(TURN UP YOUR VOLUME FOR THE FULL EFFECT!)
BEST of TIMES & WORST of TIMES
Originally Published the Week of Sept. 10, 2019 in Western Outdoor Publications
It’s 5:30 a.m. here in La Paz and it’s still dark outside. We just put out our first group of fishermen for the day with our sportfishing fleet.
It looks like it’s gonna be a great day. Seas are flat. Winds are calm a a brilliant quarter moon is shimmering on the water.
At this time yesterday morning, it was Armageddon.
To use another Bible reference, I think it’s the Book of Kings (I’m sure many of you know better than me) that says something about “Chariots of fire in the sky and the air being “torn asunder.’”
Well, that’s what it was like.
Woke up to a few little drops of water. No big.
Saw some lightning flashes over the hills. Heat lighting in the dark. No big.
That stuff happens all the time.
The weather forecast for the day has NOTHING on the radar.
I’ve got 40-something anxious fishermen on the beach… in the dark waiting to go fishing.
“GOOD MORNING, EVERYONE!”
…and just about then, as if in response, the heavens answered.
Suddenly, a BRILLIANT jag in the dark as if someone had popped a zillion camera flashes and I was suddenly looking at the lit up big-eyed faces of all our clients …followed by…
BOOM!!! BOOM!!! BOOM!
As if we were suddenly in a giant kettle drum.
More lightning. More deafening incoming kettle drums! It was like Thor and the Angel Gabriel decided to have a drumming contest and lightning was so close overhead the hair on your arm prickled up with static electricity.
Some bolts hit the water in the distance! YEOW!
Then, the rain came.
And came. We huddled under whatever cover we could.
I could see my captains offshore in the misty dark. The pangas continually lit by the lighting now so bright I could have read a book. I nervously radioed them to hold on.
Through the din of the rain and the artillery thunderclaps, my wife and I kept reassuring everyone that this will pass.
Man…we had our fingers crossed because most clients were in favor of heading straight back to their hotel rooms. Sheets of rain now obscured everything.
Nothing worse than telling people on vacation that their day had been canceled.
This was not looking good. Darnit…
And then…just like that. It stopped.
Was it over? We hesitantly emerged from hiding like nervous bunnies peeking from our holes. All eyes skyward. Some passing clouds clearing. A few residual drops.
They all looked at us. A pregnant moment of silence…
“We told you so (breathing a sigh of relief)! LET’S GO FISHING!
Yay!
We called the boats in. Everyone boarded. We had one of the best fishing days of the season.
My wife and I exhaled as we left the beach. Dodging a bullet will do that to you. Not getting caught in a big hopeful FIB will also do that to you.
When I assured folks it was just a passing storm, it was really just a hopeful guess!
But, as I sit here composing my column, I have the extended weather forecast out. There’s a hurricane headed our way although it’s going to bank and head to the Pacific. Maybe well get some larger waves and some gusts of wind.
Juliet, please head away from us!
However, I see in about 6 days, we’re in for some thundershowers. Fortunately, it will be in the afternoon. After everyone is back from fishing eating nachos, drinking beers and telling fishing stories.
So, I think it will be Ok. I hope it will be OK. I hate fibbing.
The big blow that passed over us was not on the radar. It was not in the forecast. It’s what the locals call a “TORITO.” A “little bull” hurricane. It comes…hits hard…and goes.
The big chubasco hurricane is the one we really worry about. In my 25 years down here, I’ve been through 8 of them. Most blow through and in a day or two, we’re back on the water.
A few like Odile in 2014 cut a chunk of devastation with 200 mph winds. We knew it was coming.
The ominous thing is that unlike other hurricanes that can be watched for days before striking, Odile gave us less than 24 hours notice. A benign chubasco suddenly and unexpectedly turned and hurled itself into Baja.
But, this is that tropical time of year. This stuff can and does happen.
It’s the BEST fishing in Baja.
Year-after-year, we are packed with fishermen because they know it’s a great time to fish!
This is when the fun species like tuna, wahoo and dorado dominate. Giant roosterfish prowl the beaches. Striped, blue, black marlin and sailfish arrive in schools.
There’s a reason that all the major tournaments…some of the largest in the world like the Bisbee’s Black & Blue and the Western Outdoor News Tuna Jackpot are held during this time.
From late summer through fall, it seems there are several major tournaments going on every single week.
They’re happening and folks come from all over the world because the fishing is so good.
But, you just never know about the weather. It’s a capricious mistress.
I have spent many years flying around the country for business and pleasure. I always passed those little machines at the airports selling travel insurance.
What’s that all about? Never mind…there’s a plane to catch. Check it out later.
That was way way back in the day.
There is no way to control the weather. But, you do have some control about how the weather or other unforeseen incidents impact your vacation.
Travel insurance is easy and economical. It should be a part of your travel planning just like an extra set of underwear. It doesn’t take much space.
Here in Mexico, it’s pretty hard to get a refund for anything. Actually, it’s like that in most parts of the world. Weather-related cancelations in the fishing industry? Weather is a part of fishing. Weather happens.
It’s like going on a hunting trip. Because you don’t shoot an elk or it snows, you don’t ask for a refund,
Ever tried to get a refund from the airlines or a hotel? Short of an actual medical emergency or actual crisis, get ready for a lot of phone calls and documents you’ll have to submit.
A bit of cheap travel insurance kicks in and you’re golden again. You won’t recover the lost day. But, at least you’ll get some re-imbursement.
Like a 2nd set of underwear. Better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it.
That’s my story!
Jonathan
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Jonathan Roldan has been writing the Baja Column in Western Outdoor News since 2004. Along with his wife and fishing buddy, Jilly, they own and run the Tailhunter International Fishing Fleet in La Paz, Baja, Mexico www.tailhunter.com.
They also run their Tailhunter Restaurant Bar on the famous La Paz malecon waterfront. If you’d like to contact him directly, his e-mail is: jonathan@tailhunter.com
Or drop by the restaurant to say hi. It’s right on the La Paz waterfront!
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Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International
Website:
www.tailhunter-international.com
Mexico Office: Tailhunter International, 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
U.S. Mailing Address: Tailhunter International, 8030 La Mesa Blvd. #178, La Mesa CA 91942
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863
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Tailhunter Weekly Fishing Report: http://fishreport.jonathanroldan.com/
Tailhunter YouTube Video Channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBLvdHL_p4-OAu3HfiVzW0g
“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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