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2022: Trip 6 - Thunderbird 2 Day

Trip 6 Report: Thunderbird 2 day, August 25-27, 2022


As we were approaching this trip the fish counts had been something we all dream about. Limit style fishing on kelp paddy dorado and mixed yellowfin down near/south of the border, steady dorado fishing in our northern local zone and reports of some pretty good bluefin fishing out west behind SCI.


Arriving at the dock the usual activities were happening, catching up with friends we haven’t seen in a while, drinking beers and getting leaders and tackle prepared. When jeff arrived at the dock he informed us that the bite down south had moved too close to the Coronado Islands and going that far south would hinder our chances to come back up north and get a night bite on bluefin. With that being said, we opted to stay north and fish the more local dorado in the morning and see where the day went from there.


Day 1:

We did not have to motor very fair after picking up bait. Our night captain was Chris for this trip and he got us into the zone around 2 or 3 in the morning and shut the motors off while we all slept and waited for day light to start looking for the right paddy. It did not take very long to find the first kelp paddy with jumpers all over it. On our first drift past it we were able to pick off a couple fish. We continued to do this a few times and chase open water schools of dorado. Around 10am we had 30+ dorado in the fish hold and slowly but surely started making our way north west while stopping on the few paddies that we saw on the way up and there were 4 “San Diego 10 pounders” that we pulled off one of them.


As we made our way up the front side of the island, we started to get our tuna gear ready for the night bite with sheer excitement because jeff had let us know that the boats out there the night before had some pretty good scores on fish from 70-160 pounds. While rigging goofy was cooking up some burgers in the galley beers were being had and naps were being taken getting ready for a long night.


We arrived on scene right on time with about an hour or so before dark and Jeff was doing his thing in the wheelhouse figuring out where these fish were and let me tell you it did not take long. We had stopped on a couple school before dark that didn’t bite, but shortly after dinner and now the sun down Jeff found some very eager fish. Around 8pm these fish decided to let their guard down. “BITERRRRRR” as the first fish was hooked for the rest of the night, we had fish hanging. When we moved, we only had to idle for a few minutes at the most before Chris or jeff found another big school. For the entire night we hear them over the PA “They or on us 180-240.” By the time midnight came we had our limits for day one on 70–160-pound fish. Oscar Ochoa and a guest Taylor Rodriguez put on a clinic that night landing 9 fish each helping us out for our daily limit. Another stand out fish was caught by Ian Parkers 83 year old father Nigel. He was at the rail all day and night and he was able to land a beautiful butterball of a bluefin on 50 pound test to boot! As the clock struck midnight the daily jack pot however went to Tim hill on a 100 plus pound fish.


Day 2:

Day 1 essentially ran right into day two as we were still fishing at midnight. It was the same story as we kept fishing into the night. The crowd was thinning out on the deck as it got later into the night but the fishing remained pretty much full speed. The last stop of the night Bill parks who I had spoke with earlier in the day was saying “it’s been a while since I’ve pulled in a big one.” Well, he did just that and boated a 200 pound bluefin on 60 pound test! With fish all over the deck and the fish hold completely stacked we had to leave them biting and the boys on deck Brian and Jose went to work and started filleting the fish into the sunrise and beyond as we made our way into the island.


A lot of us slept in that morning due to a late night of dropping and winding. When the boys were done filleting fish, we started catching calico bass and other island critters before the first school of yellows swam through. They were biting our nearly dead bait and a few guys getting some on surface irons. At about 12:30 jeff let us know that it was time to head home. When the dust finally settled our final fish count was 38 Dorado, 17 Yellowtail, and 76 Bluefin tuna from 50-200 pounds.


This was a very memorable trip for me and getting to share the experience with this group is very special. I always look forward to these trips to share time with my dad whether we catch fish or not but this trip provided memories for a lifetime getting to pull on these fish so close to home with a great group of guys.


