Trip #4: 1.5 Day
Boat/Landing: Fortune/22nd Street Landing
Departed: July 5, 2018
Fishing: July 6, 2018
Captain Bruce Smith of the Fortune wanted everyone at 22nd Street landing for an early departure. The DWRRC guys all loaded up their gear:
- Ron Shrout
- Joe Stassi
- Steve Lenker
- Steve Sturm
- Stewart Finley
- Luke Burson
- Chris Ramsey Jr.
- Cody Kelly
- Brian Wynne
- Mike Trunk
- Bill Parks
- Tom Hill
- Tony Beall
- Jeff Hinricks
- Murphy Parks
- John L (Steve Lenker’s guest)
- Stewart guest
- Joe G (Mike Trunk’s Guest)
We could see that the mackerel were pretty thick at the dock so the guys fished while the boat remained tied up and put 250 nice baits in the tanks.
The Fortune cast off the dock lines at 5:30 p.m. Fifteen minutes later, the boat made a U-Turn and sped back to the landing for an emergency…we forgot to load three extra bags of ice to keep all our cocktails and beers cold for the next day and a half. Crisis avoided.
Loaded up with 6 to 8-inch sardines at the bait receiver and began our trip across the channel. Bruce met everyone in the galley for his safety and fishing update. It was going to be windy and rough offshore – swells up to 11 feet and winds around 25. No way to fish Santa Barbara Island – so we’d have to seek shelter close to the local islands to be safe and comfortable. But there was some good news -- the squid had been thick and easy to make at Ben Weston and West Cove at Catalina. Bruce’s plan would be to make squid at Catalina and then head to San Clemente Island for the morning bite.
The trip across the channel was a windy and bumpy but could have been worse.
The crew made full tanks of squid at Ben Weston without any problem. Bruce decided that we’d stay anchored up at the Catalina squid grounds for the morning bite – rather than crossing the channel to San Clemente Island. The squid were thick at Catalina – but not the game fish. Guys fished from 2 a.mm to 5:30 at Ben Weston and all that were caught were three bay rays. With no gamefish biting, the decision was made to pull the anchor and head to SCI.
Two hours later, after a relatively smooth trip across the channel we arrived at SCI and began looking for signs of fish. A nice breezer of yellows was spotted off the bow, but as we got close they sunk out. Nonetheless, Mike Trunk hooked and landed a beautiful big yellow of close to 30 pounds. No other biters so we went back on the hunt.
Around 9 a.m. another smaller breezer was spotted. Luke Burson was throwing the surface iron off the bow and he hung a good one just as the school sunk out. Sadly, after a long fight the hook pulled and that one got away. Nobody else got bit.
Around 10 am. Bruce anchored the boat in the point kelp area and we began a slow pick on mostly keeper calicos. Over the next couple hours, we had a decent calico bite with about 2-3 keepers all around.
We made a short move right into the kelp forest and the calicos really went on the bite. Limit style calico fishing for the next two plus hours. Again, no real big fish – but mostly all keepers and nearly every cast was good for a bite whether you were fishing sardines, mackerel or squid. It was fun fishing.
We left the fish biting when Bruce got a radio call from Greg Obymako that he had seen a good spot of yellowtail about 45 minutes from our location. It was a nice ride – the weather was around 78 degrees and the seas were flat. We had heard it was incredibly hot 115 degrees at home so we were pleased to be offshore. When we arrived, we pulled up very close to the island and as we did, it was like entering a furnace. You could feel a wall of hot air blowing down the back of the island the temperature soared nearly 20 degrees.
Bruce tried setting the anchor twice in this area, but each time the anchor kept sliding and we couldn’t get anything going. With the uncomfortably hot weather, windy conditions and no biters, Bruce told us he was going to run back to Catalina in hopes of hooking some white sea bass.
We anchored up off the West end Catalina and started soaking baits. It was pretty slow and the boat was swinging around on the anchor. A few “pier fish” were caught – bat rays, a shark and a few barracuda. But then, Murphy Parks gots bit and it looked like the right kind. 20 minutes later he landed a beautiful 30-pound yellowtail on squid.
A few minutes later, Steve Lenker’s squid gets bit and he successfully landed a beautiful 30-pound class white seabass. No more bites so Bruce made the move back to the squid grounds at Ben Weston.
Once again the crew plugged the tanks with live squid…but no more gamefish. As we all went to bed for the night, nobody knew who would win the patch for biggest fish – Mike, Murphy and Steve each had a legit contender.
In the morning the announcement was made – Murphy Parks won the patch with his 30 pound yellowtail.