
First-time visitors from Washington and new amigos, Barbette Davidson and Robert Brooks got into a sweet dorado bite out’ve Bahia de Los Muertos early in the week with some good quality fish. The bite at Las Arenas has definitely improved since earlier in the season.

Oh the agony! Ed does his best to hold up one of his dorado caught on his panga while our popular driver, Carlos looks on. Nice rack of fish to take home standing there at the beach at Bahia de Los Muertos!

This was just crazy! Normally, flat and blue and pretty-as-a-postcard, two of our captains struggle to get the panga back on the trailer and out of the water. Note the chop and muddy waters from rains! Southern winds whipped the normallly calm seas into a froth on one of the few days of the season when it was just crazy to try to get fish. The sun was out but the seas were not being kind. This was the remnant of Tropical Storm Kristy that was blowing several hundred miles away.

La Paz has gotten more rain in the past 3 weeks than the last 3 years! Almost every afternoon, for about 10-30 minutes we get localized rain or thundershowers. Sometimes just breezers and sometimes gully-washers! This is the view outstide Tailhunter Restaurant. Ten minutes later the sun was out blazing again!

For those of you who have fished with us over all the years, you know how dry our desert looks and what the drive to Las Arenas looks like! Well, after 3 weeks of rain…TAKE A LOOK! Grass is growing. Flowers are blooming. Butterflies are all overthe place. The WILD SKINNY COWS ARE GETTING FAT! Everything is green! The mountains are sprouting jungles! It’s like the earth has turned into a giant Chia Pet!

Our amigo, Al Yu, wasn’t trying to catch a billfish. He had a sardine out on light tackle trying to catch a dorado when this sailfish bit on 30 pound test! Fight on! They were going to release the fish, but it had swallowed the hook. Still a nice catch, Al! We did get quite a few hook ups on sails this week, all were either released or got off!

Jeanine Stenzel and her husband Roy are technically our La Paz neighbors since they completed their house in La Paz and they come to visit us every few weeks always trying to get in a day of fishing! Our amiga poses with one of several she hooked fishing with our Las Arenas fleet from Bahia de Los Muertos.

Had to post up this one of our daughter, Jessie, with another dorado and the big smile. Check out the skies. Pretty much how it looks every afternoon just before the rains come. Fortunately, most of the times everyone is already in and able to enjoy the cool downpour over a cold cerveza. Jess was fishing near Espirito Santo Island when she hooked this one!

Fred Li had a few banner days of fishing with us and really got into the dorado like this one taken north of La Paz!
WORKING A LITTLE HARDER FOR OUR FISH THIS PAST WEEK BUT DORADO AND SOME TUNA KEEP IT BENT!
La Paz-Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of Sept. 9-16, 2012
It was hard to get too excited this week. We have so many great weeks of fishing I’d have to say this week was OK. There was some good fishing. There was some great fishing. And then, there were some bad days of fishing. That about sums it up.
No way to put a finger on it. We continued to have tropical conditions with variable weather that dropped mega sunshine on us one minute with tons of humidity followed by growing clouds in the afternoon and often heavy localized thundershowers. (By “localized” I mean it would rain like the 2nd coming of Noah in one spots but ¼ mile away, it would be dry as toast!). The weather might be a part of it. We have not had a hurricane but instead have had about 3 weeks of mini-showers. Very welcome to the area since we’ve not had pretty much any rain for about 3 years. However, in the last 3 weeks, we’ve had more cumulative rain than in the past 3 years combined. By most opinions, we’ll take little afternoon thundershowers over a hurricane any day!
But, it also meant variable fishing. I mean, everyone got fish. If you fished more than 1 days, you were gonna get fish. Most of it was going to be dorado. But one day, you could be absolute aces and the hero on the beach and the next day, with no changes at all, you might end up with barely one fish! 5 pangas would fish an area and 3 would get limited early and be back on the beach. One would get 3 fish. The last panga fishing exactly in the same spot would get one little dorado! The next day it might be all reversed.
The highlight of the week was the tuna that blew up at Las Arenas. In fact, it was an epic bite off Cerralvo Island that some guys described “the bite of a lifetime!” “All we could want.” “Just stupid good fishing!” About mid-week the football tuna…8-12 pounders…just came boiling and biting about anything that got thrown in the water! Just wild. We all thought that it was finally the beginning of “tuna season.”
Well…
Not so fast. Just like in the past when the tuna sort of peeked out…the tuna disappeared the next day in rough choppy waters spurred by high winds that made it literally crazy to even try to get to the tuna grounds. (See the photo above of what Muertos Bay looked like!) And that was that. As the week went on, a few tuna popped up, but nothing to get too excited about.
So, that’s the bite. Dorado. Some tuna. A few sailfish. Oh…and a wahoo. Dorado are still the big biters so I figure we’ll let these waters calm down from the tropical storms and they’ll come foaming back.
I did want to share one story from Barbette Davidson who fished with us this week with Rob Brooks (See the top photo with all the dorado). She tells us that on the plane ride back to Washington Rob fell asleep.
“Robert fell asleep on the plane and was slouching forward a little bit and all of a sudden he pulled back hard against the seat with his head and lifted his arms. This woke him up and I asked him what he was doing and he said he thought he had a “fish on”. LOL he was dreaming of catching fish!”
That’s our story!
Jonathan and Jilly
Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International
Website: www.tailhunter-international.com
Mexico Office: Tailhunter International, 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
U.S. Mailing Address: Tailhunter International, P.O. Box 1149, Alpine CA 91903-1149
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863
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Tailhunter Weekly Fishing Report:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm
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