield Magazine. I read John Steinbeck’s the “Log from the Sea of Cortez” when I was in 8th grade. I used to actually save and chart the dock counts from the Los Angeles Times.

I remember my dad telling me that if I did my homework, he’d take me to the Fred Hall Show in Long Beach. I saw the booths and all the places I promised myself I would go fishing “when I grew up.”

And now kids get a daily dose of reality shows and computer-generated sludge. The outdoors are defined by the how many bad guys you shoot in a jungle video game or the “reality” of such shows where contestants “survive” bogus dangers on deserted islands and real dangers from scheming team members (with cameras watching every ugly emotion) or how frightened you can be eating a handful of bugs. What does THAT teach them?

A generation is losing it’s heroes. Roy Rogers where are you? Better yet, where are you Captain Joe? Hunter Bob? Rod the River Guide? My kids want to come out and play. They need to come out and play. The wolves are taking away our inspiration.

Jonathan Roldan is the Baja Editor of Western Outdoor News and his column appears every other week. He can be reached in La Paz at: riplipboy@tailhunter-international.com

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PHOTO 1: Still quite a few roosterfish around considering it’s so early/late in the season. It’s like they never left. In addition to the small school-sized fish like this young roosterfish, some of the larger toad fish are here as well. Larry Daniels holds this one he caught and released. Captain Victor checks over his shoulder.

PHOTO 2: Another surprise fish we’re still catching are dorado. Tim Zimmer and Captain Jorge show off the great colors of this bull. We had several days this week when our pangas fishing out’ve Las Arenas caught limits of dorado which we usually only find from about April to October.

PHOTO 3: No, this isn’t Baja. It’s the plains of Colorado where we encountered temperatures as low as 11 degrees below zero while driving from Los Angeles to Denver where we spent this past week at the Denver International Sportsmans Show at the Colorado Convention Center.

PHOTO 4: Here’s Jill in our booth at the Colorado Convention Center at the ISE Show this past week. Great to see so many of you who came by to visit. Next stop…we drive back towards to California for the International Sportsman’s Show at the San Mateo Expo Center near San Francisco from Jan. 14-17 (Thursday to Sunday) Come by the booth and say hi as well as pick up a new copy of our brochure and DVD.

SURPRISINGLY MILD CONDITIONS SPARK ANOTHER RUN OF DORADO, ROOSTERFISH and OTHER SPECIES!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of January 3-10, 2010

Been a tad chilly in La Paz, especially at night and early mornings. Temperatures in the mid-40’s at night but sunny and comfortable mid-70’s in the daytime. The best part is not much wind.

We’re having a blast catching sierra pretty much everywhere right now. Jump in a boat and put down a bait or some kind of small shiny lure and it seems that within minutes you’re hooked up. Throw more baits and soon, there’s a school or you pick up or or two more. You go again and wham, you start all over again. Before too long you’ve got limits and you’re looking to throw back as many as you can!

I’ve been recommending that our anglers either crimp or cut off treble hooks from their crank baits or other lures so that you can unhook the fish easier. It’s pretty tough to have a flipping sierra which has a very slippery slime on it plus a mouth full of snapping teeth in your hand while you try to take a treble hook out of it’s mouth. You end up spending more time unhooking the fish than catching them! A single hook works so much better…much like barracuda fishing!

In addition to the sierra, we’ve still got schools of 5-10 pound roosters roaming the rocky and sandy areas, often in the same spots as the sierra so this is light tackle and spinning rod heaven right now. The roosters are also hitting the flies as well. There are larger roosters about, but they seem more interested in taking only the larger live bait like the big 12 inch sabalo which you have to catch to use for baits. Some 30-60 pounders were hooked and lost this week and some other larger ones were seen.

Offshore, it’s amazing to still be getting dorado this late/early in the season, but yes…there’s still some dorado about. In fact, if you find the school, there’s ALOT of dorado about! These aren’t big fish, but 10-20 pounders are not uncommon. Best way to find them is to either slow troll a hoochie skirt or a strip of fresh bonito. Combining the two on a single hook is even more deadly. When you hook one fish, keep an eye out for followers and multi-hook-ups are not uncommon.

In addition to these species, inshore action, especially on light tackle has been solid for cabrilla, pargo, and snapper.

TAILHUNTER COMING TO THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA

We leave chilly Denver on Sunday January 10th and drive back to California to set up for our next fishing and hunting show. We’ll be at the San Mateo Expo Center in San Mateo, California near San Francisco for the International Sportsman’s Expo. The show opens January 14-17. Come say hi at our booth!

That’s our story!
Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

Website: http://www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863
.

Tailhunter Weekly Fishing Report:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm

Tailhunter YouTube Videos:
http://www.youtube.com/user/pangapirate

“When your life finally flashes before your eyes, you will have only moments to regret all the things in life you never had the courage to try.”

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PHOTO 1: We’re in Denver, Colorado this week for the first of our 2010 appearances at the major hunting and fishing shows on the west coast. This week were at the International Sportsmans Expo at the Denver Convention center. This is our booth from last year. Come say hi and pick up a copy of our new brochure a DVD and talk to us about fishing in La Paz this year!

