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Monday, June 28, 2010

East Cape Guides Fishing Report

From the watery desk of Mark Daugherty


This week has been all about the tuna and BIG roosterfish. We have been experiencing some cool green water but that hasn’t stop the tuna bite that is literally 50 yards off of the Punta Arena Lighthouse. These fish are so close to shore you could surf cast to them. Tuna are ranging from 20 to 80 pounds and are readily taking chunks of squid. Also on the scene are very large roosters in the 40-60 pound range. These fish are within 500 yards of the tuna bite. You really have to ask yourself what is inshore and offshore fishing when roosterfish and yellowfin tuna are swimming a few hundred yards of each other? Striped marlin are in the mix with a good number of fish being release every day. You can also throw in some nice pargo to boot. The down side is the dorado counts have been lagging behind with very small fish being landed. All in all, a lot of quality fish have been taken this week. Oh, the weather has been perfect at 85 degrees every day without a cloud in the sky.

Photos

Frank “Chip” Stearns and wife Leanea with one of three 40+ pound roosters landed, a tuna in front of the lighthouse and a 25 pound pargo. Both Leanea and all around great guy Tommy landed their first striped marlins. Tom Spencer with a nice tuna landed on 30lb. test after a 2hr. fight.

Buena pesca,

Mark
EastCapeGuides.com 


 

Van Wormer Resorts Fishing Report

by Eddie Dalmau, Van Wormer Resorts


2010 Keep´n It Reel Fish and Chips Tournament
Palmas de Cortez

The 2010 Keep´n It Reel Fish and Chips Tournament got under way today and what a day it was for everyone involved. 15 boats participated in this year's tournament and every single one of them came back with some very nice yellowfin tuna. The third place tuna weighed in at 122lbs. The second place tuna weighed in at 133lbs. The winners of the 2010 KIR Fish and Chips tournament were Jack Wright, Troy Peterson, Kevin Chrisman and Jermy Galatio from the state of Washington, whose tuna weighed in at a whopping 143lbs. It took these guys only 45 minutes to bring in this monster while fishing aboard the Jen Wren with Captain Mark Rayer. Tomorrow the tournament will conclude with the always exciting no limit poker tournament at Hotel Palmas De Cortez.

It was all about the tuna this week in the East Cape. There was well over 500 yellowfin tuna landed this week ranging from football size to the biggest this week coming in today at 143lbs. There were approximately a dozen tuna that were weighed or estimated at over 100lbs this week and many more that came up just a few pounds short of the 100lb. mark. Once again there was quite a bit of sashimi being passed around the bar area this week. A special thank you goes out to Mrs. Saiki, who prepared some of the best sashimi I´ve ever had the pleasure of eating. Because of all the tuna that came in this week, Mrs. Saiki prepared enough sashimi for everyone at the hotel to enjoy. "Thank you for all your hard work Mrs. Saiki".

The tuna bite was fantastic, but let´s not forget about all the other species that were landed this week. After all this is the East Cape we´re talking about and the East Cape is known for year round marlin. There were plenty of stripe marlin to be had this week. For those fishermen who reached their limits on tuna, many went after striped and blue marlin with great success. There were over 200 marlin landed this week out of the three hotels. The wahoo are still around as well, with approximately 15 landed, and the biggest weighed in at 105lbs. The only down note to this report is the lack of dorado right now. Captains are seeing big schools of dorado, but everything that is being landed is too small to keep. We are seeing the occasional 20 to 30 pound dorado, but not in any great numbers at all. All in all it was another great week down here at Van Wormer Resorts. Hope to see many of you down here very soon.

Eddie Dalmau
Baja’s Van Wormer Resorts

Monday, June 21, 2010

Reports for La Paz, Gordo Banks & Cabo

by Cass Tours

Baja Pirates - La Paz

Strong winds, Rough water, green water? Who cares BAJA PIRATES crew still filling everybody ice chest with only good eating fish like Pargo, Cabrilla, Dorado, Telowtail and even amberjack.

