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Private Boater's AMS Fisherman's H&M Seaforth Islandia
Southern California Marlin On-line FishSpotters FinnSeeker Bites On 976-BITE
JD's Big Game Blue Marlin Chronicles Historical Landing Fish Reports Hot Bite
Eric Nelson Southern California Offshore Reports   East Cape Smoky's  Declaration
SWAG Baja Anglers On-Line Los Cabos Weekly Fishing Report Amigo's de Baja's

Marlin Weighed in and Releases
Southern Californian Anglers Marlin Release Board


Awesome Blue Marlin Photos
courtesy of Southern California Marlin Online


Wednesday Fish Report    Marty Morris  10/31/2001 6:14:38 PM
Harry Okuda and I went on a geritol special. Didn't want to get up too early (got up at 0400). Didn't want to go too far (Steve Bledsoe recommended the 43 - too far)., Checked the Terrafin SSTs (61+ on the "9") and headed for the bottom of the 302, stayed just outside the 371 (65.5-.8) down through varying temp breaks to a max of 66.1, and as far as just inside the 390. Turned around worked our way back. Saw fair number of scattered birds - no terns. No bait. No porpoise. No breaking fish. One kelp strike (sounded good). No jumpers, tailers, sleepers, feeders, or biters.

Give the fat one some throat spray and let her go to work. Marty


Saturday Fish Report     Bob Hoose     10/29/2001 8:08:27am
If it wasn't for a small swordy we baited late Saturday, we had a 0-0-0 trip. The highlight was when swordy decided to "butterfly" three times ten feet off our pulpit. I think he was eyeing my #50 gear and sizing up this thing that keeps throwing mackeral at him. Great show... Friend of mine just returned from Guadulupe. Solid bite on 35-40 lB. yellowfin, with a handful of 60-80 Lb fish at Westies. ESPADON got a 65 lb. yellowtail. They lost about a 1/3 of their tuna to white sharks. Coming home Saturday, had a double jig stop on 40 Lb yellowfin outside the Butterfly.
The fat lady has sung...   Hoose


Marlin Report for Saturday, 10-27-01 Steve Bledsoe      10/28/2001 9:16:13 AM
Was that the Fat Lady we heard singing yesterday? A small fleet of DAC boats including HOT SPOT, SCOTT FREE, MOORE FUN, TUNACIOUS, ESCAPE ROUTE and NO EXCUSES fished the East Catalina Ridge area in search of the marlin yesterday for a string of goose eggs. We joined forces with KAWAKAWA, POCO LOCO, THREE SEAS, ANDIAMO, JAD, ONO, and others. Even with all those other boats working together, only Jim Madden on ONO got a bite and then sadly lost the fish at boat side. There were very few fish seen. There were also no tuna seen in the area that I recall. The water temperature was mainly between 64.8 to 65.4 degrees with some 66.2 degree water inside the 277.

Gary and Lynn Jasper reported seeing several fish in the area on Thursday and Friday last week and managed to catch one fish each day. (For those of us who are counting, I think those were marlin number 14 and 15 for Gary and Lynn). Despite the generous support of the WAIT-N-SEA crew who passed all of their information and bait to us, we still managed to come up empty handed yesterday . We arrived on the grounds in the dark hoping to find a sleeper show at dawn, but it never materialized. Only a few of the dreaded "quick feeders" made an appearance and none of them did that within sight of the NO EXCUSES!

By 10:00AM, Dave and Niall Devoy on SCOTT FREE and Bob and Bill Waters on TUNACIOUS joined Rich Duncan, Chris Benson and I on a run to San Clemente Island. We found 66 degree water, bait and lots of porpoise, but no marlin or tuna. We fished it through the afternoon tide and returned home to Dana Point over a flat calm sea. 

I think we're ready to throw in the towel!


Wednesday Fish Report    Marty Morris  10/24/2001 9:57:38 AM
     Just as the offshore Albacore and Tuna fishing has lingered on so have these reports. The various species, including even "exotics" such as Dorado, continue to tempt us and give excuses not to remain home in mid-week. In addition, the usual early autumn Santa Anas flatten out the seas and make even poor fishing tolerable. One of the current highlights has been the Yellowfin Tuna fishing with reports of fish under "every kelp patty" and lots of biters as opposed to the non-biters associated with the porpoise and wild saurie-scene.
     As far as the Marlin fishing is concerned the waters off Catalina have remained the only game in town with 50-70 mile runs from San Diego required and the prospect of rewards for the effort very poor. Thus, rather than putting the boat to bed for the winter, three of us (Geoff Halpern, son Kenneth and myself) decided to try the YFT game. Reports have indicated lots tuna "only" 35-40 miles from SD and fish under "every piece of kelp."
     We loaded up with sardines and anchovies and left at 3 AM. Water temps were 66.5-66.1 throughout the area - just short of the 390 spot and waters above, inside, outside and below the area. There were even several sport boats in the same area. The morning started with a double on the small Albacore and we managed 6 of the creatures in the early AM. The first kelp patty yielded a flurry of Yellowtail and we boated about 5. No YFT. For the remainder of the day we must have tried at least 20 patties (I still don't know if the kelp comes in "paddies" or "patties.") and ALL were dry except for a couple of Dorado bites, one of which made it to the deck. Along the way we may have had one legitimate YFT bite which somehow ended abruptly when the hook pulled. Throughout the day we caught as many Skipjack as one might have wanted, but kept only a few which Kenneth plans to use as bait in his Lobster hoop-net.
     At about 0830 we were 43 miles, 206 heading from SD in flat 66.2 waters when something we haven't experienced in 2 years happened. Off in the distance I saw something that looked like - 2 sleepers. Kenneth felt it was a swordfish and Geoff thought it was a Marlin. Regardless, they started cranking in the lines and getting out the heavy equipment with one of the skippies designated as our official swordfish bait. But as we got closer a quick look with the glasses confirmed that this was one one lone Marlin sitting there with an erection - his dorsal fin, that is. Hence the mistaken identity from afar, but the serrated edge of the dorsal made for the proper diagnosis.
     Not having had the opportunity to do battle with such a creature for over two years we scratched our heads asking: "How does one catch a Marlin?" But, all was not lost for in this electronic era a quick internet search under the topic "Marlin, How to catch them (especially if one does not have Mackeral)" revealed an article co-written by Bill Kingsmill, Steve Bledsoe, Gary Jasper and our good friend Rich Hamilton giving all the currently accepted methods.
     Therefore, I advised the crew to get two juicy sardines ready for the slow-troll routine. Just as I began the encirclement routine the fish gave a gentle kick and sank out, but pointing in the direction of the baits. With one engine in and out of gear we continued the slow movement when Kenneth exclaimed those famous words: "I think I'm bit!" After an extraordinary long pause watching the line peel off the reel I was finally instructed to "punch it." At that moment, as the rod bent over, the age old debate of release vs. "you know what" flashed through my mind. But after two years of frustration and near misses this fish's fate was sealed. We have released our share of these beautiful creatures, but the thought of some fresh smoked fish, at this time of the year, down here where nothing has been seen or caught in quite some time, made for a very prognosis for this animal.
     Someone once said that "bait fish don't jump," but this fish never heard that and put on quite a show which only helped to tire him out and shorten the battle. On 20 pd. line in 27 minutes we nailed him with the time-honored curved tagging stick (the one with a barb on the end) and brought him aboard. When first it jumped it didn't look too large, but at the boat it obviously had large shoulders (as they say) and it took the three of us to muscle him into the cockpit - the swim step being pre-occupied by the fish bags loaded with all those albacore, 'tails, and Kenneth's lobster bait.
    Back at the Marlin Club (that's the place where they kill all those fish, you know) it tipped the scales at 180 pds. If you average that out for all the trips over the past two years that comes to about 6 pounds per trip. The cost per pound? Don't even try.

