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Posts Tagged ‘La Paz fishing’

Family Outing with three generations of the Whittlesey guys including grandpa Norman (tuna and pargo); grandson Mike (striped marlin); Dad Craig (wahoo) and grandson Dan with another wahoo. The guys from Pullman Washington spent the past week fishing with us and had this great day fishing with our Tailhunter Las Arenas fleet. The bite reflected the improved fishing towards the end of the week.

Ed Johnson from S.California got into the nice jag of Cerralvo Island on the south side that went off this past week. It was his first trip and his panga got 3 wahoo and lost another. They also got dorado. The wahoo were eating trolled deep running dark colored lures early in the morning.

Making his first trip to La Paz from Colorado, Jim Schmid had an eventful week with all the different species he encountered (see account below) including this La Paz dorado as more dorado moved into the area with some larger fish like Jim's.

Leif Dover from Atlanta GA spent a week with us targeting "only big fish" and spending the time to only use larger baits and fishing larger tackle. It paid off with this beast dog-tooth cubera snapper with Captain Adolfo looking on.

Big roosterfish are still around in what has turned out to be an excellent roosterfish season. Check out Scott Damron's big fish he caught and released south of Muertos Bay.

Not a bad day at all. Early the week, the dorado bite was tough as winds pushed things around, but Cindi and Jim Schmid from Colorado still managed 4 nice mahi. As the week went on, winds diminished and dorado got more cooperative.

It's not big...but it's big news and a great catch, especially for a first timer like Mike Whittlesey from Washington who got this tuna near Cerralvo Island trolling for wahoo. Tuna keep popping up, but not staying so we have to keep an eye on this!

Captured in mid-flight during the battle, Jim Schmid's sailfish goes vertical. The fish broke off at the boat after a long fight and was "the fish of a lifetime" according to Jim. They were fishing north of La Paz with Captain Raul and our Tailhunter La Paz Fleet.

SLOW START OF THE WEEK ENDS IN HIGHER NOTES BY THE END!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of June 12-19, 2010

The week started slow and scratchy with some really tough fishing.  Winds again kept blowing erratically not only turning waters off-color, but also scattering bait and generally putting lock-jaw on the fishing.  There were times early-on when even the bonito seemed dis-interested in biting and basically, we all struggled with both our Las Arenas and our La Paz fleet.  How bad?  Well, imagine getting excited about BIG triggerfish!  Well…not quite that bad, but we sure had to work hard for the  roosters, pargo, cabrilla and inshore fish that we got.

Then, just about to throw up my hands and kick sand and boom!  The winds stopped for a few days…

And the fish bit! 

We suddenly found dorado, wahoo, some marlin and sailfish…even some tuna bit!  What a difference a day or two makes!  Roosterfish kept coming on.  Dorado up to 30 pounds.  Every day there were a few billfish hooked (lost or released).  For a few days, it seemed every boat fishing south of Cerralvo Island hooked a wahoo…not necessarily put it in the boat, but they were getting bit and several boats each day did put a wahoo in the pangas. 

As of the time I’m writing this, winds have stayed relatively calm and the waters are getting clearer.  Our biggest challenge is the live bait now.  The winds have beat up the bait so badly over the last few months and thrashing all the usual bait spots that the bait is scattered and takes a long time to get.

For our La Paz fleet, they’re doing OK, but it’s taking almost 2-3 hours to find enough bait or waiting for the bait guys to catch enough to sell.  Once they get the bait, it’s fine.  For our Las Arenas fleet, as has been the case for about 3 months, the bait is all the way up the east side of Cerralvo Island.  Rather than spend the time going all the way up then coming all the way back, our captains are using the time to troll around the south end of the island for wahoo and waiting for the bait guys to come back from getting bait and then buying it. 

Alot of the anglers can’t understand why it takes so long or why we don’t do something else.  You gotta understand, it’s pretty hard to fish without bait unless you want to troll around all day.  It’s not like we can wave a magic wand and make bait suddenly appear or get easier to catch.  The weird weather patterns have just made this a tougher season so far to get bait.  Once you get the bait, there’s fish to be caught.  It’s just trying everyone’s patience a bit more than normal.

FIRST PERSON ACCOUNT

Thank you to Jim Schmid for this!

“While the fishing was a little tougher than we hoped for, in 4 days we managed to catch 9 different species, 61 fish total, brought home a cooler full of filets, and still had extra fish to give away to Captain Raul and some of the hotel staff.  I really wanted at least one BIG TROPHY FISH, and my wish was fulfilled on the last hour of the last day, when we hooked a very large sailfish.  I spotted the fish behind our boat, and Capt. Raul made two quick hand thrown casts to place the sardine in the path of the fish, which cooperated by eating it.  Cindy graciously offered me the opportunity to fight the fish (hooked on her rod), and 40 minutes later, we brought it to boatside.  Unfortunately, when Raul grabbed the 30 # line and tried to get ahold of the fish’s bill, it thrashed and the line snapped.  We were going to release it, anyway, but it would have been nice to get some better photos (Cindy got a good one of it jumping, attached here)  Oh well, we will always have the memory of that huge fish jumping out of the water, over and over…a total of TEN TIMES!  Raul said it was a “Very big one” and estimated the weight at 70kg.! 

