Feeds:
Posts
Comments
Lenny Salazar from Lomita came down with his “Pez Gringo” buddies for the first time to La Paz and hit quite a variety of fish including this nice dorado and football tuna not too far from the Las Arenas beach.

TUNA and MARLIN BREAK IN WITH DORADO – MEXICO ELECTIONS – THIS COULD BE THE WEEK FOR AERO CALIFORNIA –
GREAT MIX OF FISH

Sure feels like August here! It’s hot. It’s sunny and sometimes humid too and the fishing reflects it. Fish we don’t normally see until late in the summer like big blue and black marlin have come to prowl with a number of hookups on surprised anglers who thought they were fishing light tackle for dorado only to find themselves suddenly hooked to 500 pound billfish!
The dorado have been really active for our La Paz fleet with fish scattered from El Bajo to the north end of Cerralvo to the Channel and down to Las Cruces. Sargasso weed lines have been productive and dorado in the 30-50 pound class are not uncommon. For my Las Arenas anglers, they have had more variety with not only dorado; but breezers of tuna off Punta Perrico; sailfish, marlin, roosterfish and even dog tooth (pargo perro) and mullet snapper (pargo lisa) in the rocks. Nice mix of fish!

The tuna are really a bonus. We used to have tuna frequently, but in the past few years, the bite has been pretty anemic as marine biologist tell me the fish haven’t left. They’re just way down deep and have no reason to come up because one of the big sources of food…squid are down there too.

Well, the past few weeks, the sharp rise in water temps has brought a bloom of algae resulting in a phenomenon called “red tide” where the oxygen levels become so depleted by the rise in plant life, it literally chokes off the oxygen to the larger species swimming around. It hasn’t been a problem outside in the blue water, but in the bay…whooo-weeeee…it sure gets stinky as squid, mollusk, inshore fish and other marine life wash up daily emitting a stink as they roast in the Baja sun as folks try frantically to clean it up. This is just a natural thing we get a few times a year so no big deal, but for whatever reason, as the squid have shown up with great frequency, it’s not surprising that the tuna also seem to move into shallower waters.

If you’re coming down and the tuna are still around, you want to be fishing with as light a tackle as possible. I’d suggest 20-25 pound test for these fish and a short leader of flurocarbon wouldn’t hurt either!

MEXICO ELECTIONS

July 2nd is Mexico’s national election day as President Fox only serves one 6-year term as proscribed by Mexican law. At the time of me writing this, the polls were too close to call, but locals in droves were at the polls. Be interesting to see how it comes out and what effect it will have on everything else.

AERO CALIFORNIA

Could this be the week it happens? Aero Cal has promised that right after the elections, tickets would be on sale again and flights would resume. I’m so tempted to point my finger and call…’B.S.” but I gotta try to remain optimistic. That’s my story!
Jonathan
Jonathan Roldan’s Tailhunter InternationalWebsite: www.tailhunter-international.comPhone: (626) 333-3355FAX: (626) 333-0115E-Mail: Riplipboy@aol.comU.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Dr., Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
“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.”