2001-marty morris marlin.jpg-72.jpg (36156 bytes)

     Will this be the last Wed report for 2001? Depends. Will all that bait up towards Catlina move this way? to Clemente? will we see one of the famed "bye-bye bites" as in the past? Stay tuned. But please, don't tell Stan Eklund, Jr. (or Rich Holland, for that matter) what you read here.

Marty


Shark looked close to record; scale said no

By Ed Zieralski  
STAFF WRITER - Union-Tribune Publishing Co.
October 16, 2001

Capt. Anthony Reid listened to the old-timers, because old salts know the weights of fish by looking at them. And some of them told Reid at the Oceanside Harbor that the huge mako shark caught by Lee Reynolds Saturday night on the west side of Catalina Island aboard Reid's Jessie's Best II was 800 to 900 pounds. If it wasn't a state record, it was close. But it wasn't that close at all, really, at least that's what the San Diego Marlin Club scale showed.

Reid transported the shark by pickup to the San Diego Marlin Club after it bottomed out the scale in Oceanside. It hit 646 pounds in San Diego, way shy of the California state angling record, which is a 986-pound specimen caught by Tom Brooks Jr. off Santa Barbara Island on Sept. 5, 1999. Reynolds' mako, landed after a 11/2-hour battle on Reid's 32-foot Blackman was a great fish, but not a record.

Disappointed? Not Reynolds, who beat by nearly 550 pounds his previous best catch, a 100-pound tuna. But Reid wonders. He has seen bigger makos, and he believes in his heart this one was in that class.

"I've seen granders, and I've lost granders," Reid said of the coveted 1,000-plus-pound sharks. "I lost a mako I thought was 1,300 pounds during the Dana Point mako tournament earlier this year. It did a full Monty on us, jumped out and looked like a killer whale. I thought this one was at least 800 pounds, and I've learned to be conservative with weights." Reid said the San Diego Marlin Club scale jumped around before settling on 646 pounds twice for the official weight.

"We stopped a boat and four of their guys joined four of ours, all big guys, and we still couldn't lift it in the boat," Reid said. "I was lucky to get 4 knots towing it back."


Photo by Barbara Horner


Thursday Fish Report    Marty Morris  10/11/2001 9:57:38 AM
This is Thursday AM after a good nite's rest after yesterday's excitement. However, the way things are going this could very well be the final installment of these fabulous, fintastic, (non-)fishing reports. After the reports of the all the exciting fishing(sightings and non-catching)) reports from the week-end we decided that we would give it one last mid-week, avoid the traffic, shots. The plan was to get away early, shoot up to White's, make bait, troll baits early in the AM, chase the feeders, pray for a jig bite, and have a nice down-hill run home. And things started out well. We (Harry Okuda, son Kenneth, and Geoff Halpern) managed to gather on time and we got away about 1700. We picked up a scooop of sardines (in case we couldn't make bait) and sprinted up to the island. We had flat, glassy seas all the way with only some net boats between the 277 and 209 to dodge en route. For all we knew they mmight have been Navy boats, but who cared.

At White's we dropped the "hook" near Hen Rock and settled in for a night of jigging. We had spanish all around and under the boat, but only managed to snag a few. The greenies were deeper and would only bite the anchovie loaded hooks. So it was 1 or an occasional two at a time. Slowly the three of them dropped out of sight and I stayed with it until 0245. I must have managed to snag about 40 of the creatures before calling it quits. At 0530 Harry was out there when he noticed that there were lots of dead 'dines in the tank. Apparently, the fact that the mackeral were "sleeping" on the bottom of the tank didn't excite him nor did that fact that there was no water flowing.

This created panic, got everyone up, switch to 12 v pump, still no water flow, pouring buckets of water into the tank and bags trying to save what was left, checking the flow of the intake, etc, etc, etc until, finally turning the 110 pump back on and finding it flowing well. And so, we managed to save about 15 or so of the "bullets."

By now it was almost dawn. So we powered up and found that the plates on the winch were slipping and simply wouldn't pull the chain up. So poor old Kenneth, the youngest and healtiest of the quartet, had to sit there and pull the 150' of chain and anchor before we finally got under way.

Harry had been there on Saturday and assured us that lots of fish were seen early in the dy from Whites down to the East End. (e.g. Bob Woodard and snagged one out of a group of feeders before 0800.) So we slid out about 3/4 of a mile and put out a couple lines. We even tried to use our Don Blackman trolling sled when the line promptly broke. Imagine the words by then. So we we picked teh sled up, re-strung it, re-deployed it, and got the troll (with the trolling valves, that is) going well. We did this for about an hour and a half and soon realized that Harry had seen the fish on Saturday and this was Wednesday. More words (usually of the "s" variety). When we lost interest in that (not even makos around) we pulled in and put out the jigs.