FISH BITE BUT NOT MANY ANGLERS TO START THE NEW YEAR!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of Dec. 27, 2009 to Jan. 3, 2010

Sorry I don’t have any fishing photos this week for the first time all year. Either fishermen didn’t bring a camera or…one guy dropped his camera into the bait tank and another forgot lost his camera on the beach! Oh well…

A nice week of fishing with overall great, but cool conditions and lots of sun interrupted one day of drizzle! But the fish still bit. Highlights of the week were many, despite the time of year. The tuna came back solidly for our Las Arenas boats pushing out of Muertos Bay. We found fish as close as Punta Perrico and then scattered out towards the south end of Cerralvo Island with some larger fish at the north end of the island. Most of the fish were fun-sized 15-25 pounders, but some larger 30-35 pounders were taken and a few large ones lost.

As well, dorado are still in the area. School sized 10-15 pounders are not uncommon with some larger 20 pound bulls cruising along the drop offs. The most action comes off the beaches and rocky areas with literally unlimited sierra fishing. You can pop almost as many of these as you can stand within limits! Same with the roosterfish. Several dozen roosterfish in the right school are not uncommon and happily most fish are getting released.

We did have two marlin bite and fall off and three times wahoo bit guys off so there’s still alot of variety.

Air temperatures are in the mid-60’s to high 70’s with lots of sunshine!

DENVER INTERNATIONAL SPORTSMAN’S SHOW

As I write this, we are on the road driving towards Denver, Colorado for our first hunting/fishing show for 2010. In the span of two days we have gone from temperatures in La Paz in the “chilly” mid-70’s to driving through Nevada where it was 32 degrees. . . to here in Grand Junction, Colorado where it is now MINUS 5 degrees below zero! Hijole, it is cold!!! Sheesh…the wind is also blowing too. Will post up photos next week and on Facebook. Nothing but white everywhere!

We’ll be at the ISE show at the Denver Convention Center from Thursday to Sunday (January 7-10). Come see our booth and say hello and talk to us about fishing in 2010 in La Paz! Pick up a new brochure and DVD too!

Next week we drive to California to the San Mateo (San Francisco ) ISE show so put that on your calendar too!

That’s our story!
Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International
Website: http://www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863
.

Tailhunter Weekly Fishing Report:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm

Tailhunter YouTube Videos:
http://www.youtube.com/user/pangapirate

“When your life finally flashes before your eyes, you will have only moments to regret all the things in life you never had the courage to try.”

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REFLECTIONS ON A NEW YEAR

Originally Published In Western Outdoor News The Week of January 6, 2019

Having been down here now since the mid-90’s (where did the time go?) and running fishing and diving, I’m often asked what a think about the future here. More folks moving in. More fishing and boat traffic. More construction. More condos. More marinas planned, etc. etc.

As a businessman, sure, we all like the business and it’s good to have jobs for folks. However, as a Baja rat, like many of you, it’s hard not to be skeptical of the future. Heck, my outlook is downright dour sometimes.

They say you can’t fight city hall and after seeing so much waste over the years, stupid politics and greed, one has a tendency to throw their arms up in frustration. You smack your head against a brick wall and scream, “What are they thinking?”

Actually, my complaints probably sound like the same complaints you have up in the U.S. about resource and recreation management so you understand my wringing of hands.

But the advent of a new year is often reason for perspective, at least on several fronts. Maybe, just maybe, there’s some hope and some things to applaud.

On a personal level at ground zero, I gotta tell you this “catch-and-release” thing that seemed so alien several years ago seems to have caught on a bit.

Not only am I hearing more fishermen asking about it but, in some cases, demanding it. Or, in others asking to only take “some for dinner” or a small amount home.

“So much used to just sit in the freezer, why do I need so much fish?”

With each year, I see more of our clients releasing smaller fish or females as well. Wholesale slaughter of fish just for the sake of catching fish and then stacks of fish on the beach for bragging rights, doesn’t seem so important these days. Of course, I’m speaking in generalities, but there’s a glimmer that I never saw in the past.

Even more importantly, at least as far as sportfishing is concerned, more Mexican captains, especially the younger ones are more receptive to releasing fish; trying different techniques; lighter tackle and not overfishing certain areas.

It has to start with the captains. Many anglers don’t understand the delicate balance on the shoulders of a captain. His mandate is to find fish and catch fish. The “old school” mindset equated bigger tips in direct proportion to bloody carcasses in the fish box. He has to make a living. The better he does, the bigger the tips and the more trips he’ll get.

But now, captains are being judged with sometimes different standards. Numbers are important, but a captain has to know when enough is enough…from a legal perspective in respecting limits; to making sure his clients have a good time; to knowing when the clients want to release fish often communicated with difficulty because of the language differences.

It’s hard to say “oops!” once the gaff is struck. It’s hard to take back a club to the head. Dead fish don’t swim away.

In the past, even when clients didn’t want to keep all their fish, captains often lobbbied clients for the discarded catch for their own use or for sale to market. Bottom line is that there’s alot of conflict going on when a captain takes you out fishing, especially for the first time.

While many of the older captains I speak with base their decisions and daily fishing strategies on purely economic variables and knowing how much to do so that it generates the most tip money, with younger captains, I am hearing other things. It’s heartening to hear things like “environment,” “protecting the fishery,” and “responsibility.”

As one captain told me, “My family has always fished. I come from many generations of fisherman. I do not need a scientist to tell me that the ocean is not as good as it used to be. But I want my sons and their children to have the ocean. They can be fishermen if they want (He laughingly said he hoped they would go to school and get good office jobs!), but I want them to still have the ocean as I knew it. We cannot kill everything.”

That’s encouraging on so many levels. There’s hope.

Bring on the new year. Feliz ano nuevo everyone.

Jonathan Roldan is the Baja Editor of Western Outdoor News and his column appears every other week. He can be reached in La Paz at: riplipboy@tailhunter-international.com

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