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PHOTO 1: Wahoo went on the chew again this week! South end of Cerralvo Island held most of the fish. Here’s one that chased down a Rapala pulled by Jeff Sakuda of Monterey Park CA. Captain Jorge shares the smiles.

PHOTO 2: Professional hunting dog trainer, Steve Artis from N. California looks pained, but he was pretty happy with this fat wahoo he got his first day fishing with our Tailhunter Las Arenas Fleet. That’s Captain Victor hiding behind him.

PHOTO 3: Again with Captain Jorge! This time assisting Shannon Aurand from the San Francisco Bay area with her first wahoo she pulled on the troll. The fish showed a definite affinity for dark Rapalas this week.

PHOTO 4: All the way from New York, this is Arie Hendeles. Arie took a break from school like he does each summer to fish with us. This is one of several wahoo he put on the boat.

PHOTO 5: Yes, the yellowfin tuna also bit and they also got bigger too! Rod’s yellowfin was taken just off Las Arenas. The fish ranged from 10-30 pounds this week and crashed the live baits.

PHOTO 6: Bill White from San Luis Obispo is a fireman and he had sashime and sushi in mind for dinner as he holds up two of his yellowfin tuna he got fishing with our Las Arenas fishing fleet.

PHOTO 7: “Three Chicas and a Pancho!” Captain Pancho poses with Roseanne Ishihiro from Hawaii; Marianne Sugawara from Los Angeles and Karen Sakuda-Aizawa from San Franciso and their catch of dorado.

PHOTO 8: George is all smiles holding a bull dorado that might be our largest dorado of the week. George caugth this fish while fishing with Captain Victor and our Las Arenas Tailhunter Fleet. The fish fell for a live sardine.

PHOTO 9: Los Angeles resident Moise Hendeles got a cooler full of tuna fillets and added some great wahoo steaks to the catch with this fish.

PHOTO 10: First-timer, Ian Colbert from Belmont CA near San Franciso had a great first outting while fishing with us this past week. Here, he shows off a nice dorado he caught north of La Paz with our La Paz Tailhunter fleet.

PHOTO 11: Dave Tyree pulled this whopper dorado fishing on one of our super pangas with our Tailhunter La Paz Fleet out of La Paz Bay. The dorado were hit or miss some days, but if you found the right spot, it could go nuts.

PHOTO 12: One of the most amazing action photos I’ve seen. If you’ve ever tried to take a shot of a leaping fish, you know how hard it is. Your eye, your brain, your finger and your camera just don’t work fast enough! Well, Steve Artis had everything lined up perfectly for this shot of a big bull dorado going ballistic and grabbing air while on the hook!

PHOTO 13: Not a bad day! Arie Hendeles from New York; Eli Hendeles and Jonathan Uretsky from Los Angeles do the group pose with wahoo and dorado. They had a banner few days with us taking wahoo, tuna and dorado.

PHOTO 14: Double fist tuna for Tom Aurand after fishing a day with our Las Arenas fleet. Tom comes from the San Francisco area and got into a nice snap of yellowfin tuna early in the week off the Arenas lighthouse area.

WAHOO AND YELLOWFIN TUNA LEAD THE CHARGE AT LAS ARENAS WHILE DORADO KEEP LA PAZ ANGLERS BUSY (MOST DAYS).

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of Aug. 16-24, 2009

Finally back on track after a little glitch the previous week. Not only did the dorado find their way back into the feeding mode, but even more importantly for our Tailhunter Las Arenas fleet, the tuna and wahoo came back strong! Yellowfin tuna running 10-30 pounds bit nicely just off the beach inhaling live baits, dead chummed bait and iron. Light tackle anglers had a blast because the tuna were mixed in with even harder-charging bullish bonito and big skipjack so it was non-stop action between the 3 species. Limits were very common.

As well, and even more exciting, the wahoo made a strong comeback at the south end of Cerralvo Island along the rock highway. Two to four biters per boat were the average if you were pulling a big dark crank bait or wahoo rig. Quite a few fish were lost with bad hooksets and busted lines but boats were taking 1-2 wahoo in the 30-50 pound class.

Other species this week included a few marlin (released), roosterfish (most released) as well as some cabrilla, pargo and a nice jag of large pompano. Dorado ran 10-30 pounds on the average.

There were some slow spots and if you fished a few days you might have an off-day, but overall, it was a real good week of fishing with some anglers canceling (bad for us!) some of their trips later in the week because they had too much fish to take home after 2 or 3 days fishing! Glad to see guys releasing more and more fish and also more guys going to circle hooks as well. It wasn’t wide open, but the opportunities are there for some great catches right now.

That’s our story!
Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

Website: http://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:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm

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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PHOTO 1: Perhaps one of the largest dorado of the season, Captain Chito helps Steve McWhorter of Ventura with the big fish taken north of La Paz. Steve is 6′ tall and you can see that this fish is about that long. Captain Chito estimated the fish at about 60 pounds and was amazingly taken after a long battle on light tackle by Steve.

PHOTO 2: John Seidensticker of Huntington Beach CA fished with Captain Victor and our Tailhunter Las Arenas fleet and pulled in this nice bull dorado. The dorado bite at Las Arenas slowed this past week but tuna and wahoo picked up the slack.

PHOTO 3: Whittier CA resident Alan Cutler poses with another nice La Paz dorado he got north of town of Espiritu Santo Island. Live bait worked well this week, but many of this week’s larger fish were taken with strips of dead bonito.

PHOTO 4: It might not be the biggest fish picture, but it’s certainly my favorite of the week. Rebecca Waverly from Ventura CA was with us for the first time on her first fishing trip and fished with Captain Ramiro. The sheer exhuberance captured in this photo is priceless. We sometimes get so “hardcore” about our fishing we forget it’s supposed to be fun. Good job, Rebecca!
WAHOO AND YELLOWFIN TUNA CRASH THE BOATS UNTIL SPEARFISHERMEN JUMP IN WATER AND SHUT OFF THE BITE
La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of August 9-15, 2009

We had a really nice wahoo and yellowfin tuna bite going on for our Las Arenas fleet the last few days the earlier half of the week. Guys were getting 2-5 bites on the skinnies per day and putting 1-2 in the boat. The wahoo ran up to about 50 pounds and were eating the big crank baits like Yozuri and Rapalas in the darker colors. As well, the yellowfin tuna popped up as well not far off the point. These were a fun grade of fish going 10-25 pounds.