As soon as we did this a couple of boats off the East End reported starting to see a few single feeders. So we promptly punched it a bit and ran out in that direction. As soon as we got close one of the two boats out there congratulating the other on "doing it." Apparently they dragged across a feeder, it came up in the jigs and took a drop-back. They finally got the fish after about 2 hours. But as we got closer to began to see single feeders here and there. Not many. Not sheets of sauries with 2-6 fish behind each - just singles. We worked around and a couple of miles below Church Rock Saw a large group of feeders pop. They stayed up as we ran into them threw and dropped baits. Suddenly Harry proclaimed: "I'm bit!" Now we haven't heard that on the boat in a year and a half so I thought it must have been some kind of insect bite. But, no, his line was screaming out when we saw a fish stick his head and bill out of the water back there, shake his head and back came the bait, hook and all. There was no mark on the bait and I suspect that it had been bill wrapped. More "s" words.

As the day progressed, a nice tailing wind chop and more boats showed up. The feeders stopped showing, but tailers began to show up. We even managed to see a couple. Steve Bledsoe and his "No Excuses" showed up and promptly found a couple of such groups. They, too, performed the proscribed run and gun technique, but they, too, couldn't find a biter. But what they did receive was a jig bite and managed to finally get the fish, their sixth of the year. Thus, we heard of only thse two fish prior to our departure about 1430. Geoffrey has to drive back to LA and didn't want to get back too late. Of course, 10 minutes after we pulled the lines the feeders began to show again back thee. More "s" words.

One interesting sight was to learn the identity of the "JAD", a small boat that managed to catch seven last week. It is a very small boat with almost a small cabin up front and mini-tower. No outriggers, no trolling lines, but lots of white water as they ran around constantly looking for the feeders and/or tailers. And, I assume, a large bait tank. They would probably do well down at the Cape in and among the hotel boats. As far as we know - no one is fishing Clemente. For all the fish that were around Catalina last week I still feel that many have already departed and might be found there at the "skinny" one. But now is not the time for prospecting. We leave that for someone else so that we can run out there and find that "you should have been here two days ago."

More reports? Sure! look for these to continue - oh, about some time in July, 2002. Marty


Fish SE of the East End of Catalina Island     Steve Bledsoe            10/11/2001 9:41:42 AM
Yesterday, Wednesday, 10/10/01, we found fish 2.5 miles SE of the East End of Catalina Island on the NO EXCUSES. We baited at least a dozen feeders and tailers for no bites. We eventually got one to eat an Area Rule Doornob in the new Mean Joe "Silouhete" pattern and released it after 50 minutes. We got one other fish to chase a jig after we ran over a small school of fleeing sauries, but we couldn't get it to bite.

Doug Daniels' PESCADOR crew got one to eat a drop-back bait after the fish came up in the jigs on the morning tide. That fish was also released. The fish showed throughout the day but were not willing to eat too many of the live baits offered by at least 15 boats in the area.

The water temperature was 65.7 to 66.3 on our meter, and there was only a fraction of the bait there that we had witnessed only a week before. The wind came up strong in the afternoon and made for a very unpleasant crossing for us back to Dana. We were told that the wind never blew at all the day before. As usual, every day is different on the water.


Gato Gordo     10 Oct 2001  15:33:01
On Tuesday, October 9 we fished the East End of Catalina. There were lots of Marlin to be seen but no takers for us. We baited 5 or 6 feeders and we saw 8-10 more jumpers. We didn't see any tailers today. The fish were eating the tiny sauries, coming completely out of the water chasing the bait. A very exihlerating sight! The water was between 66 and 67 degrees with a light breeze all day. It is very frustrating to see marlin in an eating frenzy and to throw your beautiful mack in his face and for him to not eat it. On the way back home to Oceanside Harbor, we saw lots o' yellowfin tuna boiling. With no bait and sunset approaching, we kept ruuning. We will get them next time! 


Sunday local report  Date: 08 Oct 2001   Time: 03:32:00
Hey guys:  Our report was the same as SCOT FREE Saturday. We started the day chasing those tailers in the southeast that were popping down past Whites. I noticed on the southeast that they dont show as much as on the westerly, and it was hard to get on em, kept sinking out. With no sun in the am, it was difficult to find them underwater. We were one mile outside the Avalon Bank gunning those feeders from 2:30-5pm. We finally got wired by throwing baits on two pelicans over a meatball. Typical weekend fishing, the marlin came up "window washing" and a Boston Whaler ran over and tried to bait it. Then, it started jumping and a Grady White ran over to throw on it. I went ballistic...Long story short, we managed to get a tag in it after 23 minutes and it was Mark Minyards first marlin on his new boat RAPTOR.

At the office this morning, and my partner George on the JOKER got a fish Sunday 3 miles 240 from the 14. He baited maybe 15-20 feeders from 3pm until 6pm. He was next to us Saturday afternoon, and he said Sundays show was even better.
Good luck,  Bob Hoose


Mike and Josh Burnam on the REEL BRUIN      10/7/01
Took the Reel Bruin out today and fished a wide area around the 302, 371, and areas West. Ended up with a mixed bag of albies,
skippies, and dodos. We actually got 3 of the dodos. The hot ticket was a black and purple cedar plug, fished long, which caught
every single fish! except one of the dodos, which hit a black and purple Yozuri Bonita. We got action at the following places I noted:

Albacore: 32 17 / 117 40
Dodos: 32 19/117 42, 32 32/117 43, 32 25/117 44

We saw some breaking fish at a kelp at 32 21/117 43, but couldn't get em to go. We tried no less than 10 kelps with bait and chunk
sardine chum and got no lookers. We also trolled past an additional 5-10 paddies. Water temps ranged from 66.5-67.3. Didn't see
many other people out at all, and the radio was silent. Hope this helps!
Josh Burnam
REEL BRUIN


