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Archive for the ‘Cerralvo Island Fishing’ Category

Oh-oh! Now what? After a slow week of fishing, the bite north of La Paz fired up and anglers like first-timer Erik Rose from Arcadia CA had the dilemma of wondering what to do with all the fillets they had to bring home. Seen on the beach are yellowtail, triggerfish, amberjack, cabrilla and snapper.Unbridled joy outta Keith Brownfield who came down from Washington just to catch a roosterfish and, although it was rough early in the week, he got a 30 pounder his first day. He followed it up the next day with this 40 pound fish taken near Espiritu Santo Island. He couldn't have been happier! All the roosters were released.

 

Unbridled joy outta Keith Brownfield who came down from Washington just to catch a roosterfish and, although it was rough early in the week, he got a 30 pounder his first day. He followed it up the next day with this 40 pound fish taken near Espiritu Santo Island. He couldn't have been happier! All the roosters were released.

It was a great week to kick into amberjack...the bigger tastier cousin to yellowtail. Dave Rose made a banzai run driving from Denver CO, to get in on the fishing. He does this several times a year and was rewarded with this trophy 50-pound class amberjack. Balandra Bay in the background and Captain Chito.

 

From San Francisco, Wade Ichimura was able to get into that late week bite north of La Paz where he got into some nice yellowtail, pargo and cabrilla on live bait and yo-yo iron.Fishing with our Tailhunter Las Arenas fleet was difficult this week. Scratchy at best as winds, waves and cloudy water made fishing less-than-ideal. However, amigas like our "cookie queen" (she always brings us cookies from Oregon) put some nice jack crevalle and this good amberjack in the box.

 

A beautiful Baja Golden Group for Chris Pallemaerts that he took fishing near Espirito Santo Island. In almost 16 years here in La Paz, I've only seen about 1/2 dozen of these beautiful fish taken. Great eating.

A beautiful Baja Golden Group for Chris Pallemaerts that he took fishing near Espirito Santo Island. In almost 16 years here in La Paz, I've only seen about 1/2 dozen of these beautiful fish taken. Great eating.

 

Bill Redalen, all the way from Pittsburgh PA, on his first Baja trip holds up another one of the nice amberjack taken this week. That's Bahia de Los Muertos in the background.We had some colorful fish this week! Gilber Jue from the Bay Area poses with a red pargo (huachinango) taken with our Tailhunter La Paz fleet. Great eating rock fish and highly prized by the markets and restaurants in La Paz.

 

We had quite a few "first timers" this week including Richard Jacques from England with a fish he said "is by far the biggest fish I've ever caught" holding up a La Paz yellowtail that was so big, it didn't fit into the picture!He says he has the "Baja Bug" after his first trip here to La Paz, but who can blame Eric Rose, as he holds a freshly gaffed yelllowtail. It's a thick heavy fish! Most of the yellowtail this week were in the 25-40 pound class.

 

Fishing with our Tailhunter Las Arenas fleet was difficult this week. Scratchy at best as winds, waves and cloudy water made fishing less-than-ideal. However, amigas like our "cookie queen" (she always brings us cookies from Oregon) put some nice jack crevalle and this good amberjack in the box.

We had some colorful fish this week! Gilber Jue from the Bay Area poses with a red pargo (huachinango) taken with our Tailhunter La Paz fleet. Great eating rock fish and highly prized by the markets and restaurants in La Paz.

He says he has the "Baja Bug" after his first trip here to La Paz, but who can blame Erik Rose, as he holds a freshly gaffed yelllowtail. It's a thick heavy fish! Most of the yellowtail this week were in the 25-40 pound class.

 

SLOW WEEK FINALLY KICKS IN WHEN WINDS SLOW DOWN PRODUCING YELLOWTAIL AND AMBERJACK

 La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of May 1-8, 2011
 
The early part of the week was as picky and scratch as could be imagined.  I mean…well…it sucked!  (for lack of a better word).  Winds were strong enough to generate big swells that actually threw waves on the La Paz waterfront and got cars wet and turned the fishing  grounds green and dirty.  Pretty frustrating fishing.  We got some bonito and some small pargo (lost some big pargo) and some really nice roosters …but no one really keeps roosters and smaller fish were getting released.  So the counts weren’t very encouraging and coolers looked slack.  Not much you could do except shrug and hope for better.  Credit to our anglers who hung in there!

I mean…honestly…for those of you who have been reading my fishing reports all these years…before Thursday…I HAD ONE PHOTO for the entire week to post in the fishing report!  It was THAT SLOW!!!

But then Thursday rolled up and winds started calming and waters went flat!

We stopped most of our anglers from fishing Las Arenas and switched them over to fish our La Paz fleet instead and WE FOUND FISH!!!

We thought they were gone, but BIG YELLOWTAIL, PARGO and CABRILLA bent rods and came to chew on baits and iron.  Big fish lost.  Big fish caught. Even some big amberjack too!  Empty ice chests started to fill and we started to see the smiles again.  For alot of our anglers, spending the last day fishing La Paz meant an 11th hour reprieve after several tough days fishing, meant going home with a successful trip to battle some larger fish!

It seems that as long as the winds stay down, we’ll be OK.  Very encouraging stuff!  Also, more sargasso weeds building so that could be a harbinger for dorado showing up soon!  This week looks like it might be a repeat of last week. The forecast shows stronger winds early in the week tapering off as the week goes on.  Will keep you posted!

That’s our story

Jonathan and Jill  

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

 

 

TAILHUNTER FISHING FLEET #1 Rated on Trip Advisor

TAILHUNTER RESTAURANT BAR #1 Rated in La Paz on Trip Advisor

 

 

Now follow us on FACEBOOK TOO

 

Website: www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863

 

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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Monica Beehn from San Francisco has fished our waters here in La Paz often and usually shows the rest of us how it's done like with this trophy-sized cabrilla she holds up in front of Captain Archangel and eat a live sardine near Bahia de Los Muertos.It would be hard to find a guy who is such an enthusiastic angler as Rich Jones who visits us all the way from Utah. I'm glad he got into the tail-end of our great yellowtail bite we've had the last two months. There are still a few YT around up to about 40 pounds, but they're picky now as the waters warm. Rich got this north of La Paz.

