Trip 6 Thunderbird 2 day
Scribe: Mario Jr.
August 6th boat departs, well before that it starts at the boardwalk. Surprise, surprise Hayden is yet again the first member there! By dusk just about every member is there. Everyone is hyped up on what’s in store to come. But we have options, which is nice to have. If we as a club pick wisely… Go south and fish the zone that’s been hit hard and has fish that’s had a few off day’s and could bite any day now? Fish the back side to the ridge off of Clemente? Or go to the tanner? The choice was made and we decided to place that burden on captain Jeff to decide. (Now we don’t have to blame ourselves if we don’t catch them!) But mostly because Jeff is on the water everyday and we trust in his decision making. So we go to Clemente and fish for bluefin. Great!
Finally board the boat and the last minute top shots and hooks are tied on. Light line 20#-25# maybe 30#, small hook. Stupid bluefin stuff. Fish could be 12-50 pounds. Sounds fun! Then typical island gear consisting of 30 pound fly line, dropper loops, surface irons and yo-yo jigs.
3:45 am boats finally comes to its first stop and it’s on a sonar school. Immediately hop out of the bunk and go up top. Kitchen sink was the tactic until someone could get bit and narrow it done for the rest of us. Flat falls of all sizes, sinker rigs of all sorts, fly line baits hit the water. And all for nothing. 5:45am boats in gear and on the move. 6:15 boat slows down the throttles, battlestations was taken around the bait tank. Bluefin boiled in the chum line! so it was go time. Toss em back! Two immediate hook ups on the slide! Then a third as the boat comes to a stop. Few more might of been hooked but all said in done after about 20 minutes on the stop, 3 bluefin hit the deck. 25-30 pounders, solid fish on the 20-30 pound line. 7:00am boat stops again (third stop) and short hit and run style fishing, right when we slide up we get a couple to go and then they sink out for no reason. Something we’ve all seen and been a victim to. We managed to get 4 more bluefin and our first yellowfin on the boat. Start thinking this could be a good day, as long as we manage to get 5 or so fish a stop and we’re stopping every 30 minutes. Might be a good scratch fishing day and we’re one school away from “the school” that could be our one stop shop.
After some breakfast beers and burritos the boat slows down again and finds another sonar school. Mix bluefin and yellowfin We get 7 in about 30 minutes. Decent morning so far, it’s only 9:30 and we have 8 bluefin and 8 yellowfin and plenty of time to go. All we need to do is go search for another school. So we go searching. Keep searching...while you’re at it search some more. It was at that point you get the feeling of damn this ocean is pretty big after all. Boat never stopped again but one last time around 3:45pm. Nothing got hooked though. Looks like I spoke too soon to when I said this could be a one of those killer scratch days. Lucky to get what we did, the Thunderbird got the second highest fish count in the fleet. By fleet I mean SoCal. Every boat from Long Beach to San Diego was tuna fishing… that’s why we let Jeff make those decisions on where to fish sometimes! Now head to the island and salvage a decide sun downer bass bite.
Get to the island and right in tight with the kelp line inside of pyramid. Fish bass come over the rails, nothing crazy in size but fun size to catch. Few yellows move through and the kelp made short work of them. Lose 3 yellows. Hmmm there’s yellows and people are breaking off on the 25-30 pound test in the kelp. Better use 40 pound. Go mid ship to the deeper end of the kelp and bam a few more come over the rail. 8-12 pounders, 3 yellows before dark in about a 30 minute span. Little icing on the cake after hearing we had the second highest tuna count.
For those of you that don’t know, there’s this crazy member named Mario Jr. Who will fish any hour the boat is stopped and is known to fish through the night. It paid off, after dinner around 10pm a dropper loop yellow hit the deck, solid 12 pounder. Naturally a few others take notice and a the stern is fanned out with dropper loops. About 30-45 minutes later 2 more hook ups and we land those! End of the day we total 8 bluefin 8 yellowfin and 6 yellows. And the patch goes to Luke with 33 pound bluefin.
Day two and last day to fish, we pull anchor and start hunting. Stop right away and Gary hooked the first fish, solid 20 pounder and we get a couple more of the 8-12 pound stuff. Next stop about 7:30 we get into them to come up in the chum pretty good. We end that stop with another 6-8 fish. Then we go in for a bass sesh.yough bite for even a bass... Catch some decent 4-5 pounders but nothing worthy to measure. Or a short. Nothing really in between. Then throw in a few surprise yellows in the kelp line.
11:15 the call was made to start to head back in a little early, mechanical prevention related issues but with only 2 maybe 3 hours left to fish. It wasn’t worth the risk and we weren’t missing anything, yellows weren’t really there and where did all the epic bass fishing go? So with that being said, it was an easy pill to swallow that we were going to head back a little early. Ended with roughly dozen yellows and patch honors goes to Bill Parks. (Good luck finding room on your jacket for this patch!)