Weather is being crazy this last week with lots of changes in the water temps one day is very cold with green waters and the next one is nice and warm with blue water every where, but the experience and skills of the BAJA PIRATES CREW plus the patience of our fishermen are making the diference between an empty or full cooler.

We have seing that as the week goes by the fish is getting bigger, but the small ones like the 10 - 15 pounds dorado are lot of fun to catch when you doit with a 10-15pounds light speening gear and we provide those ones to every body.

Gordo Banks - San Jose del Cabo

Late spring is transition time, this past week visitors to Southern Baja felt weather patterns that ranged from early spring like to summer like. It started last Thursday when strong winds out of the southwest pushed colder green Pacific currents in the direction of the Sea of Cortez and actually dropped water temperatures close to ten degrees within 24 hours. This created cooler air temperatures that were very comfortable, but also made for tough fishing conditions through the weekend, until conditions rebounded to start the week. Tropical storm season has also begun, at this time there are two systems further to the south, off of mainland Mexico that are threatening to develop and will need to be monitored closely. Air temperatures at this time are quite warm and humid.

Water temperatures are now back in the 75 to 80 degree range from Cabo San Lucas towards Los Frailes. Winds have settled down and swells are moderate, looks as though the summer fishing season is about to start off with ideal settings. There are now good supplies of mullet and caballito, but there are no sardinas being found. The fishing grounds are seeing increased concentrations of bolito, which should attract a variety of gamefish for the coming weeks.

The inshore fishing action has produced a mix of action for roosterfish, amberjack, jack crevalle and dogtooth snapper. Recent days have seen larger sized roosterfish appearing throughout the region, anglers trolling live baits just outside the surf zone reported chances at fish in the 20 to 60 pound class. This is now peak season for inshore fishing, should last through July, before shifting to offshore structure and open water trolling. Surf fishing anglers have reported excellent action as well, particularly early in the morning while casting with surface plugs, they hooked into a variety of species, including dogtooth snapper, pargo colorado, jack crevalle and even several large sized snook were accounted for off of the San Jose Estuary area.

Dorado still were not found in any significant numbers, just scattered single fish for the most part, most of them juveniles, though with how the water conditions are shaping up we except that the larger sized dorado should be appearing any day. This is the same time period when we saw many larger bulls appearing last year, fish to over forty pounds were common. So we will be anticipating the same type of action this season.

Yellowfin tuna became more scattered since the passing of changing ocean currents, early in the week anglers found varied action near Iman to Vinorama on tuna ranging in sizes up to 50 pounds, striking on chunks of squid, rapalas, hoochies and caballito, at times associated with porpoise and other times on blind strikes. Then later in the week these schooling tuna seemed to have moved in the direction of Los Frailes, out of range for most local charters.

As water conditions stabilized, with warmer clean currents returning, this triggered the wahoo to become active once again. The best areas were north of Punta Gorda, Iman to Vinorama, trolling with a variety of lures and baits were all producing strikes by 'hoo that ranged from 30 to 60 pounds. Rapala type lures in silver patterns were particularly productive. Schools of wahoo were being encountered and this resulted in many multiple strikes, with a couple of charters reportedly even having four hook ups at once, that is a major fire drill, four speeding wahoo heading in different directions.

At least one swordfish was landed from a Cabo San Lucas based charter while fishing outside of the Gordo Banks near the Cabrillo Sea Mount. A commercial pangero out of La Playita reported seeing a couple of other swordfish on two successive days, one of them a monster fish possibly as large as 800 pounds, it was circling their panga feeding on cut bait they had been using to target yellowfin before swimming into the depths.

Bottom action was not consistent due to swift currents, anglers had mixed success for cabrilla, amberjack, pargo or yellowtail, but most anglers were targeting the more consistent surface action.