Just to add my two cents to Niall's report. We saw our first two sleeper/tailers (very lazy fish with dorsal fin full up, yet not lit up or feeding) around 7:00 AM 12 miles short of our destination at the three vees on a line from Dana. We saw two more about one mile further. We didn't see any more until we were a couple of miles off the slide and then we started in with the saury scenario that Niall described and it lasted pretty much all day. We baited fish, we baited bait balls and we drift fished and we dragged jigs. We went from church rock to almost White's from one mile out to five miles out. It would have been a great day if we worked for the Discovery channel and wanted to photograph fish.  Unfortunately our goal was to actually catch some. I don't think we ever
went more than an hour without seeing fish, usually announced by a batch of sauries breaking the surface. On the way home we continued to see the strange phenomenon of these tailer/sleepers sitting almost still with their dorsals up (we never saw this in the area where all of the sauries were). We saw the last pair at 13 out around 6:30. They weren't interested. They have to bite soon! I hope this helps someone.Rick Fuller - Escape route
Str8tbutta@aol.com on 10/06/2001 09:36:19 PM


After hearing of the great bite during the week, tried our luck in the same area on Saturday. During the morning, the back side was grease with almost no wind on it. Fish however where not where they were supposed to be and we soon found out, thanks to Pat and John Holmes, that the fish were really showing 2-3 miles off the
casino. By the time we had met up with them, they had already baited close to 20-30 fish. We ended chasing tailers all the way down past Whites Cove anywhere from 1/2 mile all the way to 3 miles out. However around 9 a.m. the fish completely vanished.

Fishing did not pick back up until about 12:30p.m. Feeders started to pop under both birds, sauries, and even tuna. The feeders were popping all the way from the East End all the way to the Casino, anywhere from 6 miles out all the way into 200ft. Yes, 200 feet of water, Rick Fuller and crew baited a feeder that popped off of the East End in 200ft. We saw feeders from 12:30p.m. until about 4:30 when we decided to leave. Every batch of popping sauries we saw today had about anywhere from 2-6 fish feeding on it. The fish were very easily spooked which made it hard to throw on them. From what I heard on the radio, the guys who were getting bit the most were the guys who were drifting live baits.

Well, hope this helps anyone planning on fishing Sunday or next week.

Niall and Dave Devoy


Here's another report.
I went out Friday and fished most of the day. I worked the 152 - backside - tight in the e. end and finished at the Avalon Bank. The rule for the day was quite a few fish spotted and baited, but only a few takers. A lot of 30 lb + YFT were seen jumping out of the water. On guy was sliding onto them and getting bit w/ 12 lb test. The water was ~66 with a break outside of the 152 down to 64. The tuna were on the temp break.
I did my share of throwing bait, but no takers. Sauries were coming out of the water throughout the entire area. One interesting note ... when I reeled in the black/purple Area Rule doornob, the leader directly above the hook was frayed. I must have had a fish wacking it for a while. Bottom line: no hookups, but I think I hit a marlin in the head with a mac. Does that count?
Good-luck,
Jeff A.


Excellent marlin fishing at Catalina right now.  We fished the island yesterday (10-3-01) for two fish released on the NO EXCUSES. Rich Palys caught both fish on bait, throwing on batches of feeders. We found plenty of fish on the backside of the island at 33:16 /
118:24.

Another boat named JAD had an outstanding day with 7 fish caught and released. They caught their fish east of the East End in the 33:20 / 118:14 area. All of their fish were also baitfish. I don't know these gentlemen personally, but I think I need to. Awesome job on those fish and the releases you guys!

Randy Woods and his OFF SHORE crew got a fish yesterday off the East End also and had a couple more bites on the macks.

There were several other boats that got in on the action as well and I don't know who all got fish, but this was the best marlin bite so far in local waters for this season. It will be interesting to see if this bite survives the inevitable weekend boat pressure.

Conditions yesterday at the island were ideal. We had a southeast wind in the morning that built to about 8-kts. before it backed off and left the entire area (front and back) in grease. We got a westerly breeze in the afternoon about 2:00PM that never built to better than 5-kts. or so. The water temps were the same as they've been for more than a week now with the mean temperature in the area being about 66.3 degrees. There's lots of sauries and anchovies for the fish to feed on.

Get 'em while they're hot!
Steve Bledsoe

PS: I would like to remind everyone who has caught and released a local marlin (or 2 or 3!) that we hold out an open invitation for you to post your fish on our Marlin Release Board at <www.tiburoneng.com> . Take a look at the board and then E-mail us your fish. Please be sure to give us ALL the information we're asking for including the skipper's name as well as the angler. We feel that it's not only fun for all of us to be able to showcase our accomplishments, but it's important for us to verify them as well.