All was good until freediving spearfishers dropped into the middle of the bites while the pangas were trying to fish. Incredible. Well, I do believe it and spearfishers wonder why they get such a bad rap here and get stinkeye from local captains…both commercial and sport captains and there has been open antagonism in the past and confrontations. Local commercial guys are trying to catch a few fish to feed their families. Panga captains are out there trying to put a few fish on the pangas for their clients.

A few jerk spearfishers screw it up for everyone and basically, they shut off the bite. It taints all spearfishers who show up. Word has it that some of them were using illegal gas-powered guns as well instead of the normal band guns. Nothing like little explosions underwater to put the lockjaw on the fish!

Additionally, they didn’t heed requests to go find other spots. The ocean is big. No reason to drop right in the middle of guys trying to make a living. Anyway, that surely screwed up the bite and hopefully, by the time you’re reading this, the bite will have come back.

After that, the pickings the rest of the week were marginal at best with fishermen chasing a few dorado, a few tuna and inshore species like roosterfish, pargo and cabrilla. Like I said, hopefully, by the time you’re reading this, the bite will have come back.

The dorado are still biting, however, for our La Paz boats. The bite has been pretty far-ranging from the outer banks all the way down the channel around Las Cruces. You might find a big school that makes your day or dink or single and double biters all day long, but limits or near limits were not uncommon for our boats. Live bait worked best, but catching a few bonito then using dead slabs on the troll drew fish to the boat.

That’s our story
Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

Website: http://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:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm

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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PHOTO 1: Leave it to the rookie to roll the big one! Just an incredible fish by Juan Martinez from Northern CA who made his first trip fishing to La Paz at the last minute and nailed this huge bull dorado near Espiritu Santo Island. Again, this week, dorado were the hot ticket.

PHOTO 2: One of our bestest amigos, this is “Coach” Don Rea who fishes with us several times a year. Every trip he fishes his brains out but never gets in the report. He always fishes with his favorite captain Marcos who’s helping him hold up the beast dorado. Coach took this fish on light tackle with a little Avet SX and fought the fish over an hour and admitted the fish slugged it out with him. Well, he finally made the report. Congrats, Coach!

PHOTO 3: Here’s another guy who worked like crazy for his fish. Rich Jones is an experienced long-range angler from Utah who came “just to get ONE roosterfish!” Well, over his first 3 days of fishing he put “60-70” roosterfish on light tackle and had a ball and finally nailed this beauty saying, “We saw it come into the shallow water after my ladyfish and it ripped into deep water!” Best of all…Rich released all his fish. He also caught dorado, snapper, cabrilla, and jack crevalle. By the way, knowing what this looks like, he wanted it known that he does NOT fish with a blue bonnet on his head. His boonie hat had the brim tilted back!

PHOTO 4: Tom Moon from Northridge CA put in a day with Captain Adolfo fishing off S. Cerralvo Island and put this mahi mahi in the panga while fishing with our Las Arenas fleet.

PHOTO 5: Ron Hepner put the gaff to a number of dorado and other species while fishing 5 days with both our La Paz and Las Arenas fleet this past week. He released all his roosterfish, but this dorado went into the box and onto the dinner table! Ron came to visit us from Utah in the Salt Lake area.

PHOTO 6: Coach Joey Fuschetti is high school track coach from Orange Co. CA who does lots of work with putting kids on fishing trips. He took some time out do some fishing of his own and comes to see us each year. Fishing with our La Paz Fleet, Joey got this dorado near Espiritu Santo Island. “We were w/ limits both days at Las Arenas w/ our famous capitan Jorge and the high boat out of La Paz w/ Capitan Boli. But, reality check on day three when the Pargo took us for a ride at Isla Partida and we landed 3 and lost a bunch of big toothed beasts to the rocks………” said Joey. Joey insists that chumming the waters with minced papaya is his secret to success.

PHOTO 7 – It’s always nice to know that someone caught their personal best fish when on one of our trips. George Higi has fished Baja for years, but got his personal best dorado fishing with Captain Jorge and our Tailhunter Las Arenas Fleet. George stands 6’2″ so this fish is the real deal!

PHOTO 8: Kodak moment with dorado, left-right, Bob Wood, Tom Moon, Tony Toven and Doyle Wood holding some of their day’s catch fishing north of La Paz with our La Paz fleet.

WEEK STARTS SLOW AND SCRATCHY BUT GETS BETTER AS MOON GOT FULLER!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report from Tailhunter International for Week of 2-9, 2009

It was a difficult week to put a finger on. In some respects, it was scratchy fishing as water temps seemed to have dropped and fish scattered. Let me put it this way, often you had to work hard for your fish! This was especially true for our Las Arenas Fleet. While there was a mix of fish that includes dorado, some billfish and a smattering of tuna, the “offshore bite” really wasn’t happening. Those anglers that worked inshore however, took advantage of some great fishing for roosters, pargo, jacks, cabrilla and snapper. In fact, they had an excellent time, especially on light tackle.

For our La Paz fleet, the bite was much more consistent. While there wasn’t much variety, the dorado more than made up for anything else School-sized fish in the 10-20 pound class made up most of the catch, but there were some monster 40-60 pound fish caught and many more lost to bad gear, busted lines or inexperience or simply bad luck. You might have a bad day here or there, but for the most part, limits or near limits of fish with many released were the rule more than the exception.

LATE breaking news…as the week went on and the moon got fuller…THE BITE GOT BETTER. Tuna and dorado started showing up again at Las Arenas and the La Paz dorado bite got more consistent!

JACK VELEZ FUND

Thank you to many of you who have been sending condolences, prayers and checks to the family. We have already raised several thousand dollars and will be making a surprise presentation to them in a few weeks. In advance of their appreciation, thanks from all of us with the Tailhunter Family. Please write if you’d like more information.

That’s our Story
Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

Website: http://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:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm

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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PHOTO 1: Jack McGuire from Orange Co., California with this monster of a dorado. The 50 pound-class fish was taken on light tackle which is Jack’s specialty when he comes down here. Dorado were once-again the mainstay of the week’s catch although changing water conditions meant sometimes it was hit-or-miss. See more details below.