It would be hard to find a more enthusiastic angler than Utah fisherman, Rich Jones. He's always on fire for fishing! Glad he got into the tail-end of our great yellowtail bite with this nice forktail he got north of town. There's still a few around up to 40 pounds, but as the waters get warmer we're seeing fewer of the big jacks.Big kisses from our amiga, Lisa Cruz, from Washington who outdid so many of the frustrated veteran anglers by nailing this fat pargo liso on her first try fishing with our Tailhunter fleet of Las Arenas.Mitch Chavira is our San Diego amigo who always rips fish down here, but even he admitted it was "scratchy" compared to other trips. Still, he hung tough and put several nice yellowtail aboard with Captain Juan.

 

Mike and Mike ("Mike Squared") show off a pretty typical catch with our Las Arenas fleet right now...smaller yellowtail (great eating size!) and pargo! They brought the fillets over to our Tailhunter Restaurant on the malecon for a big cook-up!

 

Our San Diego amigo, Mitch Chavira makes several trips a year here to La Paz with his son, Cole, and has had many an epic trip, but admitted that it was a bit "scratchy" this past week and they had to work hard for their fish but they still managed several nice yellowtail.

It was a good week for roosterfish for both of our Tailhunter Fleets. The only problem is that I don't have many good photos this week since most of them get released! (which is a good thing!). But the roosters have been 10-50 pounders!A young sealion from the sealion colony north of La Paz checks us out. With waters warming, it's a great time for diving and snorkeling in La Paz. A visit to the sealion colony is always a kick. (See the video clip below)

 A MIXED BAG OF FISHING TO FINISH OUT THE MONTH !

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of April 23-30, 2011

It was an interesting week of fishing in La Paz waters.  It surely seems like summer already with air temperatures already in the mid to upper 90’s and water temperatures not far behind.  To put it mildly, I think fish are confused…and so are the anglers!  No one know what to make of the early season temperature spikes.  The cold water fish like the yellowtail seem to have gone to deeper water. The warm water fish like marlin, sailfish and dorado are acting like the curtain came up too early on showtime!  They’re not sure if they are quite ready to bite!

 

So, bottom line, we’re getting alot of different varieties of fish.  No species in overwhelming numbers and every day seems different.  Some days it’s better for roosters.  Other days, it’s a pargo day.  Another day, it’s a smattering of this and that with each panga coming back with a different story about what they caught.  

 

For our Las Arenas fleet, we go into roosterfish up to 40 pounds…pargo up to 24 pounds (with many lost to the rocks)…cabrilla…a few dorado…some sailfish hooked up and quite a few bonito.  There’s still some firecracker yellowtail around as well in the 10-12 pound class.  Although not good eating, the roosterfish have really been fun this week and a welcome biter when other fish aren’t really going off.

 

For our La Paz fleet, it  appears that we’re about done with the fantastic yellowtail bite of March and April.  It has been replaced with pargo, roosters  (some big boys too!)  and big cabrilla with lots of marlin and sailfish cruising around and seemingly on the verge of biting.  In fact, may be by the time you’re reading this, they will be on a full-blown chew.  I’m seeing quite a bit of sargasso weed floating in the channel plus sardines and flying fish in abundance. All the conditions seem like they’re coming together!

FLASH NEWS!

Just as I’m writing this, I got a report of some wahoo at the south and north end of Cerralvo Island as well as some slugger yellowtail and some tuna that showed up on the north end!  Plus squid floating as well with the commercial guys throwing nets on them!  Will keep you posted.  We’ll go do some recon!

 

VIDEO CLIPS OF THE WEEK

 

Fred and Lisa Cruz put this quick clip together for us of their first ever experience with dorado and pargo fishing with our Tailhunter Las Arenas Fleet:

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wkmyv36qaQY

 

On Easter Sunday, we put down the rods for the day and were invited for a day of diving and snorkeling at the sealion colony at Isolotes north of La Paz.  I’ve dove with the sealions numerous times over the years and they are always fun.  Never the same twice and the young ones are always clowns.  It’s a great day activity for a non-fishing day!

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hrBBNw5KbKY

 

That’s our story!

Jonathan and Jill

 

 

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

 

TAILHUNTER FISHING FLEET #1 Rated on Trip Advisor

TAILHUNTER RESTAURANT BAR #1 Rated in La Paz on Trip Advisor

 

Now follow us on FACEBOOK TOO

 
Website: www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863

.
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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This trophy pargo bruised him, beat him and nearly pulled him out've the boat, but Al Jones got the last laugh (plus a big plate of grilled pargo at the Tailhunter Restaurant that night!) taking this bad boy out've the rocks just outside of Bahia de Los Muertos where the pargo continue to crash and shred and frustrate anglers.

As the waters got warmer we had alot of billfish (sailfish and striped marlin) show up. As one person described it…”there were dozens and dozens just sitting on the surface.” Many weren’t willing to bite having gorged themselves during the full moon, but we did get some biters like this one that Rich Jones holds…his first striper and among three that he and his partner, Ron Hepner, hooked but got released. Rich got this one on 40 pound test and swallowed the hook.
Not a bad first day for a first timer to La Paz, but Fred and Lisa Cruz from Washington put 4 of these nice YT’s in the boat (and a trigger fish) plus had a marlin come unbuttoned. Later in the week they got dorado and pargo (see the photo below).
Blue water, white sand and a good day of fishing is a great combination here in La Paz. Felix Basadre and his dad fished 4 days with this this past week putting some nice yellowtail like this one in the boat .
Being from Washington, Fred Cruz is more used to pulling on ling cod and salmon but got to feel the power of the big red pargo that are ripping lines near Punta Perico these days.
It’s pretty hard not to have fun when this guy is around because he’s just so enthusiastic about his fishing and even when he’s not catching a fish, he never has a bad day! Rich Jones really works at his fishing and got one of our first nice dorado of the season out of Muertos Bay. He also got his first striped marlin ever as well.
85-years-YOUNG from Anaheim CA, Felix Basadre, Sr. can still pull fish and took some nice yellowtail this past week. The fish were more finicky this week and we had to work harder for them.

There weren't alot of them around this past week, but the yellowtail we got into were all quality fish like this one held by Ron Hepner at Balandra Beach taken on the El Bajo Seamount. Ron is from Salt Lake City UT.

 

 

FULL MOON WITH WIND PLUS WARMING WATER MAKE ANGLERS WORK FOR SOME GOOD FISH!

 

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of April 16-23, 2011

 

With  air temperatures now in the 90’s it’s looking like we’re transitioning out of our cool water fishing to our warm water fishing.  Unfortunately, that means we’re probably at the tail end (no pun intended) of our fantastic yellowtail season we’ve had although I’m sure we’ll still get a few strays here and there.  Looking at the Terrafin water charts, there’s warm water south of Cerralvo Island and then also just east of Espiritu Santo Island.