Make A Wish Results   IBFisher      Allcoast   Oct-02-01, 10:12 AM (PST)
From today`s paper (10/2 S.D.Union)  Anglers deliver heart-felt touch to Make-A-Wish
Sometimes people who do good things for others wonder if it's truly worth it. They wonder if it's appreciated, if it made a difference, wonder if it mattered at all.
But the fishermen at the Make-A-Wish Tuna Challenge 2001 awards ceremony Sunday at Southwestern Yacht Club had no doubt that their charity fishing tournament will make a difference in some youngster's life. If they didn't know that before Sunday, they found out for sure when Leo Kilian stepped to the podium and described his son's and daughter's courageous, simultaneous battles with cancer.
On one fateful day a few years ago, Leo and Peggy Kilian stared at a bleak reality. Their son, Leo IV, 12, was in the fight for his life against brain cancer. He was coming off six brain surgeries and was in a coma. Their daughter, Erin, also diagnosed with cancer, was facing the possibility of losing an arm and shoulder. One in a coma, one facing the loss of her arm and shoulder. All in one day, and so much for a family to bear.
But miracles do happen. Leo Kilian explained how Leo IV fought out of the coma and now is making his way in the world despite the damage from cancer. He told how Leo's older sister is in remission and did not lose her arm. Kilian told how that fateful day influenced him to reassess his thoughts about Make-A-Wish. He had held off taking advantage of the program because he wasn't ready for his son to make a last wish.
"We now understand that phrase, 'You never know,' " Leo Kilian said. He opted for Make-A-Wish's trip to "Give Kids The World Village," the 51-acre resort in Kissimmee, Fla., that serves as a unique retreat for kids facing terminal illnesses. It includes visits to Disney World and other Central Florida attractions.
"Every minute there was treated as a memory," Kilian said. "I shot 19 rolls of film."
Of all the memories, the one that touched everyone on Sunday was Kilian's description of the Castle of Dreams, where there are more than 1,000 stars signed by the kids who have visited the park over the years.
"Every star represents a child, a child just like mine," Kilian said. "Every star represents the hope, dreams and prayers of a kid who faced a life-threatening illness. My son's star stays up there, and the impact of seeing those stars, knowing that the prayers, hopes and dreams of those stars, all came true."
Kilian stirred the crowd with his emotional, heart-felt speech. He thanked the more than 500 fishermen who participated in the 2001 Tuna Challenge, and by then, there wasn't a dry eye anywhere within sight of the Southwestern Yacht Club property.
"That was the most heartwarming speech I've ever heard from anybody, and I've heard a lot of speeches in my day," said John Collins, trying his best to compose himself at the podium.
Last year's tournament raised $36,000 for Make-A-Wish, but that was peanuts compared to this year. Thanks to the hard-working efforts of John and Judy Collins, and co-chairmen Harry Okuda and Sam Minervini and crew, this year's event raised $76,000. There were 113 boats, up from 37 boats last year.
Ian Orr, executive chef at the Staples Center, won the 15-day trip aboard the Red Rooster III for catching the largest tuna, a 90.5-pound bigeye on the Ken-Dan, with Marty and Ken Morris. The Ken-Dan returned the club trophy to the Kona Kai Anglers.
It was a huge success, but it's not just the fishing and banquet with the giant raffle and auction on Sunday that make this tournament so huge. It's more the attention to detail, the super worthy cause and organizers such as John and Judy Collins, Lan and Harry Okuda, and Minervini that combine to make this the premier fishing event of the year in San Diego.
Ed Zieralski can be reached at (619) 293-1225 or ed.zieralski@uniontrib.com


"Make-A-Wish" Tuna Challenge       Marty Morris        10/01/01
The end of the month brought the Annual "Make-A-Wish" Tuna Challenge co-sponsored by the Kona Kai Anglers and the Southwestern Y.C. Anglers. If there is anyone reading this who didn’t fish in this competition the results indicated the relative shortage of quality Tuna (i.e. BigEye or the large economy sized BlueFin) in our local waters. 113 boats participated in the competition with Albacore and Yellowfin Tuna in the mid-20’s (and an occasional low 30s of each) providing the bulk of the quality catch. However, the winning team with the only BigEye Tuna seen in local waters in the past month or so (90.5 pds) was the – uh – sh, I’m trying to remember – it’s on the tip of my tongue – got it! – "Ken-Dan" including Marlin Club members KEN MORRIS and yours truly, along with David Thomas and Ian Orr, our happy angler, who "guested" with us along with his wife Gayle. Detailed Results...


JD's Wednesdays Report    JD's Big Game Tackle    Wednesday, September 26, 2001
-Tuna! 38.67 / 000 on the bottom, were into double figures allready, it's going to be a great day, be home early 8:24am
-SSB radio reports directly with the Retreiver, (In Turtle Bay) they experienced no weather problems from the storm there, the tuna seiners that were there have all left. The Light Speed and themselves will continue south today towards the Cape. They will be fishing the Uncle Sam Bank tomorrow morning and will call in with a fish report. Fuel at Turtle Bay was $2.70 per gal, a good supply of fuel was availabe at this time. 8:30am
-East End of Catalina Island holding the yellowfin in the 30-35 lb range, several boats caught fish there, from the looks of it, the 9 mile bank off La Jolla also had a good number of fish and they're starting to bite!
-Groups of feeders poped up on the 14 Mile Bank
-38:80/ 00:05 we've got em full speed, 1:40pm if you troll the moters they go down, drift up on em.
-East End of the Butterfly Bank, bluefin, albacore, yellowtail kelp(20,25lb), yellowfin (45lb)


Drambouie Classic  Final Fish Count   Steve Bledsoe    9-26-01
9-25-01
118 boats  
30 Hook-ups
3 fish boated (yet to be weighed)
12 fish released
15 fish lost
2-Day Totals
65 Hook-ups
11 fish weighed in
24 fish released
30 fish lost

Current Standings
1st place FINTASTIC II 230#
2nd place TAJA 206#
3rd place GRAND SLAM 199#
4th place RASCAL 195.5#

Other boats in side-bet money
BUCK FEVER 166#
BACK OFF 188#
AFTER MIDNIGHT 187#

In addition, tournament participants and organizers raised $50,000.00 for the American Red Cross.

-The hot spot again was the area between and inside of the 152 and 277 spots. The weather was clear and very windy most of the day. Water temp was 66.2 to 66.6 degrees and the fish were still feeding on the 3"-4" sauries.
-There was an even split between jig bites and bait bites again yesterday but the majority of the jig hooked fish were lost. Only 2 of the 15 caught fish yesterday were jig fish.

-Lines out was 3:00PM yesterday afternoon.
-I didn't bother Harvey this morning with all the money winner details as he was trying to get loaded up and on his way back home. I'm sure the final details will be available soon. JD fished the tournament and I would suspect that he will post the finals on his web site when he gets home.

