Long Range Fish Report
From Sportfishing
From Sportfishing
Fish Report for 2-3-2012
The swells are up keeping anglers at the dock but sand dabs and Dungeness Crabs are still plentiful
2-3-2012
Allen Bushnell
The usual big winter swells are keeping many anglers at the dock. When conditions permit, sand dabs are available by the bucketload and the Dungeness crab are still plentiful. Best bet for sand dabs locally is to fish 120-200 feet of water, any sandy area can provide sand dab action. Dungeness have been trapped in as shallow as 100 feet of water, but the best hunting remains in the deeper areas-at least 140 feet, on out to 220 or 230 feet of water.
Don't have a boat and want to go fishing? No problem. Head down to the Capitola Wharf, where the perch bite is coming on. Ed Burrell reports some good perch fishing off the wharf, with big black perch, walleyes and barred surfperch being caught daily by the diligent anglers. Most find success using shrimp baits on sabiki rigs, or other mutliple small hook leaders. The center portion of the wharf has been producing best lately, though most barred perch are caught just behind the surfline.
Ron Martin from Aptos found the bigger barred perch while surfcasting the beaches south of Rio Del Mar on Wednesday. "It was slow this morning, I only fished a couple of hours. I caught one fish about a pound on a grub. It was a pretty low tide with a swell and a lot of push." Martin has been frequenting those beaches and finding fewer, but 'bigger variety' fish. Now that the Pajaro River has been opened to the sea, don't be surprised if roving striped bass hit your bait or lure in that area as well.
The recent rains raised expectations for steelheaders who fish the San Lorenzo and other local streams. We have received very little information on the number of fish, locally, but conditions look fairly good. Flows are still very low, however.
The larger northern rivers are doing very well for anglers fishing from driftboats and even from the banks. Tim Obert from Santa Cruz submitted his report this week from the Smith River. Obert and a couple Santa Cruz friends fished from the banks of the Smith on Wednesday, using roe floated with Mad River fish pills. He reported multiple hookups for everyone, including a few that exceeded the limits of his 12-pound test.
Don't have a boat and want to go fishing? No problem. Head down to the Capitola Wharf, where the perch bite is coming on. Ed Burrell reports some good perch fishing off the wharf, with big black perch, walleyes and barred surfperch being caught daily by the diligent anglers. Most find success using shrimp baits on sabiki rigs, or other mutliple small hook leaders. The center portion of the wharf has been producing best lately, though most barred perch are caught just behind the surfline.
Ron Martin from Aptos found the bigger barred perch while surfcasting the beaches south of Rio Del Mar on Wednesday. "It was slow this morning, I only fished a couple of hours. I caught one fish about a pound on a grub. It was a pretty low tide with a swell and a lot of push." Martin has been frequenting those beaches and finding fewer, but 'bigger variety' fish. Now that the Pajaro River has been opened to the sea, don't be surprised if roving striped bass hit your bait or lure in that area as well.
The recent rains raised expectations for steelheaders who fish the San Lorenzo and other local streams. We have received very little information on the number of fish, locally, but conditions look fairly good. Flows are still very low, however.
The larger northern rivers are doing very well for anglers fishing from driftboats and even from the banks. Tim Obert from Santa Cruz submitted his report this week from the Smith River. Obert and a couple Santa Cruz friends fished from the banks of the Smith on Wednesday, using roe floated with Mad River fish pills. He reported multiple hookups for everyone, including a few that exceeded the limits of his 12-pound test.
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