SCRATCHY FISHING AS WINDS COME BACK!
Paz – Las Arenas / Muertos Bay/ Bahia Suenos Fishing Report for Week of June 13-21, 2026
SHORT ATTENTION SPAN FISHING REPORT
WEATHER: Strange weather continues. Cooler than normal by 5-10 degrees. Mostly sunny, but the bad part is the winds that should have been over and normally are over by April continue to plague us and adversely affect the fishing.
WATER: It is highly mixed up. Should consistently be about blue and about 80 degrees everywhere. Instead there are cold patches, warm patches, blue patches, cloudy patches. If the wind is blowing can be very rough. Weirdest conditions ever.
FISH HOOKED THIS WEEK: Dorado, tuna, striped marlin, blue marlin, rainbow runner, roosterfish, cubera snapper, jack crevalle, barred pargo, trevally, pompano, bonito, jack crevalle, cabrilla, yellow snapper, triggerfish.
SCALE of 5-10: 4
THE MEXICAN MINUTE LA PAZ VIDEO REPORT
THE BIG PICTURE and the REST of the STORY…

Captains all agreed that Hunter Stuart’s big roosterfish was over 100-pounds. He was down here fishing with his dad, Mark, as a graduation trip. This big fish towed the 22′ panga as they battled it. It was released. They also got another over 80 pounds

Our Kansas amiga, Candy Bunyard is all smiles with Captain Gerardo and this gorgeous colorful bull mahi.

Becca works with animals at the Virginia Zoo. But, this big rooster is a different kind of beast! Caught and released with big smiles.

Not a bad day. Not alot of fish, but these are big bulls for Tanya and Dave Smith. First-time fishing with us and they did well. Good to have them here!

Jeff Haywood has been smiling all week with us and done great. He’s from Glendora CA and shows off one of his dorado. Check the rest of the report for some of his other fish.

Diego Jimenez from Colorado has been our Tailhunter friend and visiting us for about 20 years during their anniversary week. Always does well. On this particular day, they released one marlin; released a salfish, but could not revive this striper. They donated the meat. They were fishing with Captain Pancho.

Myzon Zimmermann with Captain Armando and another huge roosterfish for a quick photo then back into the water! Nice catch!

Captain Hugo put Jeff Haywood on several huge roosterfish including this huge rooster that could easily have gone over 100 pounds. Jeff released all his roosterfish.

Becca and Nathan Sexton from Kansas were on their first visit to us and had themselves some good fishing like this one day with 4 dorado for the freezer!

Captain Jorge had the panga headed in at the end of the day when Dave Smith hooked onto this blue marlin just outside the entrance to the Bahia Muertos! We have hooked more striped and blue marlin this season than in the past 10 years combined.

Big bulls today! Kelly Jimenez has been catching big fish with us for many many years. This past week was no different. She’s such a fun and good fisherman with her husband Diego.

Henri Fourrier came all the way from N. Carolina needing to get just one roosterfish! Over 3 days he also got dorado and 3 marlin!

Tim Patry from Utah hit the jackpot on his first visit to us and hooked this massive rooster that was well over 100 pounds . The fish was released and Tim is having a fiberglass mount made for his home!

Doug Fulp and Jack Haynes were fishing with Captain Hugo who found a honey spot that produced 7 dorado their first day of fishing!

Captain Gerardo give a shaka sign over Billy Bunyard’s big yellowfin tuna! The slugger went 80 pounds. Billy is a bear and moose hunting guide in Alaska. His 2nd trip with us!

Terry Melhaff from Reno got the rooster he wanted. Pretty fish! Terry was able to release it to swim another day.

Dan and Oscar Zararte Brothers won a trip to fish with us off a donation we made to a yellowtail tournament in Ensenada. They make good use of 3 days of fishing. Check out the big dorado! The brothers are from the San Diego area.

Our bestie, John Washington has been part of our Tailhunter Family of friends for many years and it’s always good to see him down here. This 43″ dorado went home with John to Reno NV. He was fishing with Captain Pancho.

Mark Stuart from San Diego got his! Another big rooster maybe 80 pounder fishing with Captain Hugo. A photo and release!

Yes, there are other fish biting! Oscar and brother, Daniel, show off a couple of nice cabrilla caught over the rocks.