TAKING BETTER FISHING PHOTOS
By no means am I a trained photographer. I can’t tell you an F-stop from film speed for the most part. I’m the fishing guy. I take people fishing and diving, but I’ve been writing fishing articles for years and several hundred of my photos have been published in numerous publications so I kind of have a feel for what works and what doesn’t. I often get photos submitted to me as well for publication and there’s a few things that you can do to improve your own personal fishing or outdoor photos!
Your Camera
Cameras are so much more affordable all the time. Features that were only found on the best cameras are now commonplace. So much of the camera is now automated that if you just turn the camera to “auto” it seems to do just about all the work for you. However, use the best camera you can afford. That does not mean buying a camera with every bell and whistle known to man! Some of my inexpensive cameras have tons of features on them that I NEVER use. It’s nice to have them, but don’t confuse yourself either. Learn the basics and you’ll be fine! So many of the cameras are so good now that you can take shots that only a pro could have taken 10 years ago. By the same token, disposable cameras are nice and handy, but listen, if you use a 5 dollar camera you’ll get a 5 dollar photo!
Digital vs. Film
I take hundreds of photos a week sometimes. I make copies for clients. I send out copies to friends and numerous shots to magazines and newspapers. The cost of film and developing used to be astronomical. With digital cameras I simply use and re-use the chips over and over. I download things to my computer. I burn them to a disc. For the computer phobic, this sounds like Martian, but believe me, it’s really incredibly user friendly to have a digital camera! Depending on the size of the chip you put in the camera and the resolution, you can literally hold hundreds of photos in the camera! Also, for you high-end folks, the newer models are as good as any high-end pro or semi-professional SLR camera these days! In terms of how many mega-pixels you want in a digital camera, I’d get one that has AT LEAST 2-3 megapixel capacity. In short, the higher the megapixel rating, the better resolution you’ll get out’ve your photos. I personally use cameras with 3-5 megapixels, but that’s also because many of my photos will be submitted for publication plus I like to print out 8 x 10 photos. If all you’re going to do is put photos through the internet, even a 1-2 megapixel camera will work.. If you’re planning to print photos out, then the 2-3 megapixel is best.
If you’re sticking with film, a simple point-and-shoot model works fine. However, below you’ll find some tips on actually taking and making better shots! If your camera has the ability to use different film speeds, use film made for bright lighting conditions. The most versatile film would be 100-200 speed. If I’m shooting for fast action like a dorado jumping, 400 speed is best. However, if mostly what you’re doing is people holding fish and “still action” you’ll get good resolution with the 100-200 speed film

Actually Taking the Photos

1. Center your shot – Seems fairly obvious, but I see so many photos with heads or fish chopped off. Try to put your subject in the center of the viewfinder before pushing the shooter button.
2. Fill the viewfinder – Try to put as much of your subject into the whole photo you see in your viewfinder. It makes for a much more dramatic shot when it’s close up! If the subject is your son holding his first tuna, you don’t need to see 10 boats behind him, the islands and the beach. Put him and his fish into the viewfinder!
3. Hold the fish so that you see it’s flanks – Fish are best viewed from the sides with colors gleaming, not from the top or bottom. Also, if you plan to submit it to your favorite magazine or newspaper, wash off the blood and goop. Even if not, it still makes for a more handsome photo.
4. The fresher the fish the better the photo – A photo of a fish just out of the water is much prettier and has better colors than a fish that has been sitting in the ice chest or fish box all day.

If you ever want to chat fishing or need fishing, diving or hotel reservations give me a call at 626-333-3355, or check out the website at www.Tailhunter-International.com or e-mail me at riplipboy@aol.com.


MARLIN-SAILFISH-DORADO and EVEN TUNA GRAB SPOTLIGHT – NO BOOZE SALES – AERO CALIFORNIA – PHOTO OF THE WEEK

RODS BENT ON BILLFISH AND FINALLY SOME TUNA!

It only seems to be getting better. While you could still have the off-day, not only did the dorado continue to provide constant action for both our Las Arenas and La Paz fleets, but yellowfin (football sized) tuna finally showed up at Las Arenas off Punta Perrico just outside Muertos Bay close to shore. These were fun-sized 25 pound fish that all of a sudden showed up early in the week where guys were trying to catch a few bonito to strip bait. All of a sudden…tuna were blowing up all around out of nowhere! At first it started with about 1-2 fish per boat then by mid-week we had about 5-6 per boat. By end of week we were at a steady 2-4 tuna just 1/4 mile off the cliffs. The secret on these tuna was light line…20-25 pound test and using 20 pound flurocarbon leaders!

Additionally, several days this week it was almost impossible not to get a marlin or sailfish hook up and several of our pangas had double, triple or even quadruple hookups simultaneously and reported that other marlin were still swimming around the pangas eating anything thrown in the water as if they were 10 pound dorado competing for chum! (See the photo story below!) Besides that, a smattering of decent sized roosterfish, a couple of wahoo and even some hefty dog tooth snapper made for a darned good week! I fished one day with Dr. Dave Perine from the state of Washington. Dave comes down every year and decided he was going to get a big dog tooth. At one point he was 14 misses in a row as the big snapper were busting off 130 pound test in the rocks!!! Well, on number 15, we finally got one of the big dogs into the boat. It was only about 35 pound…quite respectable…but there wasn’t much of that leader material, but a fine looking fish!