JD's Wednesdays Report    JD's Big Game Tackle    Wednesday, September 26, 2001
God Bless America!
-A different day alltogather, calm sea so far this morning, calm and glassy
-Now that the 118 boats have left the fishing grounds off the East End of Catalina the fish are starting to bite again, several boat allready have one or two fish by 9:00am Results of the Catalina Classic with be coming forethought.- as soon as I can remember who got what, Fintastic took overall the largest fish with a 230lb, the first fish weighed-in on the first day, and After Midnight (again), pulled another rabbit out of the hat in the last half hour with a 187lb fish , taking the seconds days daily.
-16/10, 16/09 prime area for the marlin
-Beautiful out there today, warming water, a lot better than yesterday.
-Boats fishing the 181 had a marlin or two up, bluefin also seen
-380/390 high spots outside Oceanside held a lot of life today,
-Drambouie Classic 118 boats, 65 Hook-ups 11 fish weighed in,24 fish released, 30 fish lost Current Standings
    1st place FINTASTIC II 230#
    2nd place TAJA 206#
    3rd place GRAND SLAM 199#
    4th place RASCAL 195.5#

-Other boats in side-bet money
    BUCK FEVER 166#
    BACK OFF 188#
    AFTER MIDNIGHT 187#

-In addition, tournament participants and organizers raised $50,000.00 for the American Red Cross.
-The hot spot again was the area between and inside of the 152 and 277 spots. The weather was clear and very windy most of the day. Water temp was 66.2 to 66.6 degrees and the fish were still feeding on the 3"-4" sauries. There was an even split between jig bites and bait bites again yesterday but the majority of the jig hooked fish were lost. Only 2 of the 15 caught fish yesterday were jig fish.
-Nice sized Bluefin , in the 35/40lb range, were on the easterly side of the Butterfly Bank at 32:16.02/118:03, took one fish on the Rapala, the others on sardines, working the line of kelps! 4:32pm
-Old timers (I guess that's me now) will tell you when you start to see jumpers (marlin) then get ready for them to migrate out of here! Stand By- I've heard of maybe a dozen or so marlin jumping today- Stand by-
-With the thermocline being as shallow as it is this year (somewhere from 15 to 25 feet deep or shallower that that, and the wind blowing today and yesterday , what remaining warm water we have will turn over quickly, making the water even cooler- stand by-


Report from Drambouie Classic    rich@tiburoneng.com     2:10 PM, Monday 9-24-01
-20 hook-ups for 118 boats  
- All action near East End of Catalina
-5 fish weighed in so far:
-FINTASTIC II - 230#
-TAJA - 206#
-GRAND SLAM - 199#
-RASCAL - 195.5#
-fifth fish - 174#
-7 fish released
-8 fish lost

Early Drambouie Classic report     Steve Bledsoe   09/24/2001 11:01:24 AM
Harvey reported at 10:45 AM this morning .... 
-18 hook-ups for 118 boats so far this morning.
-2 fish weighed in so far
-FINTASTIC II with a 230# fish,
-RASCAL with a 195# fish.
The big fish ate a jumbo mackerel. No sauries found in the bellies of these two fish.
All the boats working the East End area of Catalina (no surprise there!)
Morning started off with jig bites and then eventually the bait started working.
I'll get more updates later.

That report is pretty much how I figured it'd go. For the last 3 days, boats pounded the ridge from the East End to the 277 and saw a bunch of fish, but couldn't get them to eat. I talked with Bob Stephens, who got the last fish of the ZG, and he indicated that when they lifted his fish up, it barfed out a bunch of bait. Clearly, these fish were gorging byt the light of the new moon and are just now getting hungry again. As usual, two days to late :-)   Thanks for the update, Steve
Stan    SCMO


"Marlin Sept 20-22 (Pesky Roundup)"    Southern California Marlin On-line    Sep-24-01, 08:13 AM (PDT)
Fished the Pesky on Friday and Saturday and, once again, survived.
Fishing was slow, but we knew that going in. There has not been a lot of fish taken in the Zane Grey earlier in the week (although BLUE THUNDER landed a behemoth 289-lb stripe that was the largest ever in a SoCal tourney). Most of the action had been along the ridge from the east end of Catalina down to the 277, so that where we went.

Friday was difficult, as a decent number of fish were seen but none taken. Remember, this is the cream of the SoCal fleet, and when they see fish but can't get them to go, something is funky. One report I did get from Bob Stephens, who caught the last fish of the Zane Grey, was that the marlin had been stuffed with anchovies and squid, so I think they were glutted. No fish were taken in either the Pesky or the King Harbor tourney on the first day.

Saturday dawned full of expectation. Because of the way the point system works in the Pesky, the first fish of the day would most likely win the event and, if fishing continued slow, could take everything. Our fears that the top prizes would have to be raffled off were allayed around 9:30 when Ed Day on PAPA LOCO released a jig fish. Feeders were still being seen (even by me!), but no one was able to get a bait fish to go. By the end of the day, 4 marlin has been caught and released on lures. All of the action was between the 277 and the end of the island.

The evening's festivities were up to Pesky standards, although somewhat muted. The events of the week before were still fresh on everyone's mind (and if you had forgotten, the enormous flag hanging down the side of the Casino would remind you), but we had additional sorrow in our hearts. Earlier in the week, the wife of Greg Stotesbury, fisherman extrordinaire and all-around good guy, had died unexpectedly, leaving Greg a single father. The Peskys may be cutups, but they support their own, and a lot of money was raised that night to help the Stotesbury family through this difficult time. After the banquet it was the usual Pesky shuffle through Armstrongs, the Marlin Club and God only knows where else. Hard luck award goes to the crew of SHELLBACK, who learned the hard way that a rod not safety-lined really can be pulled through the outrigger clip when hooked up. So far as we know, the rod is still in tow behind a particularly active striped marlin. They cleaned up in the raffle, though, so don't feel too bad (hey, did you guys get the bikes to the boat without riding them into the bay??)

Congratulations to Ed Day of PAPA LOCO for taking top honors in the Pesky and Warren Gunther of JEWEL LURE for winning the King Harbor Marlin Club event.