I never imagined the remotest chance of catching a big sailfish.  I know very little about sailfish, but am guessing a person could make many trips out trying to catch one of this caliber.  I certainly feel I was very fortunate to have the chance to fight a fish like this and very lucky to get the fish in, on fairly light gear.  It will very likely be my “fish of a lifetime”. “

By the way, wherever you’re celebrating it, Happy Father’s Day everyone!  God bless all the dads out there.

That’s our story!

Jonathan and Jill

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

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:
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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What a great way to spend your honeymoon fishing in Baja! Chanpen Suwannate (now Blackard) spent her honeymoon with us fishing and got this nice dorado fishing with Captain Armando and our Tailhunter Las Arenas fleet.

Great week again for roosterfish! The exotic fish have been solid now for several weeks with fish between 5 and 50 pounds along the beach areas. John "JD" Drucker from Redondo Beach comes down twiced a year and has had some great trips and had a banner week and shows off a nice rooster he released. He also got a number of wahoo (see below!)

Sacramento visitors Adolfo Cisnero and Kurt "I have another joke for you" Vorpagel show off a great mix of fish taken with our Tailhunter Las Arenas fleet from Muertos Bay. They're holding a dorado (and lost several others!) and have a mix of pargo, cabrilla and sierra at their feet as well which is very typical of the type of fishing right now as waters transition between cool and warm.

He has a horseshoe hidden somewhere! Guys come down here trying to hook just one wahooo in their lifetime! John Drucker hooked 6 of these over two days with three busting off but putting three into the boat. Captain Victor strains to help him for the photo op!

These sierra are normally cold-water fish, yet even though waters are getting warmer, we're getting sierra in fairly decent numbers and most of them are pretty nice-sized like this one being shown off by Ryan Blackard. He got married and came down the next day for his honeymoon to go fishing with his new wife! That's Punta Perrico in the background.

Bill "Pancho" Evans enjoyed himself so much fishing down here, he moved here last year and has become quite a hot stick with the fishing especially taking trophy pargo like this excellent dog-tooth snapper!

Some nice pargo stuck into the fish boxes this week! Yes, the big red fish are still in the shallows! Jim Brignall from Arizona holds up a nice doggie.

DORADO GO OFF FOR LA PAZ ANGLERS WHILE ROOSTERS AND BIG PARGO TANGLE WITH LAS ARENAS ANGLERS!

La Paz/ Las Arenas Fishing Report for Week of May 16-23, 2010

 

We had a full solid week of great weather.  It was the kind of weather you put on postcards.  But fishing has been like night and day between our Las Arenas and La Paz fleet.  It’s so different between what we’re catching around Las Arenas/ Muertos Bay and south Cerralvo Island compared to what our other fleet is catching around Espirito Santo Island and the waters north of La Paz!

Basically, al week, I’ve been telling our anglers, if you want variety of species, fish with our Las Arenas fleet.  For inshore fishing, you just can’t beat it with a dead needlefish!  Big pargo, cabrilla, snapper and even still some sierra and rainbow runners are in the rocky areas mixing it up with the “beach species” like pompano, jack crevalle (big ones!) and roosterfish. 

For one thing, if you’ve ever wanted a roosterfish, the stellar bite on the pez gallos has been in full swing for our Las Arenas fleet and boats fishing that area.  It’s two-sides of the spectrum.  You can get into a school of the 5-10 pounders and have a blast or go for the home run and try to nail one of the 30-60 pound beasts prowling the sandy spots.  For the last 3 or 4 weeks these big guys have been showing up and powering their way onto live bait, flies and even lures.  And, they get bigger! 

The world record was taken on this beach at 114 pounds and over the years, we’ve had fish approach that size.  I’ve personally seen fish close to the 100 pound mark (we will never know since we released them, but even the captains verified the sizes) but it’s pretty hard to fathom fish that large swimming around in sometimes only a few feet of water.

Anyway, the problem with fishing with our Las Arenas fleet is that this past week, other than bonito or the occasional dorado (very occasional) there was very little surface bite!  Very few dorado; no tuna to speak of and although we saw billfish, they were about as interested  in biting  as  cat wanting to attend a dog show. 

Contrast that with our La Paz fleet that fished north of La Paz and found dorado consistently almost every day.  Most days there were limits or near limits on all our boats.  Many of the fish were about 10 pounders and many were released, but there were still some 30-40 pound bulls in the box that really tore up some of our first-timers!  As an aside, we also got more of those big cabrilla and some pargo mulatto.

That’s our story!

Jonathan and Jill 

Jonathan Roldan’s
Tailhunter International

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:
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 »

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