 

 Interestingly, that’s where we’re seeing marlin and sailfish seeming by the dozens sunning themselves and, although some are biting I think if we kick it up just a degree or two more, it’s gonna bust out WFO.  Let the full moon stuff pass and the water warm just a hair and BOOM!  It’s gonna be billfish rodeo time!  In fact, by the time you’re reading this, we might already be in it.  We have had a few flurries and fortunately, most of the billfish are getting released, but a few have been taken and we’re seeing that their bellies are full of squid like the schools balling up on the east side of Cerralvo Island and I think with the full moon that just passed the squid were coming up from the deep and the marlin were “on the chew” all night long stuffing themselves!  So…maybe we better get ready!  When the buffet table gets taken away, the billfish might just come charging! 

 

 Oh…yea…we also had to deal with some big rolling swell…higher and lower tides from the full moon…some days of strong winds…plus the changing water temps mentioned above.  By themselves, any one of two of those events would normally be no problem, but we got the multi-spanking whammy from mother nature and props to all our anglers this week for putting a great face on it and still coming away with some great fish!

 

 As for other species, like I said, we’re seeing perhaps the last hurrah for the yellowtail, but other cooler water species like pargo (barred pargo/ dog-tooth snapper/ mullet snapper) are still rolling in the shallows frustrating anglers as thehy take anglers to the rocks time-after-time.  Still, we did get a few nice ones this week…interestingly, the rookies did so much better than the veterans!  As well, we also got into some nice fat cabrilla (Mexican seabass) some amberjack, nice roosterfish and maybe not surprisingly some decent-sized dorado given the warmer waters!

 

 That’s our story!  Hope everyone has a great Easter.  God bless!

 

 Jonathan and Jill

 

 

 

 

 

 Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

 

 TAILHUNTER FISHING FLEET #1 Rated on Trip Advisor

TAILHUNTER RESTAURANT BAR #1 Rated in La Paz on Trip Advisor

 

 Now follow us on FACEBOOK TOO

 

 

 

 Website: www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863

 

.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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Every reason to strike a pose when you nail a fish like this big yellowtail taken by Bob Robbins from Arizona fishing north of town at the El Bajo Seamount where yellowtail put on a world-class show this past week and were the highlight of a week that had its ups and downs.

John Bolton from San Luis Obispo CA has fished with us many times, but it was a first time for his amigo, Doug Fulp from Texas. The two of them got into that epic yellowtail bite north of town where they estimated they caught and released or lost close to 20 fish in just several hours!

Theres a reason they call the La Paz area, the "roosterfish capital of the world." This fish isnt quite as large as the world-record- roosterfish caught in La Paz at 114 pounds, but this is an incredible beast of a fish caught by our own Jilly Roldan of Tailhunter. (See the video clip below). Jill hooked the fish just south of Bahia de Los Muertos on a slow trolled live sardine and fought it for about 20 minutes in a spectacular battle on 40 pound test with the fish estimated at 30-35 kilos (70 pounds). Jill had an incredible day on the water getting her first pargo liso (mullet snapper); pargo pero (dog-tooth snapper) and this world-class roosterfish which is her personal best largest fish! Even better, she worked extensively to revive the fish and get it swimming away strongly! Not 5 minutes after releasing this fish, she hooked another that may have been even larger and it went "dorado" on her leaping completely out of the air which is unusual for roosters. The tough fish then went into the rocks (like a pargo) where Jill battled back and forth until the big rooster sawed finally sawed her off. Capt. Gerardo lends a hand.

 

Its a good day ANYTIME you get one of these great fish outta the rocks! Gary Palese says it almost pulled him outve the boat twice and his fishing partner had to hold onto his shirt tails as he struggled to keep the fish out of the rocks fishing just several yards from the Perico cliffs. This dog tooth snapper (pargo perro) makes great eating!

Sometimes they even let me fish! I hooked 4 pargo this day just outside of Bahia de Los Muertos with fish crashing all around, but only managed to get this one pargo liso (mullet snapper) to the boat. Fish are tough and can humble anyone very quickly!

A FRESH ONE on the gaff! Gary Palese holds up on of the slugger yellowtail that exploded north of La Paz this week. The trick was having caballito or mackerel for bait although sardines and iron worked well also.

 

Dr. Desmond Sjauwfoekloy from Los Angeles makes last minute trips to us when he can get away from his busy schedule. Whenever he shows up it just seems the bite goes off for him and he nailed 8 big yellowtail this week like this one. I dont know if the fishing gets good because he shows up or he just shows up when the fishing is good, but he always does well!

Theres always something special about a first fish no matter the size. Its all about the smiles. Abby Oclassen from Colorado holds onto her very first fish...a sierra...caught fishing out of Bahia de Los Muertos.

CRAZY YELLOWTAIL FISHING NORTH OF LA PAZ BUT COULD THIS BE THE GRAND FINALE?

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of March 19-17, 2011

 

There’s good news and bad news.  First, for our Tailhunter Las Arenas fleet, things just went flat this past week.  And I’m not talking about the water smoothing out.  It was still a bit bumpy out there especially at the beginning of the week making it tough to get to Cerralvo Island and sometimes difficult to get sardines for bait.  Waters also got warmer which meant the algae bloom went off making the waters green and dirty.  None of this helped the bite except for pargo.  And you’d hook 10 and “maybe” get 1 to the boat.  That didn’t make for very good numbers of fillets to take home.

 

Now for the good news!  I’m glad we have two fleets…one in Las Arenas and one in La Paz!  We were able to switch many of our anglers to our La Paz pangas (where the fishing normally isn’t rolling full turbo just yet), but nonetheless was better than Las Arenas mainly because this past week we hammered some of the BEST yellowtail fishing in recent memories.  It wasn’t just the numbers of yellowtail, but also the size of the fish and the ferocity of their bite that made this so exciting. 

 

I don’t use the word “ferocity” very often but heading north to the El Bajo Seamount north of La Paz, the fish were FOAMING…yup…crashing the surface in displays we don’t often see.  According to some of our anglers, they were in such numbers at times that they were fighting to get any bait thrown in the water.  Double and triple hook-ups were the norm and the “smaller” fish were 25 pound class the the “larger” fish were in the 50-pound class (this is my captains talking…not the anglers!  To fishermen EVERY fish is 50 pounds!).   Getting the big baits early in the morning like the caballito and mackeral were the key and then chumming with sardines to get the yellowtail crashing and on the chew.   Anglers just had to be patient at times as it’s not easy to get the larger boats as they have to jig the up in the bay before going out to the fishing grounds.  You can’t just drive up to the bait man and order up a scoop or two!