JD's Friday Report    JD's Big Game Tackle    Friday, September 21, 2001
-God Bless America!
-High Tide today, 12:34 pm
-The Los Pescadore's "Pescy's Tournament " to be held over the next couple of day, It's hard to believe anything these guys say!
-Dressing up like clowns when they hook a fish, etc. All the common spots to fish were given different code names, which dont make since, example the 209 might be called the Santa Monica Pier--- etc. really confusing for the other anglers trying to get some inside dope on what's happening.
-Stand By!-+
-Overcast/ Foggy skies, calm seas
-To all the stock brokers and investors out there, hang on--- it's like a long ride up-hill from the 60 Mile Bank, you know you'll going to get back to dry land, it'll just take some time and you might get a little sea sick, but stick in there, the longer you wait the bigger the fish will get! They don't go on diets!
-The Mushroom Bank reported to holding small albacore .
-We're baiting a couple now, sleepers, , on our way to the 209, 10:11am
-We had a batch of three fish up 10:30 but wouldn't take the baits,
-not very encouraging on the 152, 277 looked better (inside)
-We just had a double hook up on the albacore, 1:35pm,
-I think only three fish seen so far today, not a bite, not a hook-up- nothing. 3:15pm
-Birds , porpoise, north of Avalon three miles, we got a double on the pelicans! sloppy up there there, progressively winder as you got up to Long Point
-A jumper seen near the 181 Fathom Bank! 3:38pm
-Remember-- The Peskies ,you can't believe anything they say!
-25-30lb fish albies, 54 degrees to Pt. Loma 15 miles, Daisy chains, Rapalas, and Pink feathers doing best!
-Saw a couple of jumpers coming back from the 209
-Old timers (I guess that's me now) will tell you when you start to see jumpers (marlin) then get ready for them to migrate out of here! Stand By- I've heard of maybe a dozen or so marlin jumping today- Stand by-
-Huntington Harbor Naval restrictions, open between 8-10am and 4-6pm, Patroll boats may escort boats and are subject to search
-Let others know what color on Marlin strikes, hook-up, Zips etc, Give us a call, what you had your strikes on- JD
    Mean Joe Green (Black & Green) ...32
    Purple & Black ...29
    Bleeding Mackeral...8
    Mackeral..24
    Flying Fish (Blue /Silver)...9
    Green /Yellow..12
    Others...21


JD's Wednesday Report    JD's Big Game Tackle      Wednesday, September 19, 2001
God Bless America!
-The Zane Grey Tournament Continues on to it's third day,(Wednesday) 41 boats in the tournament, the winning fish so far, (like who's going to beat it) was caught on a bait in the Juliet echo area (Near the 209 Fathom Spot!)
-Overcast Calm Seas. (High tide today 11:14am)
-Go Fish started it off early, released one
-After Midnight hooked up- lost it
-Gambler put a fish on board early
-Capt. Hook released a fish
-Club Ted hooked up 9:45am (lost it)
-Go Fish hooked up again , Rob P. Hotel 3 9:46am
-Gene's Machine Hooked up Bill S. on it, 9:48am, Gulf-3 came off, bait.
-Fire Hat, something big just splashed in front of your boat,---yes it was a sunfish!
-Gambler hooked up again, Dick P. H/4 10:22am
-Wait & Sea hooked up 10:47am
-Chaser. Extosea both Hooked up 10:50am
-Gambler, fish is on the boat! 11:40pm
-12:00 Noon Update 10 hook up so far, Capt. Hook has released a fish, Chaser released one, Gambler released two and has two on board!, there were others reported , I just missed hearing them- JD
-Tiger Spirit, hooked up! 12:01
-Tournament Control. "do broadbill count?,----ah, sorry all broadbill become property of tournament control----ah,,,ah OK!
-Celebration, hooked up 1:35 Just landed it 2:27pm
-Extosea still hooked up, since 11am this morning! 2:28pm


JD's Tuesday Report    JD's Big Game Tackle     
-"No Problem" started out the day (Tuesday) with a released fish
-"It don't get much slower than this,"
-69 1/2 degrees yesterday in the lee of Clemente Island, today it;s 65degrees, no life. Catalina Island's East End had a little life and a few shots at fish this morning, Long Point looks to have develoved a litttle better with warming water/ bait.
-Lots of life. birds seals, kelps just outside the 209 Fathom Spot
-Tournamen Controll, C-Bandit Hooked Up, 12:42 pm (Gulf-3) where ever that's at? Released it.
-C-Bandit has released two fish so far in the tournament
-Bongos, #3 just caught a Swordfish, 5 hour battle, Everyone on board (it was a family charter) fought the fish, so the angler is listed as "the Watson's" 247lbs, hooked in the corner of the mouth, on a live mackeral, 50lb tackle, just outside the 14 Mile Bank.
-Huntington Harbor Naval restrictions, open between 8-10am and 4-6pm, Patroll boats may escort boats and are subject to search


JD's Monday Report    JD's Big Game Tackle     
Monday's Results 
-"Blue Thunder" caught their marlin after a 4 1/2 hours battle! 2:42pm 287LBS, GRAM was the angler! 1184 points! bait fish, Capt. Richard Hoffman,
-"Andeamo" 175lbs 2nd Place
-Wait n Sea, Hooked up , foxtrot 3, weighed in at 173 1/2lbs! 3rdPlace
-4 fish released , three taken out of 11 hook ups,
-C-Bandit , Capt Hook, Ted, Vitamin Sea, Released their fish!
-Like any tournaments, a few minutes before the lines out,, someone always calls in a hook-up- Tigre Spirit, calls in with 6 minutes, it came off- 3:55pm Lines out 4:00pm
-Andnamo just landed their fish, 4:45pm
-40-60lb Bluefin taken off the Dumping Grounds 90 below San Deigo (below / outside ) the 60 mile bank
-The Masters Angler Billfish Tournament, had some 58 boats, 11 fish caught and released, 1 fish on 30lb, 1 on 20lb, 7 on 16lb and 2 fish on 12lb tackle, Charlie Albright, age 13 took High Angler with his released 12 lb tackle fish taken on his dad's Kea Kai- Congrats Charley, a standing ovation at the awards banquet honored him!


Marlin - Sept. 14/15/16"     Southern California Marlin On-line   Sep-16-01, 09:23 PM (PDT)
With heavy heart, we boarded HOOKER for 3 days of marlin fishing. I'm pleased to report that most boats, including ours, were flying the Stars & Stripes. Tried with little success to make bait in the harbor and headed for the island. Most success lately had been in the lee of Catalina, so we started there. Friday was Day 1 of the MABT, so there was little info available but lots of boats to follow . Worked primarily from Avalon Bank out to 152, but saw nothing. We weren't alone, however, as only 5 marlin were released the first day. ESPADON gets the hard luck award, as their fish was successfully tagged but subsequently DQ'd when the main line broke, leaving them without the required portion of leader. Weather was snotty, but not as important since we were fishing within a mile or so of the island.
Day 2 dawned beautiful, but soon whitecaps were evident once again. The majority of the fleet moved further off the island today, and most of the action for the MABT was out by the 152. The water was unseasonably cold - between 65 & 66 in most places. The Terrafin chart showed that there should be warmer water off the west end, so we headed that way to start. By the time we got past the Isthmus, hovever, action was heating up on the 152, and we reversed course and headed down the ridge. WILD BILL led a group of MABT boats all the way to the 172, where there were great conditions, but no fish. We baited a pair of swordfish on the 152 to no avail. 5 more fish were taken Saturday in the MABT; I'm guessing Dana Anglers were high club with 3 marlin released on 16-lb gear, and Charlie Albright of Los Pescadores was master angler for his 12-lb release.