PHOTO 2: Bob Woods, Tom Moon, and Tony Toven from the Los Angeles CA area show off a really strange catch for July. Take a close look…in addition to the dorado and the tuna they’re holding YELLOWTAIL! These fish are normally caught here in the spring when waters are cooler, but for the last two weeks we started getting yellowtail again on bait and on yo-yo iron! Weird! Some of the fish have been as large as 40 pounders. The yellowtail might be here because waters cooled this past week a few degrees which might also explain why overall fishing slowed a bit as well.

PHOTO 3: When you only have two hands to hold 3 fish, it’s hard to show off a grand-slam catch of tuna, dorado and yellowtail, but TonyToven found a way to photograph all of them at Las Arenas Beach. Needless to say they dog-piled onto the sashimi that night at the restaurant! Nothing fresher!

PHOTO 4: All the way from New Mexico, Darren Hanson holds up one of the nicer bull dorado of the week. Darren was fishing with our Tailhunter La Paz Fleet north of La Paz our towards the islands. Dorado were the focus of most of the fishing this week. While not spectacular, the fishing for the most part was solid with some good days and some slower days as the dorado schools moved around.

PHOTO 5: Sailfish release. We love to see this. Not only a good photo, but a good release as well. We release about 80 percent of our billfish and encourage letting ’em go. This season has been about average for the billfish. We haven’t seen alot of marlin or sailfish the last two weeks but there were still some bitiers. We’re about to head into the blue and black marlin zone as the end of summer and the fall seasons approach. Our largest fish this year has been around 700 pounds.


PHOTO 6: First-timer, Kevin Blakely, Jr. from Los Angeles had a momentus first trip with us getting tuna, sailfish and dorado including this bull while fishing with Captain Yofo and our Las Arenas fleet.


PHOTO 7: Although the tuna weren’t as crazy as previous weeks, but off Las Arenas there’s still some tuna cruising through. Al Tesoro comes down several times a year and always fishes with Captain Adolfo.

PHOTO 8: Captain Victor put Steve Kerchichian on this nice roosterfish he got off S.Cerralvo Island. The high-schooler came with the intent of catching just a single rooster and instead “stopped counting at 10” and maybe got over 20 roosters on his first day. The roosterfish are still here but few folks are fishing for them now that the dorado and tuna are in the area.

PHOTO 9: On a sadder note, we lost our friend, mentor and Tailhunter Family member, Jack Velez, to a heart attack this week. Jack had been sick for the past few months but seemed to be on the recovery. He was an icon and a character in La Paz for decades and with us since the first days of Tailhunter 15 years ago. Many of you may remember his crazy sense of humor and boisterous laugh in the early morning hours as he delivered the breakfasts and lunches before we packed you off in the vans to Las Arenas. He could laugh at anything and certainly himself and always greeted people by bragging, “I am the only Mexican that is ever on time!” He was one-of-a-kind and will be sorely missed. Jack leaves a wife and 3 young kids so we’re starting a fund for them. Details are below.

CHANGING WATER CONDITIONS MAY HAVE SLOWED THE BITE BUT DORADO STILL FILL FISH BOXES MOST DAYS

LA PAZ/ LAS ARENAS FISHING REPORT FOR WEEK OF JULY 26 – AUG. 2, 2009

It can’t always be “SPECTACULAR” or “AWESOME” or “OF THE CHARTS!” But better to be honest. It wasn’t bad either! In fact, we had some pretty darned nice fishing all week. I think the fishing had just been so incredible for the last few weeks that we got spoiled, but we had some good solid fishing this week with a nice mix of fish.

The backbone of our catch were dorado for both our Las Arenas and La Paz fleets. At times the fish were thick. At others, it was a pick day. Each boat seemed to do differently each day. The slow boat one day became the hot boat the next. The boat that had all the big fish one day, had trouble finding fish the following day. But, if you put in 2-3 days on the water, EVERYONE got fish! They ranged in size from newbie 5 pounders up to fish in the 40-50 pound class.

As well, there was still a smattering of tuna off Las Arenas and incredibly, some yellowtail biting as well. These yellowtail have been showing up the last two weeks in a total surprise since yellowtail season is in the spring when the waters are cooler and right now things are anything but cool. The yellowtail are biting the live bait fished a little deeper and some larger fish were lost in the rocks estimated in the 30-40 pound class. The guys who knew how to fish yo-yo iron really did better.

I tell you what I think, we looked at the satellite charts and although it seems like the ocean is warm as a bath and the air is blazing, the water tempos actually have been dropping over the last week or so. It’s come down a good 3 or 4 degrees. That may not seem like much but it’s enough to put the fish into a bit of a pout until things level off. I think that’s why the bite may be a bit off. Other species this week included some sails and striped marlin (all but one released) and a few wahoo were hooked, but not landed.

JACK VELEZ

As mentioned above, we lost our amigo, Jack Velez this week. To so many he was a comic, a character, a scamp and a clown, but he was always a gentleman from the old-school. He could make anyone laugh and best of all could laugh at himself. “Never fear when Jack is here!” was his motto. He always loved all the clients and would always go the extra mile for service and deliver it with a smile and often a song too! I used to call him the “Ricky Ricardo of La Paz.” I wish you could have heard some of the stories he would tell of “Old La Paz.”

Jack’s dad, Rudy Velez, used to run the fleet for the Ruffo Brothers for the old Hotel Cocos then went off on his own and set up his own fleet. Jack and his brothers ran with dad and their list of stories and celebrities who fished with them back in the day included Chuck Connors, Clark Gable, Steve McQueen, James Garner and others.

Many of you wanted to send flowers or donations for flowers, but we came up with a better idea instead that has met with a lot of approval so far from many of you. Jack leaves his wife, Gelines and three great youngsters that many of you have watched grow up…Felicia, Daniel and Jacobo. Rather than spend money on flowers, anyone who wants to contribute to a special fund for the family, would be welcome. No pressure. A number of amigos have already sent checks even before this announcement. Just send me an e-mail at riplipboy@tailhunter-international.com

I’ll give you more details rather than take up the fishing report. To those of you who have already written, God bless. Your thoughts and prayers have been appreciated.