I was out several times this week with folks actually . Great shout out to the Pez Gringo guys who spent most of the week with us and not only spanked the fish and parited to tell about it, but made a point of releasing a ton of marlin as well as huget 50,60 and 80 pound roosterfish. Today was a great example of fun fishing. I was with Julian Ramos who will be a sophomore next year in high school and his chum Alex Tovar who will be starting high school. While their dads were chasing larger offshore stuff, the buys hooked 2 tuna, 4 dorado, 8 roosterfish and 3 huge jacks. (most of the fish were released). What a great day and we probably could have sat on that spot of roosters and bent rods on them all afternoon.

Looks like we could have another banner marlin season. See the photo below but black marlin shouldn’t be here yet. They are generally a late summer/fall fish. Well, several huge fish were hung this week, but one 800 pounder was hooked and fought for 6 hours before it was released on our cruiser “Black Magic.”

STOCK UP EARLY

As I mentioned last week, July 2nd is national elections here in Mexico. If you’re coming down, no booze can be bought or sold that day so stock up ahead of time.

AERO CALIFORNIA

This is supposed to be the week that Aero Cal poops or gets off the pot, but we’ve heard that before. If they do come back up this week, you can be sure that we’ll jump all over that!

If you want to read a great piece on what Aero California’s closing did to La Paz, click this link to La Paz Mexico.com and written by my amigo Russ http://lapaz-mexico.com/articles/new.html

PHOTO:

If you ever doubted you could get big fish on small pangas…Greg Covello (holding the head) weighs about 280 pounds and is a security guard at the Tracy CA prison. He was on his first trip to Baja fishing this week. We can only estimate that this fish was around 400 pounds ore more…a huge black marlin. Remarkably it hit a mackerel then snagged itself in the stomach just deep enough for the 6/0 hook to bury itself just under the skin. The tough skin will not rip! On 50 pound test and no leader, Greg battled the fish for over 2 hours on the panga. He didn’t have a fancy reel. He was using a simple stock Penn 4/0. Had the fish been mouth hooked it probably would have gotten free by busting the leader, but because it was snagged, the 50 pound held. They were going to release the big fish, but 50 yards from the panga, the fish died and they had to handline the fish in. Captain Yofo is second from the left. Even he said he was exhausted. When the fish hit the beach…the anglers took only a small chunk of the fish and donated the rest to the towns of Aguamarga and San Pedro which have been on hard times. On the far left is Cesar Carillo who also works at the prison and also took a turn at the rod as well. An incredible fish!

That’s my story!
Jonathan
Jonathan Roldan’s Tailhunter InternationalWebsite: http://www.tailhunter-international.com/Phone: (626) 333-3355FAX: (626) 333-0115E-Mail: Riplipboy@aol.comU.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Dr., Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745

Of the handful of fish that can really get people worked up into a frenzy, mention the word “Yellowtail” and it’s enough to get a young fisherman’s fingers twitching for a rod and reel and the eyes of any old Baja salt to glaze over. Despite the many gamefish available in Mexican waters, few offer the sheer tenacity, attitude and tastiness of the sierra dorsalis, otherwise known as yellowtail, but to the more knowledgeable as “yellows,” “forktails,” “forkies,” or “mossbacks.”

Not to be confused with yellowfin tuna, the yellowtail is a member of the jack family with blue/grey/silver sides and a darker blue/green back or, in the larger older resident species, a dark emerald back topped with bright yellow fins.

In the days before they were overfished, talk to an old Baja angler or even the old anglers from Southern California and they will re-count days when the birds dove on seemingly acres of boiling frothing fish. The kelp beds off S. California and paddies off northern Pacific Baja as well as the islands of Cedros and Benitos used to have schools thicker than mackerel. The areas off Loreto, Bahia de Los Angeles and the midriff islands were legendary for 40 pounders that would turn the waters to class 5 rapids when they came to feed! My own first encounter with these tremendous fish was at the age of 9 and I re-call looking into the water and seeing solid fish as far as my gaze penetrated. I farmed 6 fish before I was able to land my first one! It was a 25 pounder that the skipper said was “too small” and after a quick photo was tossed back into the water with a cavalier flip, as if he were tossing a bonito back! I was devastated, but quickly forgot as my next fish was probably closer to 40 pounds!

