8/17/17 - 8/18/17
August 17, 2017
By 4 p.m. most of the anxious anglers have already arrived. Once again, the DWRRC Team has brought a lot of nice gear – everything you need to catch a giant bluefin tuna to calico bass (and everything in between). Everyone is enjoying the traditional pre-boarding drinks, snacks and conversation.
Where should we fish – the giant bluefin grounds off San Clemente Island or head further offshore to the Tanner and/or Cortez banks where there had been decent numbers of larger yellowtail and school-sized bluefin?
What did the fleet catch today?
What will the weather be like tomorrow?
At 7:10 p.m., the Thunderbird returns to the dock.
Captain Jeff walks up the ramp to give us a briefing on the latest conditions. Jeff is concerned about the weather outside on the Tanner or Cortez – he thinks recent winds have hurt the conditions. He’s also concerned that the boats that have fished the banks the past 10 days have been getting less fish each trip. The trend doesn’t look good.
On the other hand – Jeff says the big bluefin tuna are still there off San Clemente Island. However, the bite has been very slow in the mornings – but he heard they were biting this evening.
Jeff thinks the late bite on the big bluefin is our best overall bet. He’s willing to try to take us to the Tanner or Cortez for the morning bite – but he wants to have us on the Clemente bluefin grounds for the afternoon/night bite. He says it’s up to us.
After a brief discussion, a vote is taken and we decide we’re going to fish San Clemente. We’ll fish bluefin in the morning, head inshore for bass/yellowtail, etc. until the afternoon, and then head back to the bluefin grounds for the late bite.
This is the plan.
The DWRRC Anglers board the boat:
- Roy Patterson
- Tom Anderson
- George Miller
- Mike Guest
- Bryan Upcraft
- Mike Zinniker
- Joe Stassi
- Ron Rudrud
- Tim Schneider
- Ron Henry
- Paul Casillas
- Luke Burson
- Tony Beall
- Bill Parks
- Mike Trunk
- Chris Ramsey
- …and special guest – Mike Thompson.
The Thunderbird Crew will be Jeff, Andrew, Goofy, Brian and Kevin.
We depart around 8 p.m. – plug the tanks with very nice small/medium sized sardines and we’re off. It’s a bumpy ride most of the way – perhaps it’s ok we aren’t heading to the Cortez.
August 18, 2017
4:40 a.m. – the engines slow and we’re on the hunt.
At 5:45 – we mark several big fish in beautiful conditions. We drift for 45 minutes…no biters…so we’re back on the hunt.
At 7:00 – we run across a nice spot of dolphins and Jeff sees yellowfin swimming with them. But once again...no biters.
At 8:00 Jeff finds a good sonar school of what looks like medium sized bluefin. A good-sized school at 220 feet. Beautiful conditions. The fish are building under the boat. The kite is up. It looks like this is about to happen. But it doesn’t. We keep hunting and trolling for 1.5 hours. But once again...no biters.
That’s it -- Jeff says we’re going to stick to the plan and head into the backside of Clemente and fish inshore until the afternoon. Then head back to the bluefin grounds in the afternoon.
At 10:15 as we head into the island, we run across a good sonar school. Good marks. There’s a big boil. Time to anchor up. We all fish hard. But once again...no biters.
At 10:45 we anchor in 120 feet off seal cove. Two small calicos are caught – well, at least that’s a start.
Goofy has a full griddle full of chicken grilling – lunch looks and smells good. At this pace we may need to start drinking soon.
At 11:15 we anchor up off Eel Cove. There is a decent pick on medium calicos at this spot. Some fish begin breaking off the bow and Luke hangs a 5 pound bonito on the surface iron. As he is about to throw it back, he says “wait – that could be the jackpot fish” – so into the sack it went. Chris catches another jackpot contender bonito a little while later.
Things just aren’t going right.
At 1:30 p.m. – we anchor off the Incinerator spot. We continue a steady pick on medium sized calicos and one barracuda (that Jeff prompted filleted for lunch). The kelp here was very thick – but that didn’t stop Luke and some others from asking Jeff to let out some more scope so we could fish literally inside the kelp forest. We continued to pick at the bass…and to get tangled in the kelp for the next hour.
At 2:30 we’re on the hunt heading back offshore to look for big tuna. Jeff wants to stick to the plan.
4:30 p.m. and were still flying the kite and looking for bluefin.
At 5:00 p.m. we stop on a good sonar mark. We see a couple boils and Jeff says the fish look like 100 pounders on the electronics. We all fish hard. But once again...no biters.
At 7:45, Jeff gets on the P.A. and announces that, “Well, we stuck to our plan. It was a bust…”
Time for dinner. Time to start breaking down your gear. Time to have a few drinks. Time to get cleaned up.
At least for most people that is. (Luke and Chris are hard-core diehards and still fishing).
After awhile during dinner, Jeff starts calling out on the P.A. – “Good marks at 40…good marks at 60…now marks at 20…good marks off the bow…good marks off our stern.” This goes on for quite awhile and the dinner crowd chuckles thinking Jeff is having a good time teasing Luke and watching him run all around the boat.
Finally, at 8:57 Jeff says, “Wind em in....”
Here’s where it gets good.
8:58 “FRESH ONE!!!” Luke who has been fishing in the cold and dark off the starboard corner figured he could drop his booby-trapped flatfall back down for one more last drop before the boat started for home. He didn’t get bit on the drop… but he got bit on the final grind up! It was as if he just willed that fish to bite.
At 9:05. “FRESH ONE!!!” Chris gets bit off the stern and quickly his fish drags him up to the bow.
9:16: Luke puts the screws to his fish and lands his big bluefin off the starboard corner in under 20 minutes.
Chris also has put the screws to his fish. He has it at color on the bow, but then it sees the boat lights and it freaks out – it runs to the stern, and then across the entire stern to port side. The fish is hot.
At 9:19 Chris’s fish is gaffed off the port side next to the bait tank. What a great way to finish the day. Incredible…just incredible.
The crew puts a hose down the mouth of Luke's big bluefin – and lots of squid and red crab wash out all over the deck. The fish are feasting down there.
Time to tape out the fish. They both are easily over 100. Luke’s tapes out at 116 – Chris’s at 134.5.
Luke says to Chris, “My bonita was bigger.”
Chris responds, “B.S.”
Luke: “Were gonna measure them!”
These guys just never give up…and that’s why they both deserved to catch those beautiful bluefin.
At 10:00 p.m. Jeff gets on the P.A. and says, “Wind em in…for real.”
We had a plan. We stuck with it. And with a little luck and lots of effort – it finally paid off.
Scribe: Tony Beall