That’s our story!
Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

Website: http://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:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm

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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PHOTO 1: Hector Chacon, our good amigo, is on the right. He’s holding his dorado. “One of the most incredible bites I’ve ever had. They were everywhere!” On the left…some guys will go to any length to make sure their boss doesn’t know they went fishing. “Mr. Modelo” also holds up a dorado! (Nice Mask, Dave!)

PHOTO 2: Steve Kechichian from S.California just finished his freshman year in high school and made his first trip down to us. In addition to roosterfish, he also got this nice yellowfin tuna his first day out on light spinning gear.

PHOTO 3: Dave Rose from Denver caught the fish, but Captain Armando does the honors. Check out the size of this big pompano caught off Las Arenas! The pompano came back this week and were feeding near the drop offs near the beaches.

PHOTO 4: Bruce Husson and Rick Carlton show off a pair of their La Paz dorado they caught north of town. The dorado schools continued to park themselves out in the channel this past week. The guys are from the San Diego area.

PHOTO 5: The Kellogg boys showed that there were still some yellowfin tuna off Las Arenas this past week. They weren’t as fast and furious as previous weeks, but the footballs were still in the area!

PHOTO 6: Ron Wesp and Bonnie Buiniak from Arizona were way fun on their first trip with us. Their first day they picked up some dorado and tuna. Their second day, they did much better on dorado.

PHOTO 7: Our amiga, Andrea Wood from Orange Co. She loves the pool but gets out on the water every other day or so and always does well. She holds up a big bull she slammed north of town.

DARK MOON (OR SOMETHING) PUTS A DAMPER ON LAS ARENAS TUNA/ WAHOO BITE BUT DORADO AROUND LA PAZ SAVE THE DAY FOR ANGLERS

La Paz/ Las Arnas Fishing Report for July 19-25, 2009

Well…so much for the “dark moon” stuff. Fishing actually took a hit this week. That big bite we’ve had over a month at Las Arenas with tuna, wahoo, dorado and billfish fizzled to scratch fishing. Given that I could see very little change in wind, water or weather, I don’t know what happened. Of course since MOST anglers like to fish the dark of the moon, there were some disappointments because we were pretty full all week.

Personally, I never believe in that stuff. You fish when you fish. It’s not that the fishing was terrible. It’s that it wasn’t as stellar as it had been previously. Also, when the fishing gets picky, you’d better have your game on. If you miss fish after fish, it’s not the captains fault that your ice chest isn’t as full as you want. Your opportunities are more limited. The smarter fishermen abandoned the off-shore species and went inshore and still had a blast with roosterfish, pompano and cabrilla. Fish for what’s there!

The better fishing was with our La Paz fleet that did continue to jump all over the dorado, but for sure, it seemed like there were fewer large bull dorado. The dorado on La Paz saved quite a few trips and It was pretty hard not to get bit. Fish remained in numerous places. It seemed like the smaller schoolie fish were in the channel between the islands. Larger bulls were on the high spots. So…if you wanted action and quantity you went to the channels and looked for patches of weeds or working birds or…you simply looked for a big pile up of boats! If you wanted the larger fish you buckled your chin strap and you went out trolling and hunting a bit further out.

Bottom line…everyone got fish! Any other week, this would have been a pretty darned good week of fishing. It was just that the fishing had been so off-the-charts the last few weeks that we got spoiled! I”m sure it’ll turn around. There were still plenty of dorado!

WEEKS VIDEO

I don’t have any fishing video clips this week. My video camera conked out on me. However, folks have been asking for video of the new FUBAR/TAILHUNTER BAR. We had some big parties this past week so I thought I’d pass some of that one. Click the link:

Have a great week!
Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

Website: http://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:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm

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.”

Read Full Post »

PHOTO 1: No stranger to these fishing reports, Cole Chavira (11) poses with a nice dorado and sisters Monica (20) and Gabi (18). They’re from the San Diego area and Cole always nails big fish down here. Dorado were once again the backbone of the catch this past week typical of July fishing.

PHOTO 2: This is another photo that’s suitable for framing! Love having dads and kids down. Wally Lee took time out from Wells Fargo board meetings to bring the family and took youngster Aiden out to pull on some dorado. The young man did just fine! They fished north of La Paz and got this on live bait.

PHOTO 3: Some people come down to Baja their whole lifetimes hoping to get a sniff from a wahoo. Casey Barber got one her first day out fishing with our Las Arenas fleet. (See her on the video clip). She was pretty excited. The fish scaled at 34 pounds. Early in the week, the wahoo were crashing the boats.

PHOTO 4: Sometimes I think Mitch Chavira has a professional photographer follow him and his family out when they go fishing. They ALWAYS get great shots…and outstanding fishing! Mitch comes down several times a year and holds up a big bull dorado he caught out’ve La Paz.

PHOTO 5: Another week of football tuna! The bite tapered later in the week, but earlier…the fish were blasting just off the point at Punta Arenas. Greg Jones from Bakersfield pulled a couple like this out using live bait.

PHOTO 6: Big headed bull dorado! George Simpson (holding the tail) fished with us for the first time this past week but got tuna, wahoo and dorado like this one. He’s aided by Captain Jorge and son Damon. He was fishing with our Tailhunter Las Arenas Fleet.

PHOTO 7: Dorado were our bread-and-butter-fish this week which is more typical of a summer bite. Tony Adamich on the left with Gary Skul from Colorado and John Mramor from Atlanta after a day of fishing with our Tailhunter La Paz fleet.

PHOTO 8: Hardcore! This is Romie Gonzalez. He loves his sushi and sashime. Someoen passed him a piece of sailfish to take home and he immediately took a bite! Can’t argue with the freshness! But I like mine chilled with soy and wasabi!

PHOTO 9: Our good buddy, Barry Wood, went out with Captain Chito out of La Paz and hooked this awesome dorado on bait. Daughter, Andrea, helps out. They’re both from Orange Co, CA.

PHOTO 10: Three of our favorite guys…Steve Herron and his boys Jackson and Austin…all hailing from Park City UT, got quite a haul of fish over 4 days. Here they show off yellowfin tuna as well as Austin’s wahoo. caught with our Las Arenas fleet.