 

Anyway, these fish were busting off 60 and 80 pound test at times, but normally 50 pound test with flurocarbon leaders worked well.   Here’s the rub…I’m not sure how much time we have on these things!  The way the Terrafin satellite images are showing the waters are warming up fast.  To the south at Las Arenas it’s already happened.  Once the waters get warmer, the yellowtail will shut down and I’m not sure what we’ll have after that.  Maybe great.  May it will hit a lull for a week or so until the waters keep rising and all the muck cleans up and the fish get acclimated and hungry again in which case it will be more blue water species rather than the yellowtail.  But, that’s just my guess.  Who knows?

 

For Las Arenas, as mentioned, the waters already have gone up a few notches.  Fishing isn’t bad.  It’s the ‘catching” that’s bad.  When the pargo are rolling in the shallows stopping them is sometimes just ridiculous.  I fished 3 days this week myself and broke off 8 fish and only got one 15 pounder to the boat.  But there are 20 and 30 pound fish moving in the school and all of them are horses!  But, there’s still sierra, some very good cabrilla and we also got some big roosters biting just south of Muertos Bay up to 70 pounds close to the cliffs.  Check out the photos and attached video!

 

VIDEO CLIP OF THE WEEK

Click this link to our youtube video clip of some of this week’s fishing action including some pargo and the big roosterfish!  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4S31HJffFU

That’s our story!

Jonathan and Jill

 Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

 TAILHUNTER FISHING FLEET #1 Rated on Trip Advisor

 

TAILHUNTER RESTAURANT BAR #1 Rated in La Paz on Trip Advisor

 Now follow us on FACEBOOK TOO

 

Website: www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863

 

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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In a strange early season showing, striped marlin in abundance showed up in La Paz waters giving anglers an unexpected bonus, especially just north of La Paz where one angler said, "They were thick and pesty. It seemed like dozens of marlin were seen every day!" Normally, we don't see stuff like this for about another few weeks or next month.

Our La Ventana buddy, recently from Long Beach, Roger Thompson was at it again. He was out with Captain Chito and had one of those banner days with limits of big yellowtail, a striped marlin, and huge cabrilla (see photos below).

Not bad for a first-time trip for Paul McBeth to La Paz. One day fishing...two striped marlin...5 yellowtail including this nice forktail on the gaff.

Perhaps even more prized than other gamefish for it's great eating...this trophy cabrilla (Mexican seabass) was taken by Roger Thompson who scaled it at 18 pounds!

This is just too pretty a picture not to post up. This is about a 140 pound striped marlin still underwater. It's a fat one if you check out the shoulders on this guy. If you've ever had one on the line, you can feel the power. Great shot! Thanks Roger!

Many of our readers wanted some samples of the artificials that we're using right now on some of these yellowtail when we're not using live bait. Across the bottom are samples of "iron"...basically what we call candybar type lures. Many companies make them but favorites include Tady, Ironman, Sumo, Salas, Raider and others. All of these are "heavy lures" and across the bottom from left to right are colors: scrambled egg (white, yellow, brown); blue and white; blue/ white; and dorado color (green, white, yellow). Also, above is a CD-18 size Rapala Magnum in green mackeral pattern that has also worked well slow trolled across the high spots and reefs. (Note the scratch, teeth and dried blood...these lures have all caught fish!)

APRIL ROLLS IN WITH SOME UNUSUAL FISHING!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of April 2-10, 2011

Except for some occasional strong winds that seem to diminish every week.  We’re into some great fishing weather with sunny skies and days in the mid-70’s.  Water temps, however, are really variable which might account for the really mixed fishing.  Not bad fishing…just “mixed fishing!”

How else to explain catching yellowtail (cold water fish) in the same spots as marlin and dorado (warm water fish)?  What we figure is that the surface temps are warming faster as we get to the spring time conditions.  The warmer water at the top has the blue water species while down deep, it’s still chilly which is where the yellowtail are hanging out.  In fact, I know for a fact it’s warmer on the top because the water vis has gone-to-poop.  It was great blue for a bit, but as is customary this time of year, when it hits a certain temperature, the algae bloom kicks in so the waters gets green and cloudy.  Not always the best for diving or fishing but it’s a temporary thing.  The water keeps getting warmer then WHAM…it hits a certain gradient and all of a sudden all the algae dies and disappears.  And the waters turn blue again.

As far as the fishing, it’s not been as great as it was a week or two ago, but certainly not bad.  The anglers who went-with-the-flow did pretty well.  Yellowtail still bit and we put some nice 20-40 pound fish in the boat mostly around the high spots and the island reefs but also the seamounts in deeper water.  Nice grades of moss-back fish!  In those same spots, the pargo are schooling up (if you can get through the schools of bonito) and we got some nice cabrilla as well.  But, the pargo are really frustrating…as many folks know.  If  the yellowtail aren’t biting then and the wind is blowing, you’re relegated to chasing the crazy pargo.  They bite, but they kick your butt too!  Most fish are lost and that makes for a long day!  Along the beaches, schools of small roosters and jacks kicked in which is great on a small spinning reel.

The real surprise are the marlin, especially north of town. As one angler said, “It felt like there were hundreds out there!”  Some fish are still pretty lethargic…so much so that one of our captains said he accidentally ran over two of them that were just sunning themselves.  He felt “bump bump” both times and saw the marlin skittering away.  Just not interested in baits, lure or anything 

Then, you run into another group of stripers and they almost fight each other to get to the bait.  We’re encouraging catch-and-release and most of the caught fish are getting let go.  But, for us to even be seeing marlin this early willing to bite is pretty great!  Normally, I would never suggest to anyone about coming in April to get a marlin!  But, that’s fishing!

That’s our story

Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

 

TAILHUNTER FISHING FLEET #1 Rated on Trip Advisor

TAILHUNTER RESTAURANT BAR #1 Rated in La Paz on Trip Advisor

 

Now follow us on FACEBOOK TOO

 

 
Website: www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863

.
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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Big smiles for Ken Gragg who landed this yellowtail fishing the El Bajo Seamount north of La Paz. The yellows are still there, but warming waters may change that as we saw more dorado and even marlin show up in the fish counts this week!

Someone has some fillets to bring home. That's Carl Lange and Gary Bray posing on the sands at Mogote with 8 yellowtail they caught north of La Paz. Sardines and iron still working!