JD fished 3 days with us and his last day produced this sweet rooster for the photo and release .Always good to have him visit.

Just a great photo! Captain Armando with Sean Tomlin from Virginia who was visiting us for the first time. Big rooster in the shallows up against the rocks in shallow water! The gorgeous fish was released.

Maybe not as big as their roosterfish cousins, jack crevalle are mean fighters when hooked. Jeff battled this one right off the beach near Punta Arenas.

Somewhere behind the dorsal fins of this roosterfish is Amy Tomlin trying to get a good photo before she gets the rooster back in the water!

Shallow water fishing can be pretty productive near the rocks for fish like Mark’s trevally. Great eating and makes super sashime!
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Well…like I wrote in the last report, I can’t sugar-coat this. You can’t put lipstick on a pig. It is what it is.
And fishing is not real great right now. It continues to be erratic…up-and-down…and sideways. It is directly affected by the weather and the weather continues to be totally unpredictable.
Yes, there’s once again alot of great photos of big fish, but those are the highlights. We should be getting 4, 5, 6 or more fish PER PERSON PER DAY. Waters SHOULD be flat and blue. Temps should be HOT.
Instead, we’re mostly getting 1 or 2 fish per boat. But they can be monsters! Biggest fish I have seen consistently in over 30 years here. The dorado are bigger. The roosterfish are 50-100 pounds. We have hooked, released and busted off more blue and striped marlin the last month than I have seen in 10 years.
So, you might hook into only ONE fish on a given day. But, it could be a fish-of-a lifetime. It would be a trophy. It could be a world record (we had several roosters that might have been close to our world record 115 pound rooster). The wahoo have been 40-80 pounds. The tuna have been 60-over 200 pounds!
So, you might just have that one shot! If you miss it or aren’t ready…well…that’s your day.
Or, you COULD be one of the boats that gets absolutely NOTHING! Not a bite. Not a nibble. You are right next to another boat that is fighting fish all day. You get nothing .
It doesn’t mean you’re a bad fisherman. It doesn’t mean my skipper is bad or isn’t trying. That’s just the way it is right now. Hang in there. Everyone eventually is getting fish. Everyone is taking home fish that wants to take home fish.
Don’t get mad, angry or frustrated. I’m totally up -front with expectations. In 31 years here, I’ve never had fishermen actually get angry with me like I’m seeing the last few weeks. I have to tell them, it’s not ME. It’s not YOU! It’s not the captain!
I’ve had guests start telling me…”Well, this is what you should do. ” or “This is what your captain should try.” Or ” Why aren’t you doing this?”
Been at this most of my life, folks. We are ALL busting our backsides trying to find you fish. My skippers want to get fish as badly as you.
In every situation, by the end of the trip, eventually, they hung in there and got their fish. The boat that does great one day can get skunked the next day. And the boat that gets nothing one day is the rockstar boat the next.
It’s all affected by this weird weather. Winds should have stopped months ago, but there are days when it blows for an hour or 3 or all day or several days. Then it stops. The ocean gets rough when the winds blow and we’ve actually had to cancel some fishing because of the winds. The winds change direction day-to-day or even hour-t0-hour.
It affects the water as well in terms of clarity and temperature. Some areas are blue and warm. But right next to it is cloudy cold water. There can be cold water on the surface and warm water below or warm water on top and below that…I’ve had my scuba divers and snorkelers in wet suits tell me they have been shivering in some spots because it is so cold and they needed to get out’ve the water! Hard to believe in late June to hear that!
The conditions also affect getting live bait. Normally this time of year, it’s really easy. This year, it can take hours to hunt and peck to buy or catch bait. The bait spots keep moving. The type of bait keeps changing. So, a good portion of your morning might be just trying to get bait. It’s THAT kind of year. And the sardines we find are 2 inches long…can’t put them on a hook!
So I’ve just told folks to hang with the program. Let my skippers fish the way they know how and find fish. If you tell them you want roosterfish and get impatient and then say you want tuna…then change to marlin….you’re just shooting yourself in the foot.
Just be ready when that big boy hits. You might just have that one shot!
That’s my story!
Jonathan & Jilly
755 Paseo Obregon, La Paz, Baja Sur, Mexico
U.S. Mailing Address: Tailhunter Sportfishing
8030 La Mesa Blvd. #178 La Mesa CA 91942
























































































































































