The combined panga fleets launching from the La Playita/Puerto Los Cabos Marina sent out approximately 97 charters for the week, with anglers reporting a total fish count of: 28 yellowfin tuna, 14 dorado, 6 striped marlin, 1 sailfish, 14 amberjack, 1 yellowtail, 31 various pargo species, 26 jack crevalle, 14 cabrilla, 5 sierra, 26 bonito, 27 wahoo and 48 roosterfish.

Gaviota Fleet - Cabo San Lucas

The highlight for the week was the Gaviota Fleet's first swordfish of the year, captured by Angler Dave Dominique, Illinois, while fishing aboard the 33' Crystaliner, "GAVIOTA VIII", with Captain Juan Dominguez. The trophy fish was taken near the 95 fathom spot and weighed in at 75 kilos, (165 lbs.) following a 70 minute battle on 50 lb. line, using a caballito for bait.. Overall, the fishing was a bit difficult this past week, albeit, a few of the boats did well. The "Fish Cabo" had a single billfish and the only two wahoo for the week for a single day fished and the "Tuna Time" had 15 yellowfin tuna for a single fishing day. The overall fish counts for a combined total of 12 days fished reflected 1 swordfish, 4 stripers released, 2 wahoo, 6 dorado, 1 roosterfish, 1 shark and 25 yellowfin tuna.

Cabo Climate: Mostly sunny and warm with a few passing clouds, temps from 71 nights to 92 daytime highs.

Sea Conditions: Breezy on the Pacific side but fishable. Sea temps on Pacific side at 70-71, butting up to 73-75 at Cabo Falso and gradually warming to 79-82 degrees at Gorda Banks area.

Best Fishing Area: Stretches from Cabo Falso to Chileno and out to the 95-fathom spot.

Best Lure/Bait: Still seeing good numbers of stripers but just not willing to bite the lures and remain finicky on the live bait, too.

Live Bait Supply: Good supply and mostly caballitos.

Have a great week everyone...

Sincerely,
Richard, Rauna, Robin, Roxy and Becky
Cass Tours

Friday, June 18, 2010

My latest Great Fish June 11, 2010

Story by Jerry Hall/Fish With Me
Vancouver, WA

As we headed off shore, it was apparent we were in for a rough day on the Sea of Cortez, 75 miles north of Cabo San Lucas. There was a steady wind out of the East, which is not common for this time of year. It was producing swells of 4-6 feet with the occasional 6-8 ft. We were trolling three lures with a live bait rod at the ready. After about an hour of rock and roll, the skipper spotted the fish's tail on the surface. The deck hand responded and tossed out the live bait. As he did, the troll rod on my right bent over and the sound of the reel exploded. Upon setting the hook, I instantly realized the fish was of formidable size, as the fish stripped 300 yards of 60 lb. test line off the reel in less than 2 minutes. There were no jumps or opportunity to see exactly how big it was. The battle was on, though, and after 20 minutes, it jumped 3 times, then made another screaming run to the north. The deck hand poured water over the reel on three occasions to cool it down, as the fish made several long runs. I didn't have to worry about being over heated, given that when the boat backed down on the fish several times, I was showered with waves of salt water.

Because of the water conditions, it was impossible to remain standing, and I welcomed the fighting chair. The fish jumped several times and by now it was much closer to the boat and the runs were shorter. The fish and I had been engaged in non-stop physical exertion for 45 minutes, and, aware of the old adage that the longer the battle, the greater the odds that the fish will break free, I was on the alert for possible tackle failure. The deck hand donned his gloves as I got the fish closer to the boat on several occasions and its runs were now even shorter, but still intense. After 1 hour and 2 minutes, he was able to grab the leader at the swivel. We had made the decision to release this magnificent fish, but in an attempt to elude us it made a final lunge under the boat, ripping the leader out of the deck-hand's hand and--unfortunately--running into the boats prop, suffering three fatal wounds. Although I have always released these magnificent fish, in this case, alas, doing so was not possible.