Sometimes everyone is chasing the "trophy" fish that folks forget about all the other great species to catch like this excellent cabrilla (Mexican seabass) that Carl Lange got.

Not bad,young lady!... for first time fishing for Brady Davison getting a hand with his big yellowtail from Capt. Hugo out of Muertos Bay.

Gary Wagner knows he's got hamachi on the grill tonite with some yellowtail! Note the flat waters of Muertos!

 

YELLOWTAIL MIX IT UP WITH MARLIN AND DORADO…IN MARCH!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of March 27-April 2, 2011

I’m not sure how to characterize the week of fishing.   It was a good week of fishing.  Everyone caught fish.  The yellowtail bite has been fantastic, but some folks who wanted yellowtail caught other fish.  People who wanted “other species” got yellowtail!  So, there was just the “hint” of disappointment here and there! 

Look…  Everyone caught fish, but there’s so much variety out there right now that some guys wanted one species and caught others and vice versa!  I think the waters are warming and the bad news is, this may shut down the fantastic yellowtail bite we’ve had, but the good news is, we’ll be into the surface blue water species like dorado, billfish, tuna and wahoo before long. The other bad side is that when we hit a certain water temp level the algae bloom kicks off.  Waters get cloudy.  Good for our divers because that’s when we get whalesharks, but sometimes, not the best for fishing, at least for surface species.  Then, the waters go up a degree or two and BOOM…just like that the water clear to blue and the fish blow up again!   We’ll have to wait and see.

This week, we did get into more of that trophy-grade yellowtail.  These are those really nice 30-40 pound moss-back-golden-silver slugger fish that just hammer you when they bite!  They were still in the usual areas like El Bajo north of Espirito Santo Island and in various places around Cerralvo Island and Punta Perico.  In those same areas, we also got bit by pargo, cabrilla and amberjack with some nice shoreline action along the beaches by sierra, pompano, jack crevalle and roosterfish.  No shortage of bonito around either!

The problem was  (if you can call it that) is lots of anglers are here to nail the rock species like the yellowtail and pargo and cabrilla.  So, what do you do when dorado or billfish bite?  Well, that’s exactly what happened this week.  It’s still barely out of March and we had several hookups on striped marlin and well as dorado that really surprised the anglers as well as the captains.  Again, that just leads me to believe that waters might be warming up faster than normal!

We’ll have to keep an eye out for that as well as reports of sargasso weed already starting to build up in the channel which become haven for the dorado plus reports again of tuna at the north end of Cerralvo Island.

C’MON MAN!

One problem we did have was that so many boats from the East Cape to the south of us by 60 miles were running all the way up our area to fish.  That made for alot of traffic a few days.  One day, it was reported that as many as 50 boats were on the water (between cruisers, private boats, commercial pangas, sportfishing pangas)  !  Sheesh.  C’mon.

 Our little pangas and a lots of  cruisers jumping on our fishing spots.  Love the guys down there and wave at them all the time on the water, but some of their captains will drop right on our fishing spots even where commercial guys are just trying to eck out a meager living and the big cruisers with their thumping engines will just shut down the bite.  Lose-lose for everyone.   It’s not everyone…just a few rude captains. 

Or, on more than one occasion, I’ve seen the big cruisers just thoughtlessly criss-cross back and forth right in our panga chumlines.  It’s just a few idiots, but it doesn’t make for good relations.  I did hear of one set of commercial pangeros going at it with one cabron cruiser and started throwing things at them this week.   It’s a big ocean.  There’s more than one spot to fish.  We’re there at  6 a.m. and the cruisers show up at 8 or 9 and will just jump right on our spots. Shuts down the bite for everyone.   Bad ju-ju. Bad form.  I  have seen rude bahavior from panga captains too.  Plenty of room for everyone.  Just all have to be aware and courteous to each other.

That’s our story!

Jonathan and Jilly

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

 

TAILHUNTER FISHING FLEET #1 Rated on Trip Advisor

TAILHUNTER RESTAURANT BAR #1 Rated in La Paz on Trip Advisor

 

Now follow us on FACEBOOK TOO

  

 
Website: www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863

.
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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It was that kind of week! Rick (aka "Rock") Hosmer, our amigo, from Manhattan Beach, gives us the big smile and pose after he and his buddy, John, knocked out the yellowtail fishing out've Muertos Bay. Once again the yellowtail bit strong this week!

As good as it gets! Check out the size of this pair of yellowtail by La Paz Yellowtail Tournament Champion Jorge Romero, who many of you know as head of our transportation services with Tecolote Transporation. Even he had to jump in on the hot action as he holds the "jurel" on the beach at Muertos Bay.

Not all the action was on the yellowtail. The pargo are up in the shallows schooling right now, but although we hooked alot of them this week, not many got put into the fish boxes as fish-after-fish busted guys off in the rocks. However, this one didn't get away. John Nagy of Marina Del Rey hoists one up with the help of Capt. Mundo.

You know it's a big fish when you can only hold up one, like Daryl Valdez from Fresno, is doing. The average size of these yellows was 25-45 pounds this week.

Another big dawg! This pargo liso didn't escape Gary Bray. Only about 1 out've 10 pargo makes it to the gaff but these powerful fish are schooling right now and it's pretty amazing and frustrating fishing!

We've had roosters around for a few weeks, but this is our first official "big rooster" of the season. The fish looks big in it's own right but Brad Davison from Long Beach is 6'4" tall so we figure this might be a 60-70 pound pez gallo! It was released.

These are BIG yellowtail. Our Canadian amigo, Leonard Bishop stuck these two bad boys fishing out've Muertos Bay in the early morning.

Even on days where bait is difficult, the Davison Family from Long Beach, on their first Baja trip and first day fishing got 7 yellowtail off Cerralvo Island WITH NO BAIT! The trolled deep running Rapalas and stuck 7 of these and were back on the beach by 11 a.m.

Ken Gragg is checking something out but the camera still captured Gary Bray and the two of them with some of the yellowtail they ripped while fishing with our Tailhunter Las Arenas fleet this week.

MAYBE SOME OF THE BEST YELLOWTAIL FISHING ALL SEASON!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for the week of March 20-27, 2011

It was another pretty solid week of fishing for us here in La Paz.  Still some north winds pretty typical of this time of year made it bumpy and we could have done without them , but that’s also why we’ve been doing 90 percent of our fishing with our Tailhunter Las Arenas Fleet out of Muertos Bay.  Air temps have been in the low 80’s and sunny for the most part so conditions continue to be ideal other than the winds!

