Trip #3:
Boat: Thunderbird 1.5 day
Departs: Thursday July 7th
Fishing: July 8th
Returns: July 9th am
“Limits are a secret blessing, and bounty can be a curse.”
Twyla Thorpe*
Well, Trip 3 was pretty epic. We struggled to fill the boat with members, so had 6 guests on board. We certainly got our value out of this trip with Boat limits of Bluefin and calico with a great mix of high-grade YellowTail. We also had our fun with Bonita, Barracuda and sand bass rounding out the trip.
We started fishing at 4 AM, for some of us 4 AM came quick as the Newport Deck Party had clouded our brains a bit. We started 15 miles Southwest of San Clemente Island droppping knife jigs and flat falls with both Captain Jeff and David (guest of Chris) each landing a 30-40# grade BFT. We fished there for some time, but no other action followed. You could hear the frustration in Jeff’s voice over the boat loud speaker to “roll em up”.
From 5 to 8:30 we went on a boat ride, with Jeff apologizing that nothing is worth stopping for. He spent quality time in the tuna grounds looking in familiar spots and doing all he could to find the schools. However, optimism was soon in the air as Jeff announced that one of his buddies, a 6-pack Captain of the Blackfish, turned him onto a bite and he was going to meet up and see what we find.
So, 6-packs, by names sake, have 6 people aboard. The bait tank matches that small load. Our Thunderbird holds 25+ people, and the bait tank of the Thunderbird matches that number too, so off Scuba goes and starts chumming this school and the BITE IS ON!
My guest, Alex Norkus, had a rough night with the rollers, so he was in bed trying to feel better. I landed one then found his bunk and rolled him out of bed saying “you can miss this bite!”. Before he could even take a leak, I handed him a live rod and he was off to catch his first Blue Fin and first “real” pelagic! Thanks to the Thunderbird Crew for helping the tenderfoot throughout the trip.
So based on the grade of fish we were pulling on 30-40#, a 30# set up was the magic set-up. Brian broke off 3 times with 25# and moved up. Everyone communicated and helped drag 80 Bluefin over the rail from 8:30 to around 9:45. Many caught 2 or more and Jeff rightly called off the catching (not the fishing) at 9:45. Brandon boated the lone Yellowtail on that stop, but more YT was in our future!
The Crew was pretty psyched, as you can imagine, and there was a rumor that we were headed back to the Newport Harbor happy with our fill. That rumor went sideways as Jeff looked to motor us close to SCI and put us on YT and Calico to finish out the trip.
As we motored, the talk of the boat was set-ups…”what are you rigging up”. What weight? Dropper loop? Yo Yo? Small flat Fall? Colt Sniper? We all tied up our favorites and went to SCI to see what we could drag into the boat.
Early lunch came and Goofy did his best to not smile while we recommended the quests ask Goofy for Provolone cheese and spicey mustard on their burgers. Those jokes never get old…… to us. After lunch we had a few Calico Bass stops with Luke, Brian and Bill bringing on some nice sized Calicos. We had plenty of keeper sized Calicos on these stops, as well as some fun Bonita and Barracuda mixed in. Everyone enjoyed a strong bite.
Tommy’s Grandson, Ari, joined the trip and bagged a trifecta; he caught Calicos, YT and Bluefin. Not bad for a 11 year-old-ish junior angler. He did a great job working the boat, taking some schooling and learning on his first overnight trip. Hats off to Luke, Bill and others who really mentored Ari as Tommy tended to his bag limits (Actually Tom was a great, attentive Grand Dad and should be very proud!).
Around 4 PM the hunt was on for Yellowtail.
We worked the SCI “hot spots” and were very successful. Of note, Mike Harris pulled out 2 very nice Yellows, around 25#, even fighting them on those silly spinners! Jeff moved us in and out of these spots and we ended up with 20 on board by the time we headed home. Of note, we saw so much boiling action from the YT but few bites. The fish are out there fellas.
The great thing about this trip was the quantity, quality and action we had for a 1.5 day. Great work by Jeff to put us on fish and this group landed them! It was a special trip and one I will not soon forget…great memories. Thanks DWRRC!
Steve Richard won Jack Pot with a 41.8# BFT
Bill Parks earns patch with 35# BFT at tape. Though this was close with many of these fish being in that same weight class.
Twyla Thorpe: Twyla Tharp is one of America's most important contemporary dance choreographers. Since graduating from Barnard College in 1963, she has choreographed more than 125 dances, five Hollywood movies, directed and choreographed two Broadway shows, written two books, and received numerous awards.