However, many many pounds of meat were donated to the local food bank by Chris, owner of the Smoke House.

Van Wormer Resorts Fishing Report

by Eddie Dalmau, Van Wormer Resorts



Hola Amigos,

This fishing really turned on this week. The long awaited arrival of the dorado finally came, with over 350 dorado landed this week. We saw some nice 35-45 pound bulls, but most of the dorado were in the 10-20 pound range. The tuna bite continues to be the talk at the hotels, with most anglers catching limits each day. We did see a few tuna over 50 pounds, but most were football size. Lots of sashimi being passed around at the bar this week. There were also some really nice pargo caught this week in the 15-20 pound range. Wahoo have also been coming to the docks on a daily basis. Today I say three nice wahoo come in weighing in at 30-40 pounds. The marlin bite continues to be very good, but with most anglers concentrating on all the good eating fish, we didn’t see too many marlin flags flying. The captains did tell me this week that there are a lot of them out there as well as some big blues in the 300 to 500 pound range. The inshore bite continues to be red hot as well, with some really nice jacks in the 35lb. range, lady fish and roosterfish. Some of the other species we saw, but not in any great numbers include sailfish, cabrilla, mako shark and trigger fish. Water temperatures are pushing 80 degrees and the air temperature is now in the upper 80’s to low 90’s in the day with a night time low in the upper 70’s to low 80’s. The fishing is wide open my friends and it’s a great time to be down here in the East Cape. The weather is beautiful and the beers are ice cold, so make your reservations today. Hope to see you all down here very soon. Until next week…..Eddie Dalmau/Baja’s Van Wormer Resorts.

Today’s picture:
The Barish family from Corona California with two nice dorado caught on the “Mi Sueno” with captain Paco.

Until next week!

Eddie Dalmau
Baja’s Van Wormer Resorts

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Reports for La Paz, East Cape, Gordo Banks & Cabo

by Cass Tours

La Paz - Fishermen's Fleet

So why didn't George write down a fish report for the last couple of weeks? Because La Paz Clasico Tournament Happened !!!!

People from all over the states and even a guy from germany, flew down to La Paz for our yearly fishing tournament with all proceeds going to the Asilo de Ancianos (old folks home) in La Paz.

Weather has been sunny and daytime temps in the upper 90's with cool breezes from the south west making the evenings very pleasant.

Dorado, and pargo fishing were the highlights of the tournament. The fishermen had to work very hard for their catch, with a lots of pargo on the hook, and a lot less making it to the boat. Making bait at the south end of cerralvo was not complicated with ladyfish being the preferred cubera offering.

We were told by many of our customers and captains that they hooked 50 to 60 pound pargo and lost them very close to the boat. The proof is this beautiful 45 pound cubera snapper.

Rancho Leonero - East Cape

Water-79-81 Clear, flat

Air- Cooler than normal, highs in the mid 80's, very pleasant.

Every week it gets a better. The Let's Talk Hook Up fishing tournament this week enjoyed awesome fishing, with huge Roosterfish, Wahoo, Yellowfin, Dorado, Amberjack, Striped Marlin, Blue Marlin, Pargo, and numerous other species. Lots of fish taken daily. By far the most Wahoo taken this year. Most anglers were fishing with mono, consequently lots more bit off than were taken. The tournament boats beached 12 in 3 days fishing. Yellowfin to 46# were taken both far south, close to shore, very spread, or under Porpise further outside. Lots of Gallos released this week, probably 20 over 50#'s and 10 over 60#'s, uncounted from 30 to 40#'s. Some nice Dorado to 36#'s. The Striped marlin are on the bite, very spread both north and south. A few Blues to 250#'s, released this week.

Roosterfish- Unreal Gallo fishing. Big Roosters from 35# to 65#. All taken in deeper water on Cabalito or Mullet. Lots released this week.