That same sized fish in many areas would almost be a trophy by today’s standards. Indeed the fish was so abundant, that it quickly attracted commercial interests that wasted no time in wrapping although not as plentiful, it seems the yellowtail is no less sought, especially by sport anglers. Especially during the winter/early spring months then again in the fall, yellowtail fishing in the Sea of Cortez can still be spectacular. In the summer and fall, warmer waters up the Pacific coast of Baja bring fish into northern Baja waters under kelp paddies and off structure well-within reach of San Diego/ Ensenada/San Quintin fleets.

Current fish have diminished in size where a 25-30 pound fish would be considered a trophy. Most of the fish along the Pacific tend to be under that size, but voracious schools carrying quantities of fish seem to more than make up for the smaller size. However, larger fish are often found around Cedros and Benitos Islands as well as the higher spots and banks off of Magdalena Bay and anywhere structure can be found. Generally speaking, however, the larger fish are in the Sea of Cortez. Less migratory than their Pacific counterparts, this is where most people come to find the grumpy angry fish of the past. The best areas continue to be the islands off Loreto as well as Bahia de Los Angeles as well as the areas of the midriff islands, but fish can be found as far south as Cabo on occasion, but with diminishing frequency. In general, if someone asks me for yellowtail, I send them north of my place in La Paz to fish L.A. Bay, Loreto or grab a mothership out of San Felipe to fish the midriff islands.

Most methods of fishing these prized fish entail some degree of effort one way or the other…either in getting them hooked, but then battling these bruisers back to the boat. Of course, the easiest is to find breaking fish and flyline (casting a bait with no sinkers) into the melee. Hang on! When they are on the chew, you won’t wait long and expect short brutal runs that can tax even the best anglers and gear.

The harder method, when you know you’re in the fish zone requires a bit more work, but is no less rewarding. One of the best methods favored by veterans is called yo-yo- ironing. Essentially, this consists of throwing out a heavy metal lure. It doesn’t even need to be cast as you can simply drop it over the side of your boat. Let it fall then wind as fast as you can! Wind until your arms feel like falling off! (I told you it was hard work!) The faster you wind, the better your chances of hooking a fish. Colors such as blue and white / yellow and green / all white / yellow, brown and white (scrambled egg) can be deadly with this method. Try retrieving from various depths. Try dropping all the way to the bottom. Don’t let it sit there long as yellowtail prefer rocky areas and you’ll get hung up and lose your lure. As soon as it hits bottom, give it a few twitches then wind like heck back to the surface. You can even stop and let it drop back down before you get back to the the boat. Another method is to cast out some distance then cranking like crazy; stopping and letting the lure flutter down; then cranking again so that you create a “z” pattern back to the boat. Expect huge heavy hits on this type of fishing so make sure you’ve got your rods securely in hand.

The other preferred method, if there’s bait is using a dropper loop method. Here, I’d favor a short stout rod and line in the 40-60 pound range. There were even times when I’ve had to go to 80 or 100 pound test. It’s not the fish that I’m worried about. It’s the fact that I’m going to drop my hooked mackerel, squid or sardine 100, 200 and even 300 feet down. When the yellowtail is hooked it’s first reaction will be heading right back down to the rocks to snap you off! These fish like structure, whether it’s rocks, kelp, an old wreck or other obstacle so gear your equipment to the surroundings and not necessarily the fish!

Once you’re hooked, whether via jig or bait, dig in your heels! Even if the fish tasted terribly, anglers would chase this sportsfish just for the sheer fight. It may not make the speedy runs of the tuna; leap like a marlin or dorado, but in sheer shoulder-packing-fin-beating runs, it’s hard to top a hooked yellowtail. It will most often head right back to the kelp or rocks it came from and will doggedly pull in bursts of power that will require the angler to constantly put pressure on the running fish to make it work against you; your equipment and the boat. Make the fish pay for any line it wants to take! Keep your rod tip up and short-pump the fish back to the boat between runs. If you can get it’s head turned away from the line-eating rocks and structure, you’re halfway there!

