9/7/17 - 9/9/17
DWRRC
Trip # 7
Thunderbird – Davey’s Locker
Departed: September 7th
Returned: September 9th evening
Scribe: Nick Burson
Thursday, September 7th
The first to the dock was no surprise, Mike Trunk. We assumed he had gotten there at 7 am to get a head start on Coors Light intake, however I believe he actually arrived around 1 pm. Over the next few hours the rest of the club members arrived and got in line, with big Bluefin on our minds.
There was a surprise visitor to the docks, Five Start Fish Processing from San Diego. Apparently a corporate charter hired them to process fish and ship the filets to their employee’s homes. The charter came in and it was apparent the long drive from San Diego was for very little, I think a few sand bass and a sheephead were given to the processors. At least they got paid in advance for coming up.
The two main topics of conversation at the docks were the KC/NE game, and the weather. The news of KC beating NE in Foxboro was much better news than what the weather was going to be. We were all prepared for a very bumpy, unpleasant ride.
We boarded the Thunderbird at 9 pm, and had a guest angler joining us. Andrew Viola was on as a guest, and we were prepared for him to put on a clinic. A quick stop to the bait dock, where they had been reserving cured bait for 2 day and longer trips, resulted in beautiful 6-8 inch sardines. After loading up, we were off to endure the bumpy ride to San Clemente Island. And a bumpy ride it was, I think most of us got maybe 2-3 hours of sleep.
Friday, September 8th
After barely sleeping, we were up early and ready to find some fish to pull on. We started fishing off the island, looking for Bluefin. We made a few stops on metered fish, but nothing bit. It was still very windy and the swells were big, making a few club members feel a little under the weather. As we continued searching for fish the wind eased off enough for us to fly the kite. We trolled a flying fish from the kite for a few hours, however it resulted in no bites. After messing around off the island for about 5-6 hours, we decided to move in closer to in, to an area where there had been some smaller grade tune.
12:30 – We found a spot which metered some fish and proceeded to get the anchor down. The anchor had trouble getting set, and we had to pull it and reset. This time it stuck. For the next 1 ½ - 2 hours we would hook, and lose, 6-8 Bluefin. The first fish on the boat went to Ron Henry, a 30 lb Bluefin. The next fish landed was a 40 lb Bluefin by Mike Allen. Now we were getting with it!
2:30 -6– The bites were picking up and we were having a much better landing rate. There were still some casualties, as a few hammerhead sharks had found us. One shark was hanging around on the surface, however we believe there was another 1 or 2 sharks deeper down. We had 4 fish come up with their tails missing from shark bites, and another 6 or so that were completely lost. Even with the sharks we were able to land some quality fish.
At the end of the day we had landed 28 Bluefin, ranging from 30lbs – 100lbs (using Jeff’s blue fin tax added to the YFT formula). Unfortunately, some of the larger fish were casualties of shark bites, having their tails bitten off. There were four anglers who were hot sticks, each catching 3 BFT. Ryan Burson, Mike Allen (who also had his personal best at 70 lbs) Gary Thompson and guest Andrew Viola. These four definitely showed the rest how tuna fishing is done!
Big fish and the patch for day 1 went to Bill Parks for his 88 lb Bluefin. Congrats Bill!
7 pm – we began to head to the cove for the night, however during the last 7 hours on the anchor it had wedged itself and had gotten stuck. After working back and forth to get the anchor unstuck, it finally broke free. There was some work the crew needed to do to repair the anchor connection to the chain.
Dinner consisted of a wonderful Trip Tip, baked potato and salad prepared by Goofy, with many glasses of wine, beer and cocktails being consumed. Being in the calm of the cove was a much needed reprieve from the constant wind and bouncing from being off the island. Tonight we would all sleep much better.
Saturday, September 9th
We woke with about 16 boats fishing the area we were the day before. Word had gotten out. As we were driving through Jeff didn’t meter anything worth looking at, so we proceeded to head off the island in search of the bigger grade tuna. We drove around metering fish, with making stops on 3 different marks which none of them produced even a bite. After a few hours we decided to up to the front side of the island to see what we could find. On the way, Trunk released his blowup doll to the sea. Hopefully whoever finds it will find as much enjoyment with it as Trunk did.
10:00 am – While rounding the point heading to the front of the island we drove past 35+ boats. While driving past we kept an eye out to see if any had fish hooked up. There were a few that were hanging fish, they were the boats closer to the island. We saw one get gaffed, looked like small 15-20lb tuna. We made one stop in front of the fleet, however nothing bit.
Moving up the front of the island we made another stop on some metered fish. We had a few boil on chum, but didn’t hook any. We kept moving up the island, looking for a spot to fish yellowtail.
12:30 pm – We stopped on a spot for yellowtail, and we immediately hooked two. The first landed was by Chris Ramsey at about 15 lbs., while the second was landed by Nick Burson and was a solid 20 lbs. The bite picked up and we were constantly having fresh hook ups and fish going. At one point there were 5 fish going on the port stern! The grade was mixed, ranging from 5 lb-25lb. A healthy, strong bait was the key to getting bit. While some were picked up immediately, many others were hooked on a long soak.
Around 2 pm we called it a trip and got ready to head back in. We had ended the day with 33 yellowtail between 5lb-25lb. Jeff pointed out that we had finally caught some fish on the second day of a charter!
Big fish and patch for day 2 went to Roy Patterson for a 25 lb Yellowtail. Congrats Roy!
Final count:
Bluefin Tuna: 28
Yellowtail: 33