
Stan Andre got 6 tuna at Las Arenas then was just inside Muertos Bay only about 70 yards from beaching the boat. He was dragging a Rapala in 10 feet of water when he got slammed by this toothy wahoo!

Just a great photo of Leslie Pilkington and one of her yellowfin tuna. Great colors! Leslie is from Orangevale CA

Captain Victor is flanked by some of our regular amigos…Dave Wakabayashi and Lloyd Okimura from Sacramento CA and their yellowfin at the start of the week.

From Cypress CA, brother Danny and Gary Okizaki hung some nice tuna as well as rainbow runners (yellowtail cousins) while fishing out’ve Bahia de los Muertos.

Terry Hawk had to postpone his trip last year when we got smacked by Hurricane Odile. He more than made up for it with a great week of fishing. His first day with Captain Pancho he posted a nice rack of tuna.

Captain Armando with some of our newest Tailhunter amigos. Dennis and Sue Matheson from Kennewick, Washington hold some of their tuna. Dennis used to be an Alaska guide.

Hard to find nicer guys than Gary Pilkington. Gary started his week with some good yellowfin fishing out’ve Bahia de Los Muertos.

Sacramento brothers, Joe and Dave Kevin were on their first trip with us and had a good first day before weather set in and hold 6 of their tuna with Captain Armando lending a hand.

A wahoo is a wahoo, right! Nicole Lawver was fishing for the first time with us and including tuna also posted this nice little great eating wahoo! Husband Ron got one later in the week.
ERRATIC UNPREDICTABLE FISHING AND CONDITIONS!
La Paz – Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of Oct. 4-11, 2015
It’s pretty much a repeating record these days as far as fish reports are concerned. Fishing and weather this season are simply unpredictable. It rains when it should be sunny. It’s blazing hot when the weather predicts thunderstorms. Dorado bite like crazy in one spot then the next day it’s like looking for a missing sock in the dryer. You go fishing for pargo and you catch a wahoo. A spot that hasn’t yielded fish all year starts raging with foaming fish out’ve nowhere. The water is about 90 degrees and we catch fish that are supposed to be in cooler winter and spring waters. Fish like tuna that we haven’t seen in two years suddenly pop up and go on the chew. Extreme high tide. Extreme low tides. Eclipses and giant full moons. What next?
A sign of the apocalypse? Nah. Not quite that serious. Alot of it has to do with the El Nino. You just go fish. It is what it is. It’s a cycle we have to push through until the next cycle. The world has been doing it since…well…a long time. It still beats working.
Las Arenas/ Muertos Bay Fishing
If a spot had been worth fishing this past week, for once, it was with our Tailhunter Las Arenas Fleet at Muertos Bay. Historically, this time of year, the area is on fire. But, the past two years because of El Nino, bait has been an issue. Fish have been sporadic. Until about 3 weeks ago.
Bait showed up. And we started getting more dorado. More billfish. More pargo, cabrilla, sierra and yellowtail (wrong time of year, but who cares?), more jack crevalle and bonito too. The baits are very very small, but it’s better than nothing. They worked. Still not wide open by any stretch and there are THOSE days when it truly is scratchy, but comparatively speaking, there was action to be had most days.
And then, the football yellowfin tuna appeared about a week-and-a-half ago.
And that changed the game. We haven’t seen tuna in 2 years.
We started getting 4, 7, 9 or more tuna per boats. Nothing huge, but still fun 8-20 pounders. Perfect for most folks! Mix that in with a few dorado, lots of bonito, some billfish and it made for a fun day. I have no idea where the rooster fish have gone to. But no one eats rooster fish. And the tuna and other species filled ice chests nicely! Plus lots of our anglers were bringing us tuna to the Tailhunter Restaurant to cook and make into sashime and poke!
La Paz Fishing
All season, La Paz has been our go-to spot. If nothing else, there was always bait and the dorado were always accommodating. There was always action because even tho’ the dorado are small by our standards, they bit ravenously many times, or at least by the end of the day, you had a full box of them plus the huge bonito (larger than the dorado) were worth the battles.
This week, I could only describe the dorado bite as anemic. One day every panga would be slammed and many back early with good numbers of dorado. The next day the pangas would be back telling me they barely scratched out a handful of fish. The day after that, half the boats would have solid numbers and the others fishing the exact same spots would struggle. Again, that word…unpredictable. Oh…and one panga got a huge wahoo. Out’ve nowhere. First one of the season. Why? Where? Why now?
And, as I write this report, the sun is out. But it’s raining. And the stupid weather report said no rain at all and it would be sunny. They were half right.
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, 8030 La Mesa Blvd. #178, La Mesa CA 91942
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863
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Tailhunter Weekly Fishing Report: https://fishreport.jonathanroldan.com/
Tailhunter YouTube Videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/pangapirate
“When your life finally flashes before your eyes, you will have only moments to regret all the things in life you never had the courage to try.”
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