Saltwater Fishing

Saltwater Fishing

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Surf Perch are still biting in Oceano!

FYI: Today's high tide is 6:53, sunset is 7:41. Couldn't be more perfect for surf perch!

Friday, August 12, 2011

Surf Perch

The Surf Perch are biting in Oceano! Belinda, Jeramie, and I caught fish non-stop from about 6pm until dark on Tuesday. Today, I caught about 30 fish at that same time. This time, I went with 3/4 oz. sinker, 6 lb. test, #8 Gamakatsu baitholder hook, and a 1 and 1/2" Kalin's motoroil grub with red flake.

Monday, July 18, 2011

My apologies

Sorry I haven't posted in a while. I haven't felt much like fishing. I know, crazy, huh?! Just going through a tough time right now. I'll be back!

Michael

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Roboworms!

Belinda and I caught bass yesterday Texas rigging Roboworms in shallow water. Hers was bigger. We also caught a stringer full of redear, bluegill, and a couple of crappie on nymphs and waxworms.

Gracie

Gracie was studying in the car, but took a short break to catch some redear. (dropshotting nymphs)

Monday, June 6, 2011

Jazlyn

Jazlyn caught her first fish ever on Monday. By Wednesday, she had caught 15!

AJ

AJ caught his first fish ever today on the F dock, and it brought a friend along.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Redear Bite

Belinda and I caught lots of redear, a few crappie, and a couple of bass on the F dock- just after sunset. The people who were leaving when I got there had been camping since last Thursday and hadn't caught a single fish. If they had only waited a little longer!

Friday, June 3, 2011

Update

Still haven't gone out in a while, work's been a little crazy. Should be time for Surf Perch, Poppers in the evening at Margarita and Lopez, Mackerel at the pier, and as the water temperature in the bay gets closer to 59 degrees, the halibut should come in to shallow water to spawn!

Monday, May 9, 2011

In case you were wondering...

I've been working 14 to 18 hour days and haven't had a chance to do any fishing for a few days. Hopefully, soon. I will keep you informed.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Lopez

Shad are cruising the shoreline. Big balls of fry in the shallows. Tons of redear being caught in 5 - 25 feet of water. Bass in 3 - 10 feet of water. Lots of Chironomids hatching. Must be Spring!

Thursday, April 28, 2011

_Campobello

Lots of bass at campobello today, and lots of redear at the F dock. Still waiting on the crappie. 4/28/11

FYI!

Rockfish season opens in our area May 1st!

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

F-Dock Update

The bite is real late these days. Today I caught several crappie, largemouth, 1 smallie, and lots of redear in the shallows.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Cain(?)

Even though the water was still pretty muddy, and it rained a little, Cain(not sure of the spelling) caught 3 fish including this redear sunfish. I think there's going to be a lot of years of fishing in this boy's future. 4/20/11

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

F Dock Update

 Caught redear, crappie, and bass yesterday dropshotting nymphs on 1/2 lb. test, 20" ice fishing pole, occasionally cheating with wax worms, (crappie seemed to like the nymph only). The lake is at 89% after last weekend's storm. And, while I was on the dock, a ranger posted a sign closing the trail to the F Dock. 3/29/11

Saturday, March 19, 2011

What's Inside?

The crappie that I caught today at Lopez were full of nymphs and leeches. (Just in case you were wondering)

Time For Beds!

The crappie at Santa Margarita are already on their spawning beds! 3/16/11 (from Jeramie)

Lighten Up!

This crappie ate a Wedgie on a #14 fly hook, 8 oz. test fluorocarbon, 1/64 oz. dropshot sinker, 12 inch ice fishing rod. 3/18/11

Monday, March 14, 2011

The lake levels are pretty high. Fish are moving in to shallow water. Bass are full of eggs, crappie are gorging themselves on shad. What're you waiting for? Get out there!

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Crappie Bite!

The good news: Caught a bunch of crappie at the F dock. The bad news: They were mostly small. But they're here!

Friday, March 4, 2011

Bass are still biting at Cottonwood Cove. Most came on plastic worms, but this fish came on a floating nightcrawler. I was breaking in my new strike indicators.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Slip Bobber

For those of you who have been dangling a worm under a bobber and were wondering why you weren't getting bitten, maybe you're just not getting your bait down to where the fish are. Try using a slip bobber with enough line between your hook and your stop knot to put your bait just above the lake bottom. And instead of a worm, try using a leech! This technique also works with nymphs, crappie jigs, waxworms, or, (my personal fave), live shad.

Monday, February 28, 2011

If at first you don't succeed...