Yellowfin- Both under porpise 10-30 miles off, and south of Frailles 1-5 miles off the beach. The schools under the Porpise hitting Cedar plugs and Hoochies. Chunk squid and live cabalito are working closer inshore.

Dorado- Mixed with the Tuna. The best Dorado week of the year. To 40#'s.

Wahoo- 12 to the beach in 3 days. Largest 46#. Marauders and Rapalas rigged with wire working best.

San Jose del Cabo - Gordo Banks

Moderate crowds of tourists are traveling to the Los Cabos where they are enjoying very comfortable late spring weather conditions. Cooler ocean currents off of the Pacific have been meeting with the warmer Sea of Cortez air and sea conditions creating on and off marine moisture layer, turning to fog. This pattern has cooled air temperatures, reaching highs of 85 degrees, but has also meant more wind, which there has been more than enough of this year, ranging from all directions, but more often than not starting out of the north, before turning east and in the afternoon switched directly from the south, a bit hard to predict, we are patiently waiting for more consistent weather patterns to stabilize. Ocean currents have been very strong, river like, water temperatures from Cabo San Lucas to Los Frailes had ranged from 74 to 80 degrees, then on Thursday there was very strong wind from the south, blowing through Friday, this pushed in cooler water from the Pacific in the direction of Los Frailes, dropping temperatures to the 68/ 72 degree range, also turned over conditions to green dirty water. Now we wait for improved conditions.

The live bait situation continues to be somewhat limited, no sardinas available, larger surf conditions have not allowed the pangeros to areas where these baitfish are schooling. Mullet have not been as easy as expected to obtain, especially during periods of early morning low tides. Anglers found that caballito were the most abundant readily available baitfish. These small jacks prove to be good all around live bait, not quite like a live greenback mackerel, though yellowfin tuna, dorado, billfish, wahoo, roosterfish, snapper and others all will strike them. There were only scattered reports of giant squid being caught in recent days.

Panga charters out of San Jose del Cabo found the most consistent action during this past week in the warmer currents within a couple miles from shore from Red Hill to Punta Gorda. The main species being yellowfin tuna in the 10 to 30 pound range, at times found traveling with smaller sized spinner porpoise and often being encountered by blind strikes. Angler s had success on smaller sized cedar plugs, hoochies, Rapalas, feathers etc..., also good action on caballito once the schooling tuna were located.

A slight increase in numbers of dorado showing up, but still mainly being in small concentrations. This is now the time when we start to see more flying fish and bolito activity on the local fishing grounds, always a favorable sign. Conditions change fast during late spring, should be only a matter of time when conditions really stabilize into calmer summer seas.

With the yellowfin tuna action being the most productive fishery, more charters were concentrated in this area, though for the limited numbers of anglers that traveled further north near La Fortuna to Vinorama, they did report respectable action on wahoo and tuna. Anglers used live bait, rigged dead baits and various lures, diving Rapalas accounted for a high percentage of strikes. This was an option where preferably the weather would cooperate, because wind and swells could be a negative factor a times.

Striped marlin were now more plentiful, seen jumping, tailing and feeding, coming closer to shore in recent days, attracted by the food source and warm clean water conditions. The bite was up and down, some fish being more aggressive to feed than were others. The marlin hit on lures as well as the preferred live bait, nicer sized fish lately, reports of marlin weighing close to 200 pounds being landed and released.

The roosterfish action has been spotty and these fish appear to be showing up later than normal for the second year in a row. Dogtooth snapper action has not been steady, perhaps a factor being the lack of inshore baitfish schools. There is still time left in the season for these fish to move inshore, later in August these monster snapper typically move back outside to the rock piles rather than fight with higher surf conditions for their food source.

The combined panga fleets launching from La Playita/Puerto Los Cabos sent out approximately 79 charters for the week, with anglers reporting a fish count of: 8 striped marlin, 7 wahoo, 196 yellowfin tuna, 19 dorado, 24 roosterfish, 8 sierra, 8 hammerhead shark, 8 amberjack, 24 various pargo species, 13 cabrilla, 19 bonito and 22 jack crevalle.