PHOTO 11 – We could not have asked for a funner lady to be fishing. Di Rosas was so excited about cathing this yellowtail…about 25 pounds…that she was almost dancing on the beach. It was her first fish! Very strange to get yellowtail this time of the year as they’re usually caught in the spring, not the sweltering heat of summer, but several fish in the 20-45 pound class were hooked this past week.

BIG VARIETY OF PELAGIC SPECIES INCLUDING DORADO- WAHOO- BILLFISH AND TUNA HIGHLIGHT THE WEEK!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for the week of July 11-18, 2009

Just another super week of fishing here. The last 2 or 3 weeks have been unseasonably great. Maybe it’s the fact that the waters or air temperature are hotter than normal, because it’s over 100 every day. Waters are a good 5 degrees hotter than normal and it sure is muggy, but the fishing has been good to spectacular. Normally, mid-summer, we’re locked into dorado. Nothing wrong with that. Dorado are our bread-and-butter fish here in La Paz for a good part of the year. However, school-sized dorado are the norm about now…5 to 20 pound fish.

Well, at least for a month, sure, we’ve got the punks, but also, big bulls are solidly here as well. Fish in the 30-50 pound class have been smoking drags for weeks! But, the best surprise is the other species that have been pounding our two fleets. Football-sized yellowfin tuna in the 10-20 pound class showed up about 2 weeks ago just off the shore near Las Arenas and it’s been an easy run (swim?) to the spot and limits have been the rule rather than the exception. On top of it, wahoo charged into the foray about a week ago also where the pangas were getting 2-4 hookups per day (notice I didn’t say they were “catching” that many as many fish were lost!), but it’s made for some exciting fishing to have free swimming wahoo around the boat willing to bite bait, lures and trolled Rapalas and Marauder and Yo Zuris. (THE CD-18 size..if you’re wondering…if you use the small ones, they’ll swallow them and BLINK…you’re cut off!)

Fishing did slow a bit at the end of the week as we got some weather patterns overhead and the barometric pressure changed, but overall, it just seemed like they were glitches and anomalies. If the tuna didn’t bite, then the dorado bit and vise-versa. Hard for anyone to complain! Overall, just some good solid fishing!

Additionally, we’ve still got roosterfish in the shallows and striped, blue, and black marlin cruising the areas eating the smaller tuna and dorado as well as into the bait schools. Not many sails this year, but we get a few hookups a week. Kudos to all the guys releasing their billfish!

Oh…and surprise…BIG yellowtail showed up as well…way out of season. These fish must have been lost, but off Las Arenas we caught several fish in the 20-40 pound class!

That’s our story! We have a full week of fishermen here…we’re loaded so we’ll have some full reports for you coming up!

WEEKLY VIDEO CLIP

Click this for this week’s video clip: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNrsCdwWe3Q

Turn up the volume!

Cheers!
Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

Website: http://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:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm

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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PHOTO 1: Ricardo Garcia…El Jefe for the La Paz Board of Tourism and a good amigo loves to fish and got into some of the excellent wahoo fishing which is the best we’ve seen in ages here with multiple wahoo hook-ups each day. The fish are eating bombs, trolled lures and even snapping live bait!

PHOTO 2: “Yea Baby!” That’s what Rene Renteria yelled out when he hit the beach with this fat stuffy wahoo. The angle the fish is held makes it look shorter than it is. This was a THICK fish! That had is sashime the fish at the FUBAR TAILHUNTER CANTINA that night!

PHOTO 3: Chris Ortiz poses with a bull dorado he pulled off between Cerralvo Island and Las Arenas point. The fish ate live bait and still has it’s fresh colors on it. Chris had a pretty good outing with a solid cooler of dorado fillets. This was it seemed like the dorado got tired of being pushed out’ve the spotlight by the tuna bite!

PHOTO 4: Ed Basurto from the Sacramento CA area said this fish “worked me!” The 40 pound class bull dorado was one of a number of big bulls caught this week.

PHOTO 5: Bakersfield CA vistors Greg Jones and Jo Marie Corbell fished with us for the first time and dog-piled on the fish. He shows off a few of his dorado, but also got into tuna and at one time had on a sailfish and wahoo on at the same time!

PHOTO 6: Once again for the 3rd straight week, the tuna charged the boats. This pair is held up by Dan and Josh Moore who also hung a nice wahoo. These yellowfin tuna varied from 10 pound footballs to 25 pound plugs.

PHOTO 7: One of our favorite amigos, Jorge Romero, has a knack on the wahoo. A few weeks ago, he got 5 wahoo in two hours. This week he got 3 wahoo and lost 5 Rapalas in the process. Here he does the man-up pose with a big skinny he took off the South End of Cerralvo Island.

PHOTO 8 : Mark and Ben Driver from Portland OR showed up right in the middle of the tuna bite and spanked fish big time over several days of fishing. Here, they hold up 4 yellowfin they hung while fishing north out’ve La Paz. According to their Captain Chito, they were trolling for dorado when all the rods went off and suddenly swarms of yellowfin foamed around the boat when they threw bait!

FISHING RODEO AS WAHOO JOIN THE FRAY WITH TUNA AND BIG DORADO!

La Paz / Las Arenas Fishing Report for the Week of July 5-11, 2009

I’m not sure where to start!!! I usually try to “understate” the fishing to some degree. I mean…fishing just CAN’T be good ALL THE TIME, right?

Well, just when I thought it couldn’t get better…IT DID! First we had a killer dorado bite going on that seemed off the charts. Then about 2 ½ weeks ago the tuna exploded in a surprising bite that covered waters north of La Paz…around Cerralvo Island…and several points south…such that anglers were getting limits of tuna in an hour or two of fishing!

Then, this week…WAHOOOOOOooooooooo!!!! What can I say. Guys fishing tuna on live bait were suddenly getting chomped by free-swimming wahoo. Zing-powie! Then guys started throwing bombs and trolling Rapalas and other lures and the wahoo went nuts! Guys would get bit several times…lose a few and get one or two to the boat! Several boats took 2, 3, 4 wahoo each. These fish went 25-50 pounds in a bite like I can’t remember! These fish were not picky. They loved the trolled lures, but for once did not seem picky about the colors…purple/black…green mackerel…blue mackerel…fire tiger…bright orange…all got hit! Just check out the photos and I’d have posted up even more photos, but just did not have enough space!

