This week the weather continued to be beautiful and fishing
was spectacular. Although there has
been a bit of pea-soup fog to deal with that’s just about the only complaint
one can think of. During this time of
year fish like to bed down behind, below, among a group of rocks for food and
protection. With that in mind my
fishing buddies and I like to take trips up or down the coast to fish new areas
we don’t get a shot at during the peak summer season.
So again, I went down to my favorite bait spot and collected some sidewinder crabs, mussel and ghost shrimp. Also picked up a few bloodworms to make sure I had all the baits and headed north to Leo Carrillo State Beach.
Arrived just after sun rise and found just one person on the
entire beach walking their dog.
Gathered our surf gear: 9’ spinning rod, 6lb pink Ande and the Carolina
rig and walked up the beach a bit and fished around the rocks that line the
points and shore. Pinned on a
sidewinder and it was game on.
Fishing for perch was unbelievable for about four hours
until we ran out of bait. Here’s a few
of the barred surfperch we tussled with.
These perch were anywhere from 8-16” with a dozen in the 13-16” range.
The catch of the day, of a lifetime and what would be a new
state record (if I didn’t let her go) was this beautiful calico perch. We caught two, one very small and this 13 ½”
fish.
The calico perch lives mostly from about Morro Bay to the
Oregon border. This one must have
slipped through the cracks when it was looking for a warmer place to live!
This upcoming week has some decent tides early, followed by
flatter tides later in the week. When I
fish this upcoming week I’m going to concentrate on throwing the Lucky Craft
and Kroc for halibut. As next weekend
rolls along the tides make a dramatic change as we will again enter into an
astronomical tide period. As long as
the swell stays small (as predicted) and the weather relatively calm we should
have some fantastic fishing. Although
it does look like we may get some rain later in the week, that system does not
look to have much wind or surf associated with it and should not have a big
effect on surf fishing.
From now until May try your luck near areas that have
structure, like jetties, harbors, estuaries, etc. This is where the fish will be hunkered down to avoid the weather
and also to hopefully find some food that washes off the rocks.
See you at the beach,
Bill
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