Cabo San Lucas - Gaviota Fleet

Most of the boats are seeing and having multiple opportunities to bait the billfish; albeit, the critters are certainly unmotivated to bite. Nevertheless, it keeps the excitement going off and on, throughout the fishing day and keeps the crew and anglers on their toes. Billfish counts were about the same as the past week with a near one billfish per boat average and the overall fish counts for 14 combined fishing days reflected 10 stripers released, 2 wahoo, 12 dorado and 29 yellowfin tuna.

Cabo Climate: Intermittent clouds and bright, sunshiny days, temps from 67 nights to 90 daytime highs.

Sea Conditions: A better week with less NW winds from the Pacific. A NW to SE hard temp break parallels the Pacific side of the peninsula with temps at mid-60's on the Pacific side and 72-79 on the other side, then rising to 81 by Chileno. The water in the normal fishing areas is bluing up to near perfection.

Best Fishing Area: Near the temp break at Cabo Falso has been best for the billfish but good tailer sightings throughoutt the area.

Best Bait/Lures: Most of the billfish are being taken on live bait and the fish are finicky eaters and not eager.

Live Bait Supply: Good supply of caballitos from Cabo.

Have a great week everyone...

Sincerely,
Richard, Rauna, Robin, Roxy and Becky
Cass Tours

Friday, June 11, 2010

Van Wormer Resorts Fishing Report

by Eddie Dalmau, Van Wormer Resorts

Hola Amigos,

This week the fishing slowed down a bit down here in the East Cape. We are still seeing very good numbers on the yellowfin tuna, with a few boats catching up to 19 tunas per boat. The dorado fishing remains quite slow for this time of year, with only a few dorado coming in each day. The Marlin fishing was descent this week with quite a few stripe marlin being landed and quite a few that broke off. There was also a nice 400lb. blue marlin landed out of Playa Del Sol. Inshore, the roosters are still around and there have been some nice size roosters being caught from Buena Vista to Punta Colorada. The wahoo bite continues to be very good for this time of year, with another 8 wahoo landed this week. The winds played a big part in the substandard fishing this week that made for rough seas and tough fishing conditions. This is not typical for this time of year and caught most of us off guard. We do expect the winds to lay down next week and the fishing should pick up quite a bit.

Until next week!

Eddie Dalmau
Baja’s Van Wormer Resorts

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Van Wormer Resorts Fishing Reports

by Eddie Dalmau, Van Wormer Resorts


Hola Amigos,

The fishing down here continues to get better as we head into the summer months. Each week the fishing has improved from the week before. This week was another great week for Tuna. We saw some nice size tuna ranging from 97 lbs. down to football size tuna. Most boats came back with plenty of tuna to fill their ice chest. One boat this week came back with 22 tunas in one day. The Rude Boy with captain Chuy on board had an outstanding day this past Sunday, landing 9 tuna (97 lbs., 84 lbs, 35 lbs., and on down) along with a 450 lb. blue marlin. This was truly an epic day on the water. The dorado fishing continues to be a bit slow, with approximately 15 dorados coming back to the docks each day. We expect that to change quickly as the dorado are our bread and butter down here in the East Cape. We are still seeing lots of Striped Marlin being caught and released, but with the great tuna bite, most anglers are not too concerned with landing marlin. The inshore fishing is holding up pretty well, with some nice roosters and lady fish being landed from the beach near Punta Colorada.

We currently have three tournaments going on down here at Hotel Palmas De Cortez, so I expect to have some great news to report next week. The weather down here is a very comfortable 90 degrees in the day and dropping down to the upper 70’s at night. Water temperatures continue to be in the upper 70’s to low 80’s. It’s a great time to be down here, so if you haven’t made your plans to come down, it’s not too late. That’s it for this week my friends.

Until next week!

Eddie Dalmau
Baja’s Van Wormer Resorts