Will it continue? I have no idea!

But what a bite. On two occasions, I heard clients tell me they got into dorado so thick that two fish actually jumped in the boat (not kidding…I saw the fish!) One hit a guy in the back while he was hooked up and the fish fell back in the water. We had some big roosterfish too. As for marlin and sailfish…we had several striped marlin and several sailfish caught and released. But Ryan Hershey from Colorado hooked a fish estimated to be 700 pounds (Captain’s estimate) that we have to give high-5’s to…HE RELEASED THE FISH! Good on you! Barry Wood from Orange Co, CA had on a 400 pounder that spooled them faster than the boat could catch up! Barry said, “When I saw it, I knew I wanted no part of it!”

Tell ya what…if it’s any indication, I’ve been vacuum sealing 100-200 bags of fish here at the TAILHUNTER/ FUBAR every afternoon and this does not include all the fish that the anglers are telling me they are releasing!

THE WEEK’S VIDEO CLIPS

I got the camera working again! Sorry I haven’t posted in awhile, but here you go! Right off YOUTUBE! Just click the link to see this week’s video clips of the fish! Click this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4RYQvOdIfQ

JACK IS BACK

Thanks to so many of you who kept tabs on our friend and Tailhunter family member with your e-mails and prayers. He is now back in La Paz after being in the U.S. for a month in the hospital. He’s not moving fast and is very weak but it’s good to see him again. He’ll be taking it easy for awhile as he tries to regain his strength.

That’s our story!
Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International
Website: http://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:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm

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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PHOTO 1: Yes…they are here! What a week. The yellowfin tuna showed up and rampaged through the fleets in a frenzy and in the kind of madness we rarely see. Captain Jorge holds up a YFT for Sara Moss. Notice how close to shore they are!

PHOTO 2: Nothing quite like yellowfin tuna coming closer to the boat. But this is often the time when anglers relax and the fish makes another blazing run to freedom and the anglers break off. The yellowfin started as 10 pounders, but by week’s end, they were in the 25 pound class.

PHOTO 3: Looking for the headshot with the gaff so as not to spoil the sweet meat, this tuna actually did not end up as sashime but was released as were many others. Limits at times were so easy that anglers went to circle hooks to more easily let the fish go!

PHOTO 4: Outdoor TV show host, Rick Kasper from Thousand Oaks CA, ripped this beauty of a bull dorado with the south end of Cerralvo Island in the background off Las Arenas. Captain Pancho lent a hand on the gaff.

PHOTO 5: Dennis Cadal and Alan Nojadera from the Ventura CA area hold up a paid of sweet bull dorado. The fish charged on the live bait while the guys were fishing from our Tailhunter Las Arenas Fleet. We’re crediting Al with catching the first yellowfin tuna of our season and starting the YFT bite we’ve got this week.

PHOTO: 5: These are some beasts! (The fish, not the fishermen!). Kris Kasper and Cole Thomas just graduated from high school and came down with their buddies to fish our area for the first time and slammed the dorado. These big fish were caught of Las Arenas Beach. That’s the new lighthouse in the background.

PHOTO 6: One of our best amigas, Wendy Fantozzi, with her favorite captain Victor hung all kinds of fish while here this week including pargo, amberjack and this beutiful bull dorado.

PHOTO 7 : The Utah clan of Anthony Schmidt (here for his daughter’s honeymoon) take a family pose with their dorado. The largest is a 32 pounder on the left.

PHOTO 8: Another great group shot…the Hardesty Boys…Nick, Jim, Rob and Scott hold up their fish…well, Jim is holding a zebra fish! Dorado were still going strong but tuna moved in this week.

PHOTO 9 : Al Silvas just took this great shot. Blue water. Big smile. Big fish. Life is good!

PHOTO 10 : Reg Powell came all the way from Colorado intent on getting a rooster on his flyrod. Here he hold the proof. The fish was released.

PHOTO 11: Frank Gillespie, Jr. from Utah. Puts the gaff into this bull dorado headed to the fish box.

FISH EXPLODE FOR ANGLERS AS TUNA CHARGE IN FORCE BUT DORADO POWER IN AS WELL FOR BEST WEEK OF THE SEASON!
La Paz / Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of June 28 to July 4, 2009

We possibly had the best week of fishing of the entire season this past week. What a fish-rodeo! Yellowfin tuna made a surprise crash and literally foamed and exploded on our panga fleet. We had pangas coming in back to the beach early with shocked clients and bloody ice chests.

“It was nuts!”
“Never seen anything like that!”
“It was like the old days in Baja…fish everywhere! There were so many tuna around the boat then the dorado came blasting in!” were just some of the comments.

Folks were getting limits and telling us they were releasing as many fish as they caught. At the FUBAR we were vacuum sealing fish for hours each afternoon. The early showing of the tuna was the biggest news. These fish started at 10 pounds, but towards the end of the week 20-25 pound muscle fish were not uncommon. Folks were saying they couldn’t get baits in the water fast enough. The fish ate live bait, dead bait, lures, iron, surface poppers, flies…they weren’t picky and they came ‘en masse.” This wasn’t a pick bite. This was the full panzer division blitzkrieg on the fleets. On top of that, dorado would charge in as well as if they didn’t like getting the spotlight taken away from them. Fish up to 50 pounds were ripping lines and hearts!
Bigger baits generated larger fish, but not always. Several marlin were hooked on small sardines and small hooks too. Often the method to find any of the fish was to slow troll a live bait, chunk of dead bait or small feather…enough to rip the water…when the rod went off, throw live bait and watch the foamers come tearing into the boats!

I don’t know how long this will last. We have a full moon coming on this week and I”m not a big believer in the full moon thing, but this tuna bite is just so crazy that I don’t want anything to upset the apple cart…if you catch my drift! In the meantime, life is good…the fish are biting!