Around Punta Perico and the south end of Cerralvo, we’re still jumping these nice Baja-grade yellowtail.  That’s been the big story.  A 20-pound class fish is small!  Most of these fish have been easily 30-40 pound sluggers and they’re eating the yo-yo iron on the fast retrieve as well as live sardines with a little bit of weight to get them down.  Also, some of the guys have been slow trolling mackeral-patterned crank baits like Yo-Zuri Magnums, Rapalas and Bombers over the shallower areas and getting strikes although, they’re also losing alot into the rocks too! 

There’s actually quite a few spots where the big yellowtail are holding.  North Cerralvo near La Reyna and La Reynita have fish.  El Bajo Seamount has them as well as the SW corner of Espiritu Santo.  The problem is getting in there to fish in between the wind gusts or traveling there.  That’s why we’re doing the majority of our fishing with our Las Arenas fleet so that we can fish either closer to shore or on the lee side of the island with as much protection as possible. But no doubt, the fish are here!  And, if one place is tough to get to…go fish another!  The fish were stacked this past week!

In addition to the yellowtail, and often in the same spots,  there’s a growing number of the big pargo liso…mullet snapper.  But, getting them in the boat has been a more difficult proposition than the yellowtail.  It’s pretty exciting to see them all balled up like an undulating mass of copper and red just below the surface.  Then, tossing a handful of live sardines at them, the whole things explodes or the boils on the water looks someone dropping 30 pound boulders from the sky!  When the guys get bit, however, if they can’t turn the fish away from the rocks within the first few seconds…FORGET IT!  These horses can’t be stopped before getting into the reefs and we’re losing 90 percent of the hookups.  The ones we are putting into the boats are the “smaller” 20-30 pounders!  There’s larger ones down there.   Guys were snapping off 50 pound test “like it was nothing” according to one of our fishermen.

“It was like trying to hold into a moving car over the side of a building!” said another.  “Not a thing I could do except wait for the line to pop!” 

“It was fun getting hooked up on these big fish but so frustrating watching them take the baits and losing fish-after-fish!”  commented his buddy.

Oh…just a teaser…I know it’s March but…

  • We hooked and lost our first marlin of the season north of La Paz!
  • There was a sailfish that was caught!
  • Commercial guys are reporting more tuna…big ones…at the north end of Cerralvo Island
  • We got some dorado this week too!

 

Wow…hope this is just the beginning!

Will keep you posted!

That’s our story…

Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

 

TAILHUNTER FISHING FLEET #1 Rated on Trip Advisor

TAILHUNTER RESTAURANT BAR #1 Rated in La Paz on Trip Advisor

 

Now follow us on FACEBOOK TOO

 

 
Website: www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863

.
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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Roger Thompson had a banner day fishing El Bajo seamount north of La Paz with our Captain Chito taking a boat load of big yellowtail. The only reason they stopped was because they ran out've bait! The latter part of this week, yellowtail literally blew up the waters around La Paz!

Dan Fedorka of Monrovia CA used to make yearly trips to La Paz, but hadn't made a trip in awihle, but brought his family back for spring break. Dan took this nice pargo liso just off the rocks near Las Arenas.

Donna Thompson from Long Beach and La Ventana and Judy Davis from Hercules, CA had quite a day north of La Paz taking 11 big yellowtail like this one between two of our super pangas.

Another shot of Donna and Judy...this time with the beach line-up of big forkies!

SLOW START TO WEEK ENDS WITH YELLOWTAIL GOING FULL TURBO IN LA PAZ WATERS!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of March 14-21, 2011

Y’know…if it weren’t for a few things like wind and bait, it would have really been a pretty outstanding week of fishing this past week!  With temps in the high 80’s and mostly sunny blue flat calm waters, it could have been banner.  However, there were a few days when the winds just whipped.  That, consequently makes it harder to get bait.  We need those live sardines to get going.  Sure, lures work, but nothing like a live squiggly to get the bite into gear.

Our captains worked hard…the commercial guys worked hard…the clients were as patient as could be expected.  But when the winds are rolling, then it often crashes waves into the shallow beach or rocky areas where bait is netted.  It scatters the bait.  Makes the waters cloudy too.  Or, it’s so rough the pangas can’t get into the rocks to throw the nets.   We did the best we could.  Fortunately, not EVERY day was like that and since most of our clients this week fished more than a day or two, well…there were some really nice fish to be caught with some great action.  Especially as the week went on…

As a matter of fact, as the week went on we had perhaps some of the best yellowtail fishing we’ve seen in a long time! 

Yellowtail seemed to have busted out in numerous places!  Nice homeguard mossbacked 25-45 pound fish!  Real quality stuff.

Roger Thompson, our amigo from Ventana (photo above) had this to say:

“We caught 11 yellows today between our two boats. Bait was a struggle, but El Bajo was on fire again. If we had more bait, we would have caught more fish for sure. No wind, temps in the low 80s on the water.”

There’s nothing like first-hand reports!

Another of our good Tailhunter amigos, James Davis jumped in with this:

“The weather has been fantastic and the fishing is awesome.  Being down here right now is Crazy Good, wouldn’t want to be anywhere else….Guys are coming back into Muertos with so much fish that after they get their ice chests full of fillets they are giving the rest of their fist away…. More and bigger….I weighted one 47 pound Yellowtail yesterday….Been fishing the back side of island, south side, pulling these big brutes right off the beach…..Heard some reports of huge Tuna off the north end of the island….my neighbor and one of the captains from Muertos (Fernando) hands are thrashed from trying to hand line them….”

For our La Paz fleet, the fish were found as far north as the El Bajo Seamount where fish were holding 30-60 feet off the top of the mount.  As well, the north end of Cerralvo Island near the drop off plus off Isla Ballena at the SW side of Espiritu Santo Island we found a nice grade of fish.  (By the way like James Davis confirmed above…commercial guys again spotted finning yellowfin tuna again at the north end of Cerralvo moving too fast to get on top of them!)

For our Tailhunter Fleet operating off the Muertos Bay, Las Arenas area, the yellowtail were working off Punta Perico, the Las Arenas lighthouse where the boulders are; and the SE corner of Cerralvo Island.  In all cases the fish are eating live bait, but yo-yo ing the heavy lures in blue/white ; yellow/ green/ and yellow/white also generated some viscious hits!

In addition to the yellowtail, we’re seeing increased numbers of pargo in the shallow areas by both our fleets and got action from sierra, cabrilla and snapper.