Jake Chutney


Day 1 Jackpot: Tom Hill


Day 2 Jackpot: Bill parks



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Trip #4: Boat: Thunderbird 2 day Departs: Thursday August 8th Fishing: August 9th & 10th Returns: August 10th PM “In every species of fish I’ve angled for, it is the ones that got away that thrill me the most”. — Ray Bergman: The late Ray Bergman was born in Nyack, New York in 1891 & died there in 1967. He wrote for "Outdoor Life" magazine for 26 years. I am not going to bore you with the same deck foreplay that usually starts these scribe histories. Yes, Hayden showed up before dawn. Yes, guys dropped their bags and went to their usual watering holes and dinner spots. What was unique is Paul forgot his tackle box. That, I would think, would be hard to do….but he did scurry home and get what ne needed. By the goodness of all on the deck, he was allowed to keep his place in line. Ian and I have “day jobs” so we did not show up to see the morning coffee being made at Newport Landing Restaurant. Instead we arrived at 6 PM. 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We had at least 2 loaded up consistently on that stop, with schoolies of 25-40 pounds. We dragged in 52 BFT on that stop with a few Yellow Tail coming aboard as well. Jim (6) Brian (4), BJ (6) and Saif were pretty active with nice numbers and good quality. Andy and Ryan pulled in some nice Yellows. It was good to see that Ryan could still pull on fish. His back, for the most part, held up while fishing for Pelagics. Fly line was the set-up of choice on this stop, but Yoyos and drop shots were also successful. We moved off this part of the Bank and moved to shallow water as the bite seemed to taper off as we continued to fish that stop. There were some that thought we should stay….Captain Jeff made the right decision! At 8:30 we pulled up into more shallow waters at 120 feel and anchored. We were not alone, in looking around there were at least 10 other Sport Boats in the area sitting on the same shallow bank. We moved off that anchor around 11 AM. We had to move as the boat LIMITED OUT on Blue fin with 104 boated (that includes the 52 from the earlier spot). We also bagged 35+ Yellow Tail! What was great about that stop was the quality of fish and the ability to catch YT and BFT at the same spot. If you had a Drop Shot on or you were Yoyo-ing, or fly line you were hooking up! It was an epic morning bite and one for the record books. Saif bagged 16 fish (10 BFT /6 YT) BJ- 11 (9 BFT/2 YT), Jim- 13 (11BFT/2 YT) and Steve- 10 (8 BFT/2 YT). These 4 guys caught 50 of the 145 fish caught…well done guys. (NOTE: I’m sure I missed another Big Hitter on this list, so apologies if I missed someone…I was too busy wrestling my own catch!). Since everyone had smiles on their faces and a full fish hold, Jeff moved us to bottom fishing. The Bank always shines with Big Reds and a sprinkling of other cod mixed in. Jeff let the boat know that we were headed off to bottom fish and gear up for bite. Everyone has their “ultimate” bottom set-up. I like the double dropper loop with a bunch of squid, Saif showed on deck with a large Blue Fin knife Jig. As I looked at the different rigs, I catch Mike with a dildo strapped onto his line! What the hell is that? The “tail” was long and the head would make any porn star blush. It did catch fish, but Mikey was bummed that his tail got eaten off. The knife jig stole the show as Saif brought up some huge cod monsters from the deep. I was fishing next to Paul and, on the drop, he got nailed. He was fishing a Tranx 500, so coming up was not fun; but he pulled up 2 massive, beautiful reds that put a nice smile on his face! Unfortunately, Ryan did not have a smile on his face, the heavy swells and waves did a number on his back….not fun fighting those swells with a bad back. We made 2 different drifts and brought in some beautiful fish; Reds, Bocaccio, Vermillion, and a few Sheephead. I caught a huge White Fish that I was excited to cook up when I got home. Guys who wanted to “fill their sacks” had that opportunity and we made quick time to leave the swells and white capped waves. A third drift was not warranted. We headed to San Clemente (The Island, not the beach town) around 3 PM. Night fishing for Blue Fin was off the agenda with limits on the boat, so that offered up many options for the thirsty fisherman. Some started Happy hour early while others bunked down for a few hours. I decided to nap a bit and came up to quite a happy hour crew. It did not take long to join the party, Bourbon, tequilla and many wine bottles were found throughout the galley. Carmelo, standing in for Goofy, did an awesome job on dinner. We had baked chicken with a purple rice and salad. The salad was worth noting as it was a mixed green with tomatoes and cucumber…nice alternative to the bland head lettuce we usually see on these trips. No Goofy drama with this dinner. The dessert bars got handed out and no one had to beg….I’m sure some missed the banter. Day 1 JACKPOT Winner - Roy, who edged out Saif and BJ with a nice sized Blue Fin caught during the AM bite. Congrats Roy! We woke at Pyramid Cove with lines being wet around 6. This Scribe did not see the sun till 7ish, but no harm was done…no fish landed. Jeff moved us out of the Cove to hunt Yellow Tail. He stopped at Gold Beach where Hayden and Reilly caught 2 nice YT and we picked off a few Bonito and Calico. While at Gold Beach, Alex hooked a nice Yellow on his Yoyo and brought it to the rail, it was gaffed and “controlled” but as they moved it to the stern to lift it to the deck, the fish flipped off the gaffe and the jig! Go figure! Jeff did Alex right and gave him a Boat Yellow to make up for the gaffe (get it ha, ha). We left Gold beach and searched for other spots. We stopped on some Calico, stopped to fish YT, but never found a sweet spot till 11:30. Thunderbird pulled onto “Runway” and the spot lived up to its name. We fished there for 90 minutes and brought in18 yellows and missed many more than we bagged. All of these fish were of high grade 20-30#. I was pulling on a nice Yellow when my spool went off with a huge run…quite a fish! Then I hear Mike yelling from the top deck that I was on a seal…. my Jackpot lust was lost. We left Runway at 1 PM and started to head home. Bruce won the Jackpot and Fisherman of the Day. Congrats Bruce, great looking YT! As we were heading home I was chatting with Jake intently (as you do with Jake ) on the port side of the rail. We were into a good story intent in conversation when….Crash…on my head and 50% of Jake, a cooler was emptied from above deck! Ice cold water allowed us to sober up and laugh at the “accident”…still wondering if that was an accident or prank, but fun no matter! Our Junior Angler was Rowan, Ryan B’s girlfriend’s son. Great young man who was excited to be on his first overnight! He had some issues with waves and swells, but finally got his sea legs and enjoyed pulling in a few big fish. Great work by a future DWRRC Angler! What an epic fishing trip with great quality and a crazy consistent bite throughout the 2 days. Thanks to the folks who helped me Scribe, hard to keep up on such an action-packed trip. Dutifully submitted, Justin
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