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2024: Trip 8 - Thunderbird 2 Day

Trip #8:

Boat: Thunderbird 2 day

Departs: Thursday October 3rd

Fishing: October 4th, 5th

Returns: October 5th pm


Arriving at the dock a little later than I usually like to, the typical group as one would expect was all there. At this point I am starting to think that Hayden secretly lives at the landing, and only comes out of the shadows every couple weeks to fish with the club. It was overcast and on the cool side at the dock and I was beginning to regret only bringing shorts on the trip but figured with enough beer and maybe some stronger beverages I would find a way to stay warm throughout the trip.


The fishing had either been wonderful or complete garbage the days prior, but everyone was hoping the optimistic that we would locate some hungry fish.


After the standard, organized, boarding of the vessel we would call home for the next 2 days, we loaded up some great looking bait and off we went into the calm night. The plan was to head to Cherry Bank to hunt for the elusive bluefin.


Our crew consisted of Carmello, Steve, and Jarid with Captains Jeff and Chris. It was my first trip without Goofy, and there was a calmness in the galley that felt very unfamiliar but also a feeling that something was missing. The forecast was absolutely wonderful with very little wind and a swell that was almost non-existent. After the guys all set their gear up, they disappeared one by one into their bunks. 


Day 1 - Friday

Fishing began around 4am for some, with 2 bluefin being landed by Jim (81 lbs) and Ryan (87 lbs) just after 5am. Excitement was high with a couple of great grade fish coming over the rail, but we would soon lose that excitement. We continued to look for hungry schools, and look, and look…. We found several good schools swimming deep, but they would either disappear or avoid our bait like I avoid my mother-in-law.


At about 1130 Captain Jeff decided it was time to take a break and drop deep for some taco meat. The rockfish grade was great with Luke pulling in the largest Salmon Grouper he had ever seen. It weighed in at 11 lbs, but I swear it looked bigger. We continued our taco quest until around 245 before resuming the look for the bluefin. We looked, and looked, and looked some more with zero success until dinner time. At this point, I figured if I wasn’t going to catch any fish I might as well catch a buzz.


With a great dinner from Carmello consisting of chicken, rice, salad, the cocktails and conversations flowed into the evening until it was time to look yet again for these stupid fish. We looked, and looked, and looked some more. At some point only 4 were still standing. Jim, Cory, Ryan, and I were hanging out hoping to come across something to catch. We did our best to stay well hydrated, and that was about the only thing we were successful with late into the night. Of the 4, Ryan was the first to throw in the towel sometime around 2 or 230, I think... The remaining soldiers finally surrendered at about 315 and made our way to our bunks.


Final count for the day was 2 bluefin and 52 rockfish.


Day 2 – Saturday

With a disappointing day 1 behind us, day 2 did not bring a change. We drove hundreds of miles looking, and looking, and looking. I think Captain Jeff was more disappointed than any of us. We sat around and ate what we could of the endless amounts of chips, which seemed to be the only snack option when people were shopping prior to the trip.


On the upside, we had a great group of guys and some of the calmest seas that I have ever seen.


Final count for day 2 was a big fat zero but I guess that’s the way fishing goes sometimes.


We returned to a quiet dock, and disembarked with our snack size bags of rockfish, and headed home.


Till next time,


James Harris

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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. 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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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July 29, 2024
Trip #3: Boat: Thunderbird 2 day Departs: Thursday July 25th Fishing: July 26th & 27th Synopsis: 23 supper athletes forfeit their chances of Olympic Gold to participate in our two-day-fishing-trip departing Newport Landing on charter boat Thunderbird. Tom Hill’s grandson, Ari and three guests join us for the trip. The catch includes 25 quality Yellowtail, one super-sized Bluefin Tuna, 23 Calico Bass and a variety of miscellaneous species. Saif Liswi takes both Friday and Saturday jackpots. The trip: 8:00 pm Thursday: Anglers board the Thunderbird. We take on about 60 scoops of sardines at the bait barge. A small number of live squid are also in the tanks as we leave the harbor for San Clemente Island. Boat operations are conducted by captains Jeff and Chris, cook Goofy and crew members Collen, Steve and Jared. 3:00 am Friday: Boat arrives at Pyramid Cove and anchors up. Dropper loop fishing in the dark commences while an abundance of squid attracted to the boat lights is harvested. Alex losses the first biter from line rubbing the hull. At 3:20 am Bill Parks lands the first Yellowtail. A lull follows. At about 4:30 we distinctly smell smoke from the island’s wildfire. Then a red sunrise. At 5:20 am, Bob, Tony, Jeffy and Chris land nice grade Yellowtails. We are surrounded in the Cove by boats including the Fury, Eldorado and Aggressor. Jeffy’s fishing line is snagged by a jig cast from the nearby Fury. It is quickly released with no fuss. The bite stalls. We round the East end of the island to the leeward side. 8:30 am Friday: Fly lining and jigging produce Yellowtail, Calico Bass, Bonita Whitefish and Barracuda. Noon to 2:00 pm Friday: Kevin lands a nice Yellowtail. We hopscotch with other sport boats northwesterly along the leeward side of the island. At various stops, we catch and release small Calico Bass, potpourri of island fish and more Yellowtail. We pass smoking vegetation on the ridge marking the edge of the island brush fire. A Navy helicopter operating overhead is dropping seawater on the fire. The Fury gives us sardines. We cruise past our old friend the Amigo, a boat the club had regularly chartered year’s back. 2:00 to 9:00 pm Friday: We make a 2 1/2 - hour northwesterly run leaving the west end of the island for open ocean where other boats are working the Bluefin. At 7:00 pm Kevin and Luke hookup. Large Bluefins overwhelm their tackle and breakoff. At 9:00 pm following a very tough fight, Saif lands a beast – a taped 148-pound Bluefin that would probably be another 15 pounds on a scale. Saif is exhausted. He wins Friday’s jackpot. A nice prime rib dinner with exuberant table-talk and wine follows as we head back to the island. 3:00 am Saturday. We arrive back at Pyramid Cove and start fishing the same spot. All is quiet until 6:00 am when Saif and Jimmy land two nice Yellowtail. Saif wins the Saturday jackpot giving him a clean sweep for Trip 3 – his fans hold up the broom. 6:30 am Saturday: Repeating the prior day’s strategy, we hopscotch with other boats along the leeward side of the island fishing bass and Yellowtail. I venture to say that maybe one out of twenty bass are keeper sized. To the east we see a Navy flotilla approaching the island. 1:00 pm. We lunch as the boat turns homeward bound for 7:00 pm arrival back at Newport Landing. The crew continues its excellent customer service helping us unload and collect our filleted fish. Driving out, traffic on Balboa Avenue is ugly as our cars creep off the peninsula with hordes of Saturday beach goers.  Best regards, Andy Sienkiewich
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