LIVE WEBCAM

We have a live webcam now on the TAILHUNTER BAR/ FUBAR CANTINA. If you want to watch, just click:

When you get the webpage type in the word: remoteuser
You do not need a code word. You can watch the view from the 3rd floor of the bar 24/7!
Happy 4th of July Week Everyone. I’m craving Kentucky Fried Chicken, parades and potato salad!

Best fishes!
Jonathan and Jill

Tailhunter International La Paz

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PHOTO 1: “Changes in latitudes…changes in atitudes” – Jimmy Buffett. A summer sunset this week in La Paz Bay. Cheers to our Colorado amigo, Dave Hagen, for taking the shot. He spent this past week with us taking both fish and fotos!

PHOTO 2: All it takes is one! After getting skunked all day, Junior Azores from Ventura CA dropped down a live zebra fish and got hammered by this big amberjack for his only fish of the day but it made him king of the beach. The big fish topped out a 50 pound scale and we estimate that it would have gone 60 pounds. This fish is the big cousin to the yellowtail.

PHOTO 3: From Denver, Dave Wade made his first trip to see us down here in La Paz and spent a few days fishing with our Las Arenas Fleet then with our La Paz fleet. He went home with quite a few dorado fillets similar to this bull mahi he put in the boat fishing out’ve Las Arenas.

PHOTO 4: DORADO SEASON is ON! Full turbo dorado for bulls like this fish caught by Sandra Raveling from who is stationed in Seattle with the U.S. military. She’s helped by Frank Gillespie from Utah. This was especially a hard-fought fish because if you look closely at the flank, you’ll see the white “nick” where she actually snagged the big dorado and had to really wrestle with the fish for 45 minutes on light tackle!

PHOTO 5: Can it be???? A yellowfin tuna??? Yes…your eyes don’t deceive you. But don’t get too excited. I think this fish was lost or something. Our Fish Brother, Alan Nojadera, from Ventura CA was hopping the outter buoys off Las Arenas with our fleet for bigger dorado and hung this YFT. It’s the only yellowfin we’ve seen in weeks and there were no signs of any other fish either. It was just a wrong-way fish!

PHOTO 6: Newly-wed catch! Just so you don’t think that dorado are the only things we’re catching, Austin Adams and Stephanie (Schmidt) Adams from Utah came to spend some honeymoon time with us and got tangled with some nice jack crevalle (toro) that are still schooling off the beach and beating up anglers. That’s Cerralvo Island in the background.

PHOTO 7: Strike the pose! Big fish on the beach being held by Isaac Schmidt from Utah who pulled this out’ve the waters near Punta Perrico. The fish went 32-pounds and took a live sardine. Little brother, Nathaniel, holds up his own dorado in the background.

PHOTO 8: I wish I could have gotten a photo of these guys with their flyrods. Bob Yagnich (left) and Manny Martinez came to visit us from Colorado with flyrods in hand intent on roosterfish and dorado. They got both, but they really tangled with the dorado. Manny broke his 10wt rod on this big bull dorado just as it got near the boat! Time to check on that warranty! Both were fishing with our Tailhunter Las Arenas Fleet.

PHOTO 9: Wendy Fantozzi is one of our favorite amigas and she CAN fish! Here she holds up a nice amberjack she got on live bait. Fishing 4 days with her husband Jonathan Spier, the pair got dorado, amberjack, bonito and pargo. Also, happy birthday, Wendy!!! How was that tequila shot at the FUBAR Cantina?

PHOTO 10: I couldn’t help but publish this shot. I THINK it’s Dave Wade from Denver. He wins the tatoo award for creativity!

PHOTO 11: Sed Roldan from Hacienda Heights…yes, this is my dad…came to visit us for Father’s Day. It was great to have him down and have him hang out at the new bar and restaurant. He got his first roosterfish off Las Arenas Beach. He’s helped here by Captain Adolfo. The fish was released as were several others.

PHOTO 12: Our buddy Dave Wehner from Northern California comes to see us every year and usually goes home with a load of fish and Kodak moments such as this one with a big bull dorado he took off Boca de Alamo with out fleet using live bait. We did a majority of our fishing off Las ARenas this week because of high winds on the La Paz side, but everyone got fish!

PHOTO 13: From BAKERSFIELD, CA, Ken and son, Steve Gragg, ran into some of that rough wind and weather we had mid-week but hung in and nailed some nice dorado including this pair on live bait with our Las Arenas Fleet.

DORADO GO FULL TURBO ON ANGLERS THIS WEEK DESPITE SOME ROUGH WEATHER!

La Paz / Las Arenas Report for Week of June 21 to 27, 2009

We had some touch-and-go-weather this week as we watched storms build to the south of us and intially promise wind and rain. Fortunately, the darned things blew out and to the west far to the south of us bringing only a few days of strong winds during mid-week.

Fortunately, most of the wind was around La Paz (really rough!) but having two fleets, we simply moved those folks who didn’t want the rough stuff to go fishing with our Las Arenas fleet where waters were generally alot calmer and fish were certainly alot closer to shore.

Either way, this week there were no shortage of dorado. You might go all day and hit nothing then BOOM! You find the spot and the waters explode with 10, 20, 30 or more fish and every rod bent! Or, you might hit a fish here. Two there. Another one here. At the end of the day you realize you had a pretty full day and your box was full!

There are alot of small fish around in the 5 pound class and great to see so many of them released. However, fish in the 20-40 pound class are running out there too and some larger bulls closer to 50 were hung and even more were lost…many by angler error or simply because these are outstanding fighting fish that can rip line; do aerial acrobatics or dog-down deep!

The biggest thing was reminding folks that THERE ARE LIMITS and INSPECTORS ARE CHECKING (more on that below), but even then, in the heat of battle it’s hard to think of catch-and-release! Give it some thought beforehand so that when the time comes, it’s not a big thing to pull the hook and let the fish…especially the females and smaller fish go.

These fish are biting on live bait, dead strip bait as well as lures although the bigger fish are produced by larger baits such as caballito and dead strips of fresh bonito or skipjack.

Other species include roosterfish (sometimes all you can handle!); marlin…stripers and blues (many feeding on the young dorado)…pargo, amberjack, pompano, jack crevalle and cabrilla.

Hot areas include Boca de Alamo; the inner and outer buoys; any of the high spots and banks, the channel outside of Las Cruces, Punta Arena; Punta Perrico; the SE side of Espiritu Santo Island.