Excellent raw as sashimi; grilled, broiled or sautee’d, it’s hard to top fresh yellowtail. The meat is pinkish white and cooks up firm, flaky and white with few bones. It makes great eating along with the great stories of boating this legendary fighter!

If you have any questions or ever want to chat fishing, you can reach me at 626-333-3355 or e-mail me at riplipboy@aol.com or http://www.tailhunter-international.com.

Stay tuned for great adventure stories with Jonathan in La Paz. Here you will find his published print articles as well as special online stories exclusively available on the Tailhunter International website!

SORRY TO START THIS WAY –

So, there was I was on Thursday evening strolling over to Hotel Los Arcos to meet my clients who were coming in from the airport. Parking was unusually difficult so I had to park some blocks away and as I got closer to the hotel there was quite a crowd around and I began to notice a lot of my friend who work at Hotel Marina and La Concha Beach Resort as well as other hotels here in town. I figured there must be a big union meeting at Los Arcos because most of my friends were waiters, room maids, porters, etc. As I greeted them, I laughing asked, “Where’s the party and how come I wasn’t invited?” They laughed back.

So, I walk towards the lobby and its PACKED! I walk smack into the TV cameras and crowds and find out that the hotel has gone on strike. Well…not the hotel, but the union of hotel employees. Apparently, the contract had come up and negotiations had stalled and BOOM…hotel suddenly closes! People were being turned away to other hotels. Current clients were being packed up to other hotels!

This is no bueno. The hotel, like all hotels and other tourist related businesses here in La Paz have been extremely hard hit by the Aero California situation and the lack of airflights into town the last 3 months to where various parts of the hotel had already been closed down. Now this!

Like most strikes…money is at the heart, but also a big political thing. Luis Cuppola is the owner (also owns the Finnesterra in Cabo) is running for the senate as the “choice of the worker.” Big black eye to him when his own hotel workers take a walk!

Bottom line, if you’ve got reservations at Los Arcos this week, better change them! I spoke with hotel management who hope it resolves soon, but we all said that about Aero California too. If you’re one of my clients this week, we’ve already taken care of you. However, many of you who read this are not my clients so talk to your agents or give us a shout to see what can be done. All of my clients have already been placed in other hotels. Once again…until further notice, Los Arcos Hotel is closed due to a workers strike!

OK…let talk fishing…

YOU WANT DORADO WE GOT DORADO!

I think I will dub this the official week that dorado and marlin season started. Still a bit windy, but the dorado bite went into full swing this week with good numbers of chicken-sized schoolies topped off with nice 30-40 pound bulls. It wasn’t wide open or all day, but some spots really produced and if you wanted dorado they were there to be caught. Additionally, marlin finally decided to get with the program instead of just cruising the surface and actually jumped baits and lures along with sailfish. On the La Paz side, areas such as Las Cruces, Coyote, the Canyon and Punta Norte all produced as did the sargasso weeds accumulating in the channel. On the Las Arena side, if you hit the right buoy it was dorado rodeo. You could dink dink all day and get limits or do it with one-stop-shopping if you hit the right buoy. Biggest dorado of the week was a 45 pounder by Rich Strauss of Cleveland who landed a personal best. Inshore as well, roosters, jacks, big bonito and pargo were still on the chew although drawing less attention now that the mahi are centerstage.

AERO CALIFORNIA UPDATES

Still on the ground, but according to the newspapers this week, all the planes have been tested. All the paperwork has been filed and submitted and turned into the government to get the planes back in the air. It’s in the governments hands now (always was!). For the first time, town is buzzing that Aero Cal will be accepting reservations again after June 12th. I want to believe!!!!! But…my optimism is tempered. I want to see their planes flying with people first! The planes have been flown around here, but not with clients…just yet!

In the meantime, most of our clients are either coming through Cabo San Lucas and we are shuttling them up or coming in on the limited flights offered by Aero Mexico.

PHOTO OF THE WEEK
Big jacks such as this one taken by Doug Oclassen (left) of Boulder CO, helped by his dad Glenn were voracious and could school up in huge spots. Using light tackle, the Oclassens got quite a few of these tough fighters and released them all.

That’s my story!
Jonathan