COME JOIN THE FUN!

Alaska Air has just announced some great price reductions on airfare.  Check out www.alaskaair.com   You have to purchase tickets to La Paz by March 28 and travel to La Paz between April 5-May 13.   For example…Los Angeles to La Paz…one way as low as $129 dollars right now.  Some restrictions!

That’s our story!

Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

 

TAILHUNTER FISHING FLEET #1 Rated on Trip Advisor

TAILHUNTER RESTAURANT BAR #1 Rated in La Paz on Trip Advisor

 

Now follow us on FACEBOOK TOO

  

 
Website: www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863

.
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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Nice trophy yellowtail were again the centerpiece of the weekly bite as shown off here by popular Tailhunter Fleet Capt. Jorge and Phil Coo and Chris Cribbs from Los Angeles. The week started slowly with tough winds, but got better thru the week.

Talk about a FAT fish for a first timer...note not only this big yellowtail by Chris Pena, but also the calm waters AND HOW CLOSE TO SHORE! Only about 50 yards off just out of Muertos Bay!

Angelino, Chris Cribbs comes down at least 2 times a year and ALWAYS does well. His week started slowly, but he finally slammed his last day. Check out the size of this big fork-tail YT and the smile of Capt. Jorge also! The fish ate a live sardine.

For sure! The big pargo have moved in, but we're losing so many to the rocks! However, every now and then, we get one of the big boys like this one by Chris Pena. These guys are spawning in shallow waters right now.

Phil Coo always has a great time. He owns a bar in Los Angeles and comes to see us a few times a year and does well with Capt. Jorge holding up one of several big yellowtail he got.

Not exactly dorado season which is usually when the water is warmer, but we're starting to get a few dorado here and there which leads me to believe that waters are already warming. This mahi was taken just inside of Bahia de Los Muertos near Las Arenas.

Another nice big PHAT pargo (liso) aka "mullet snapper" being shown off at Muertos Bay where we've got our boats right now. These fish are just casting distance from shore and have moved into the shallow rocky areas around Punta Perico and Cerralvo Island.

Our good amigo for so many fishing years from Austin, TX, Ron Martis went home with a truckload of fillets after a great day of yellowtail fishing. Note the calm waters behind!

Barry Mendelson from Malibu CA got 3 of these pargo liso after a single day fishing.

Thanks to everyone who asked if we were OK after the earthquake this past week. Everyone is fine. Our bar and restaurant is fine (even tho' we're only about 20 feet from the water!). But our captains took no chances...just-in-case...pulling their pangas about 50-100 yards up from the water very high and very dry! Thanks to our amigo, James Davis, for the shot!

It was crazy utter madness and fun this past week at the Fred Hall Fishing & Boating Show at the Long Beach Convention Center with packed aisles and a great time seeing all the amigos. However, the Tailhunter International 2011 "road tour" moves on to it's final show of the season and we'll be at the International Sportsman's Expo in Salt Lake City this week from Thursday to Sunday!

Just a special shout-out and "thank you" again to our amigo, Charles Belnavis...tattoo artist supreme to so many of us in the fishing industry...who gave me one of the most unique gifts I have ever gotten! He spent more than 30 hours hand-painting this pair of Vans deck shoes with incredible underwater sportfishing scenes...one has a dorado and the other a billfish. The detail is amazing! He only makes two of these a year. He is the owner of the Shogun Tattoo Shop in Pasadena CA http://shoguntattoo.com/

 

AFTER SLOW START YELLOWTAIL AND PARGO AGAIN KICK IT!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report from Tailhunter International for Week of March 7-14, 2011

The week started with with some really strong winds but our early-week clients were veterans and didn’t want to lose out to the weather and got into some great fish.  This time, more pargo than cabrilla.  Nothing like a bit of experience to put some fish into the boat.   Although the winds were whippy early in the week, it calmed as the week went on and we had air-temps in the high-80’s and low 90’s. Perfect beach and fishing weather.

This time we actually put out some pangas for the first time with our La Paz fleet to go along with our Las Arenas fleet and both sides scored fish although it seemed like the numbers favored more pargo in the boats than yellowtail.  Some of these fish were real chunky power fish too!  Pargo in the 30- pound class and yellowtail in the 40 pound class were highlights. Still, quite a few fish were lost.  Sometimes, there’s just nothing you can do but hang on and know that your big fish is going to break off in the rocks.  Pretty powerless feeling to have your rod bend almost in half and all the strain on your arms and back then suddenly…POW!  Line breaks!

Chris Cribbs (photos above) had this to say which was not unusual this week.  Some tough days, but sticking with it paid off:

” Little bit of a rough trip- Sure you’ve heard- . . . Bait was tough and as windy as I’ve ever seen there !! Anyway never gave up – Got good bait Saturday- Beat everyone there and killed them- Big bitch-en fish !! Had a couple of monster Pargo snap off 50lb Fluro leader like it was trout line !!”

As well, we also had cabrilla, quite a few bonito and jack crevalle and sierra taken inshore as well.  Even a few dorado!

 TAILHUNTER COMES TO SALT LAKE CITY THIS WEEK

Our 2011 Tailhunter Road Tour of all the biggest and best Fishing/Hunting shows comes to Salt Lake City for the ISE show at the Expo Center in Sandy, Utah, this week!  We’ll be there in the booth from Thursday to Sunday.  We’ve been on the road since Dec. 31st and this will be out 10th and final show…10 shows in 11 weeks…11,000 miles driving!  Come say hi and talk to  us about your 2011 La Paz Fishing Vacation!

We are just pulling out of Long Beach after the Fred Hall Fishing & Boating Show!  Had the usual awesome time.  To everyone who came by to say hi…old friends and new…to everyone who showered us with gifts and all the good food…homemade cookies, pizza, sandwiches, Chinese dimsum potstickers, cheese, See’s candy, pastries, homemade Mexican frijoles/ cheese and salsa, chicken, ribs, carnitas burritos and more…we never had a hungry moment!  We leave with great smiles and 10 pounds heavier!  You all rock! 

That’s our story!

Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

 

TAILHUNTER FISHING FLEET #1 Rated on Trip Advisor

TAILHUNTER RESTAURANT BAR #1 Rated in La Paz on Trip Advisor

 

Now follow us on FACEBOOK TOO

  

 
Website: www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
Mexico Office: 755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
Phones:
from USA : 626-638-3383
from Mexico: 044-612-14-17863

.
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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Dentist Desmond Sjauwfoekloy, often calls us at the last-minute to book a quick get-away trip from his practice in Los Angeles and always does well. In two days fishing he slammed 4 big yellowtail every day in the 35-40 pound class fishing with our Captain Pancho. It was a wild week of yellowtail and pargo. Some days hit and some days miss, but overall, a solid week of fishing! Read Desmond's first-hand account below.