LICENSES AND LIMITS

Yes, they are checking right now! Inspectors are going boat-to-boat somedays. They are checking boat licenses as well as angler licenses. We are one of the only authorized vendors of fishing licenses so we have them here at our store…but that means you also have to have them on you when they ask for them!!! Don’t leave them in your room. Inspectors are friendly and professional, but they can and have confiscated some fishing gear; fish and other items. It’s the law!

Also, they are being much more thorough about limits. The days of packing 20 and 30 small dorado in the boat are long gone, but even then, there’s no reason to put a dozen baby dink dorado in the box. The inspectors ARE being pretty lenient, but they CAN enforce the limits harshly. Listen…I don’t agree with alot of things they do, but they have been hammering ALOT of boats, especially south of us on the East Cape. No reason to tempt anyone. Many incidents start with not having your licenses! It’s a simple thing. All-in-all, the inspectors that have been in our area have not been jerks. Very professional and a few times, were understanding when a fisherman said he forgot his license in his jacket back in his room. Just a heads-up! Our fishermen have been really great and realizing they have alot of fish anyway so have been readily releasing much of their catch as have other fleets as well. At the end of the trip, many still have more fish than they can bring home.

JACK

Thanks to all of you who offered prayers, good thoughts and money for our friend and family member, Jack Velez, who has been in the U.S. for the last 3 weeks. It turned out he had and continues to have a complicated heart problem. Doctors in Mexico could do nothing so he went to the states where they somewhat stabilized him but he’s still very weak. They were going to do a bypass on him, but are unable to do so and he’s been released from the hospital to come home now to La Paz. He hopes to be ready to pass out breakfasts and bad jokes shortly like always. I have forwarded all your great e-mails to him and he has read and appreciated all of them and says “thanks for the jokes!” God bless you all for keeping him in your thoughts and prayers.

That’s our story!
Jonathan and Jill

Tailhunter International La Paz

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PHOTO 1: Starting the new day into a sunrise as we make bait. Just too nice of a photo to pass up. Also, an opportunity to wish everyone a Happy Father’s Day to start out the fishing report!

PHOTO 2: It’s upside down but it doesn’t diminish the great-looking dorado caught by our “Mai Tai” Queen, Amy Mann from Oregon (she has discoverd the joys of dorado as well as mixing fruit juices and Captain Morgan rum). He’s not Captain Morgan, but he’s a great captain but no for drinking…Capt. Archangel lends a hand with the gaff. The fish was caught fishing with our Tailhunter Las Arenas fleet. That’s Cerralvo Island in the background.


PHOTO 3: All the way from Virginia, my pirate brother, John Benson, fished out towards Cerralvo Island off Las Arenas and hooked onto this 40 pound class dorado they fought for 30 minutes. They also hooked a striped marlin as well. Both fish were picked up on live bait.

PHOTO 4: Vanessa Luciano from Canada builds websites. Charles Belnavis is one of the most awesome tatoo artists around http://www.tatoosbycharles.com/ and one of the original members of our “Team Modelo” boys that started out with us way way back in the day. The two team to hold up nice fat bull dorado that ended up in garlic and butter that night!

PHOTO 5: Inshore fishing is getting largely ignored because of the great dorado bite, but inshore fish like this tasty barred pargo held by Alan Beilstein from San Diego are still in the shallows along with roosterfish, pargo, jacks, pompano and sierra too. That’s Las Arenas Beach about 20 yards behind Alan.

PHOTO 6: Devon Morse just finished his freshman year in high school and dad, Joe Morse, brought him do La Paz for the first time to catch a few fish. They hit into the dorado nicely and show off one of their bulls they caught fishing with our Tailhunter La Paz Fleet between Cerralvo and Espiritu Santo Island.

PHOTO 7: Happy folks! All from the Northern Cal area…Janine and Roy Stenzel and Kevin Bradley and Mark Jacobs pose at Balandra beach with two of a number of dorado they hooked while fishing with us just north of La Paz. For Kevin and Mark, it was their first time out!

DORADO PUT ON A SHOW THIS WEEK AS ANGLERS GET MULTI-HOOK STOPS!
La Paz- Las Arenas Report for Week of June 14-20, 2009

If you were looking for dorado this week that was the predominantly hot biter this week for both our Tailhunter Las Arenas and Tailhunter La Paz fleets. There were bunches of fish as well as scattered fish under patches or areas of sargasso weed or under any floating structure such as buoys or floating debris. Sometimes, the best way to get them would be trolling feathers, but also slowly dragging a nice messy slab of bonito generated some viscious strikes from big bulls…or marlin which are also in the area eating bait as well as the smaller dorado.

Once you got the boat hooked up, then throw bait and hopefully the school comes charging. The biggest problem is actually getting people to slow down and release the smaller fish and female fish and remind folks of limits. No kidding you could suddenly realize after the heat-of-battle that you have several dozen fish in the box…well over limits!
Trolling patterns include brighter colors like white and blue or else pink/red/white.
Marlin, not surprisingly are hitting dorado-colored patterns or (my favorite) strips of dorado belly and collar. It leaves a nice smelly oil trail that the marlin (and other specie including other dorado love!)

Other species include roosterfish still along a lot of the beach areas and in the rocky areas, cabrilla, pargo and amberjack have been the predominant species…not to mention, too many needlefish! Live bait is working the best on pretty much everything, but if you want to play, throw plastics and retrieve slowly. Also shiny spoons working as well.

UPDATES ON JACK
Thank to all of you that have been sending their good wishes for Jack. We have been forwarding each and every e-mail to him and whenver he can, he’s been answering. He really appreciates it. He’s been hospitalized in L.A. now for over 2 weeks and it was touch-and-go for a bit. Currently, he’s been moved and had an initial heart procedure but they are now waiting for him to stabilize so they can do a bypass. You can write to me directly at riplipboy@tailhunter-international.com and I”ll forward all messages to him. We appreciate that you keep our Tailhunter Team and Family Member in your thoughts and prayers!
HAPPY FATHER’S DAY EVERYONE!
Best fishes!
Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

Website: http://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:
http://www.tailhunter-international.com/fishreport.htm

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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