CHEAT!!! When the bite is real slow, try adding a waxworm to your nymph, and slow way down. You can buy waxworms all year long at CD's Pets in Arroyo Grande. There is absolutely no better bait for red ear and bluegill sunfish.

Tip-O-The-Day:

This is a Western Grebe. He mainly eats fish. In our local lakes, he will follow the schools of shad almost all year round. So do bass, stripers, crappie... See where I'm going? Keep an eye on this guy. If you see him eating shad, you can be sure there are gamefish nearby.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Texas-rigged nightcrawlers.

Had to prove my technique worked. Caught several bass up to 20" today at Lopez.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Floating Worm Rig

This setup, which is just a carolina rig, can be used to catch bass, catfish, trout, redear, bluegill, hitch, suckerfish, and carp. Using a worm blower or syringe you can inflate a nightcrawler or red worm so that it floats above the weeds and debris on the bottom. Insert the needle just under the collar of the worm, and inflate slowly. If your worm bursts, or explodes, you have overinflated him. Try again. This rig works best when used with a strike indicator. (See photo). Use a red worm or half a nightcrawler for redear sunfish and bluegill.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

The Uni-Knot

I know several knots, but mostly just use two: The Surgeon's Loop, and The Uni-Knot. Once again, there are stronger knots, but these are fast and simple.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Catch-O-The-Day

Caught some bass at Cottonwood today. From 10" to 16," in 5 to 8 feet of water. Texas-rigged plastic worms. Most of the fish were caught right where the old aluminum dock used to be.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Fishing Off The Rocks

For fishing off the rocks, you will need 8-10 lb. test line, 1/2 oz. drop shot sinkers, #10 Gamakatsu baitholder hooks, and... crabs! That's right, crabs, (See set up on left sidebar). Every fish that lives in these rocky tidal areas eats crabs. So, when you get down to the shoreline, find a shallow tide pool that is far from the surf, but looks like it was submerged at high tide. Now just slowly lift up stones and fill a zip lock with live bait. If you lift slowly enough, the little crabs will often sit still hoping you don't see them. Pin them to the ground with one hand, then pick them up by the claws. You only want them 1" to 1.5" long because some of the fish you will be catching have small mouths. Now, hook one of the little buggers through the butt, bottom to top. This will keep you from burying your hook into every piece of kelp that he grabs.
The pools and holes will be full of places where the water cuts under the rocks. This is where your fish will be hiding, waiting to ambush anything that gets swept past with the tide. Cast out and slowly bounce your bait as close to the rocks as possible, stopping frequently to allow your bait to be taken into the undercut by the tide. The fish will often swim out from under the rocks, grab your bait, swim back under and wedge himself in. So, when you set the hook, pull your rod tip out and away from the rocks. A big boulder inside a tide pool is also a prime rockfish hideout.
The fish you will likely be catching are cabezon, gopher rockfish, kelp rockfish, kelp greenling, striped surf perch, ling cod, and eels. Other baits that work well are mussel, squid, and the easiest to come by... hermit crabs. You'll have to take them out of their shells, of course.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Carolina Rig

Take a look at the Carolina rig set up for surf perch on the left side bar. This basic rig can be used for working plastic worms in deep water, floating nightcrawlers for trout, soaking cut mackerel for catfish, or drifting live shad for stripers. Of course, you'll have to adjust sizes to whatever you're chasing.

For Surf Perch, you pretty much just cast out past the breakers and reel it back to shore. Go just before to just after high tide. Look for cuts, holes, or brown water. Sometimes you'll get bit right in front of your feet.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Rock Fishing

FYI:  Did you know there's no moratorium on fishing for rockfish if you're actually fishing from the rocks? That's right. You can catch Cabezon, Rockfish, Eels, Striped Perch, Kelp Bass, Kelp Greenling, and even Ling Cod all year round off of any of our Central Coast rocky shorelines. I'll post a really simple technique for fishing the rocks this evening... unless, of course, I go fishing!

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Pre-spawn Bass

The pre-spawn bite is right around the corner, and has already begun in some of the shallower ponds around the county, and with it comes the opportunity to catch lots of bass. For me, this means fishing swimbaits or plastic worms. But let's say you're taking some kids fishing, and you just want to make sure they hook something. Well, I have a technique that is guaranteed to get you bitten. Whether you set the hook or land the fish is another thing entirely. My bass fishermen friends may have me killed for posting this next technique as it involves bait,  but this is for kids and beginners, right? Stay tuned for this next technique... Texas-rigged nightcrawlers!

Dropshotting Nymphs

You may notice that most of the fish in these photos were caught using the same technique: dropshotting nymphs on 2 lb. test. I'll write up a detailed description of this technique this evening, unless, of course, I go fishing.