Take a look at the thickness of the bodies of these yellowtail that Greg Jaquez of Long Beach got fishing with our Tailhunter Las Arenas Fleet out've Muertos Bay. All these fish are 35-40 pound class fish!

Another of our amigos who comes running at the last-minute when he sees the fish are biting is Barry Mendelson who splits his time between Malibu and Cabo. In just a few hours, he spanked 3 yellowtail and pulled 3 nice pargo liso out've the rocks fishing with Captain Archangel.

Bill Zambriski from Long Island, NY, and Mark Martis from Redondo Beach CA have a long successful run of fishing in La Paz with us. In a matter of less than 2 hours their group caught enough yellowtail to send 6 guys home with about 100 pounds of fillets each! Check out these two fat yellowtail that were in the mix!

Not a bad day for Desmond! He fished two days and got 4 of these 35-40 pound class yellowtail each day! Slamming mossbacks just outside of Muertos Bay. He was fishing with Captain Pancho.

Take a close look at this photo! Yes...that's a yellowfin tuna and it's still WINTER! That's north Cerralvo Island in the background. Dan and Tony, members of the Ventana Fishing club live in the area and Gary Morris also on the boat sent me the photo. There had been rumors of some stray tuna around, but no one could confirm it! Well, the guys were fishing North Cerralvo and thought they had hooked another yellowtail and instead...SURPRISE! It was a YFT! So, yea...it's confirmed. There's some weird fishing going on with yellowfin tuna prowling around!

When I first posted up the previous photo showing the tuna, I got some sceptics telling me it was a "fish story" and that the fish had actually been caught at a different time of year. Well, take a look at this photo showing both Dan, Tony and Gary holding their tuna PLUS the yellowtail still wearing the same clothes as the photo above! Thanks to Gary for sending me the photos!

THE BIG SHOW is THIS WEEK! We leave the great sportsmans show in Boise, Idaho and drive to the Long Beach Convention Center for the Fred Hall Fishing and Boating Show this week. This is the largest outdoor show on the West Coast and goes from Wed. to Sunday. It promises to be crazy! Come check it...hunting, fishing, boat, camping...everything outdoor!

BIG YELLOWTAIL AND STUBBORN PARGO TAKE CENTER STAGE!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of Feb. 27-March 6, 2011

For the most part, it’s hard to argue with winter weather in the upper 80’s for fishing and even the low 90’s although some days were surely more windy than we would have liked.  Still, overall some really solid fishing this week, especially with our Las Arenas/ Muertos Bay fleet.  Some days were better than others.  Some boats on a given day did better than others.  However,  we surely didn’t hear too much grumbling because the fish were definitely  biting!

The yellowtail were trophy-size sluggers!  Most fish were 35-40 pounders and a boat could hook 5 and only get one to the boat.  The next boat would land 8.  The next panga would land 6 or 7.  The panga next to that one would lose 3 and show a zero (good fishing…bad catching!). 

 But there’s no doubt yellowtail were on the feed and after two weeks, we’re officially into yellowtail season.  The fish were holding off high spots or up from dropoffs in several spots such as Punta Perico, South and SE Cerralvo Island, North Cerralvo and out of Muertos Bay.  Live bait worked best with a little bit of weight or else fast retrieved blue and white or yellow/white yo-yo iron. 

As well, it was a good week for pargo also.  Lots of fish hooked. Lots of fish LOST to the rocks and inexperience or simply bad luck!

 Just like the yellowtail, there were pangas that would hook 5, 6, 7 of these fish big fish and lose all of them or the next panga would hook 6 and land 4.  Just the nature of these toothy-beasts!  The largest of the fish we saw that made it back to the beach were in the 20 pound class but tales of much bigger fish were told by wide-eyed tired and frustrated clients. 

But wait…there’s more!!!

We also had several small spots of yellowfin tuna show up!  What?  YFT’s in February and March?  Yup!  For several weeks, commercial pangeros have been taking a fish or two and some gringo locals have told us of seeing YFT carcasses on the beach where the commercial guys clean their fish. 

Well, then several of our gringo amigos who live in the Ventana area actually got some of the tuna around north Cerralvo and it surprised the heck out of them as well.  They thought they had another yellowtail hooked and then when the fish got to color…WHOA!!!  What’s this?  WTH…IT”S a TUNA!!! 

As if to underscore the wacky bite this week, another of our local gringo amigos, Mike Madlock from La Paz, got into two days of 12-18 pound dorado as well to go along with his yellowtail. 

Things are heating up!  Here’s what our amigo, Desmond Sjauwfoekloy, from Los Angeles told us after 2 days and 8 big yellowtail:

“…  I should have stayed another day, but not bad at all for a last minute impromptu get-away!The fishing was great.  (Captain)  Pancho got us out there and we put the hurt on the fish, or was it the other way around?

It’s been years since I’ve gotten a quality yellowtail, and it was just one specimen after another.  The second day we left after another 4 yellows to get a few pargo. Frustrating when the seas are discolored all around you (from so many red pargo in the water) and they just won’t bite…  Nonetheless, the beer was cold, the sashimi fresh, and I always get to talk to a few interesting folks in the van.  Thanks for “hooking me up” and I’ll be down there again — no doubt another last minute phone call…”

TAILHUNTER TOUR BRINGS IT TO LONG BEACH CONVENTION CENTER THIS WEEK!

Finally, the big Fred Hall Fishing and Boating Show hits the Long Beach Convention Center this week!  This is the oldest and largest of the outdoor shows and for us, after almost 9 weeks on the road and 8 shows, we’re looking forward to seeing all our amigos!  Check this video clip out: 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oqIkyz-cSnE

If you need more info such as show times, tickets, etc. check out the website: 

http://www.fredhall.com/

We will be in our usual spot on Tackle Row next to Izorline.  It gets really crowded so the best advice I can give you to finding us is to look for the palapa (grass) roof on our booth!  That’s us!  We’ll see you there!

That’s our story!

Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

 

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Website: www.tailhunter-international.com
U.S. Office: 3319 White Cloud Drive, Suite A, Hacienda Hts. CA 91745
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Phones:
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Tailhunter Weekly Fishing Report:
https://fishreport.jonathanroldan.com/

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“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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