Day 3 was very quiet, with the MABT boats gone home and only a couple of folks pre-fishing for tomorrow's Zane Grey start. Heard of no marlin taken today, and headed in around noon.

As you might imagine, there was a high security profile this weekend. LA Harbor was crawling with Coast Guard auxilliary, and all boats headed into San Diego were searched. Huntington Harbour had it worst, since they share an entrance with the Navy's ammo dump. The harbor was closed Saturday except for 4pm to 6pm and all day Sunday, causing a lot of tourney boats to bolt early to insure entrance. There was also a carrier group operating between Catalina & San Clemente Island on Sunday. Even this far away from New York, both literally & figuratively, the acts of a handful of cowards can be felt.


Sunday Fish Report    Wayne Slahor      Sun, 16 Sep 2001 00:27:45 EDT
I fished the last two days (charters) and coming back into the harbor was not really a big problem. Today was even quicker than yesterday-maybe they have their act together more after doing the checks for several days. It only took us about 20 min today, which included 10min. of waiting. The Coast Guard is boarding all inbound traffic. The officers were friendly and polite. Where have all the sailboats gone?-there was not a single sailboat in sight in the harbor all the way to Sunroad Marina at 6:15 PM.??  By the way, on Friday we had 72 albacore for 5 passengers, and 63 for three passengers and 4 crew today
You guys were lucky with the short wait getting into the bay...I spoke with the guys on one of the 6 packs and they waited in line (it bottle necked/90 boats or so) for 4 hours around mid-afternoon, getting to the fuel dock around 5:30pm....of course the actual inspection only took a few minutes....heard it was better early early in the mornings...and during the week. Sounds like good fish'n all around.   Penny, The Marlin Club


JD's Friday Report    JD's Big Game Tackle   
-We saw a jumper 10 off the island.
-Long Point ,cooler dropping a degree or two
-Albacore catches on the 16/02 (inside the Butterfly Bank)
-Wild Bill's hooked up again (on 20) , you just can't keep these guys out of the game1:26 pm
-Tournament Control,---Sassy Sissy We're Hooked Up! 1:41pm
-Control, 28 we're wired Tiger Spirit, Ned's on the fish 16lb 2:04 pm, Tag and released! 37 minutes.
-Tournament Control, Sassy Sissy just released their fish 1 :07 30lb- Jerry Lewis
-The albacore they were catching were in the 12 to 16lb range.
-Mackeral Bank held a fish (marlin) or two, a little action off Church Rock, 152 but not much, most of the action on the marlin came from around the Avalon Bank area. 3 or 4 miles surrounding it.
-a couple of long 3 and 4 hour battles, some won others lost.
-Those wanting to catch a White Sea bass, fish the Newport Artificial Reef with mackeral.


JD's Thursday Report    JD's Big Game Tackle   
-A light overcast morning, some fog which seems to have burnt off by 9:am
-Boats fishing off the East End of Catalina, report only fair conditions, another boat whom had made bait at the offshore oil rigs report 67/68 degrees and clean blue water ,"looks good here". those at the east end say to stay there! 9:15 am
-Seems there are quite a few boats traveling around, also the Navy has patrolls out in the water. Not many fish (marlin) seen, a few schools of yellowfin reported inside Catlina/Avalon Bank area.
-Albacore boats are working out as far as 100 miles for a few fish.
-Huntington Harbor was open for boat getting in or out/ with armed/shotgun escort. Reports say the Navy would like boats that are returning in on Saturday to enter the harbor between 4 and 6 pm.
-It's Tournament Time
-Secret dope passed between boats today, , from what I've gathered it goes something like this, "we're on the --------, saw a ------------ about------ ago, so and so went out to the ------ but they didn't find much. Water Temps on the 209, 68.5 Got the jigs out, seeing the tuna jump out of the water, nothing yet, --------- was hooked up ------ on a ---------.
-Albacore on the Airplane Bank (5 west ) (15 miles below the 60 mile bank) , small albies, but a bunch of them.
-Those wondering if the tropical storm off Baja will push warm water this way may be, wrong - ground swell action only pushes energy not the physical movement of water hundreds of miles.
-San Pedro/Long Beach has small bait, anchovies and sardines.
-Circle hooks, like long-line hooks are designed for still/drift fishing, let the fish hook themselves, all you've got to do is, bait em', drop them down, go eat a hot dog then wind in a marlin, -----------or shark!
-Several of the marlin that were caught in the Rosie' Tournament, when cleaned and gutted, were plugged with squid!
-Mackeral (bait) were caught off the Balboa Pier earlier this morning , cut pieces of squid, (flylined) worked well. use chum.
-By 4pm this afternoon the wind was a 10-12 knots out of the west, pleasant tailing weather. Several marlin were hooked today, locations were kept secret.
-25/26 (outside the Coronardo Islands) yellowfin, they're there but not biting. up and down more yellowfin than I've seen in a long time. 4:19pm
-Butterfly, 60 mile bank had a few fish (tuna) but rough out there
-Water temps off the East End have dropped several degrees, looks like the curents have pushed to the west. Long Point has the best warm spot and bait is stacked up against the beach 1/2 mile.- JD- 5:45 pm
-Good Luck in the Masters Tournament

The Rosie's Tournament was held in Avalon, Catalina on Monday and Tuesday, they had 19 boats participating. Gambler took 1st Place with a 226lb fish winning $52,000, 2nd Place went to the Verdict with an 214lb fish/ $18,000 and 3rd Place went to the Arin Marie with an 192lb fish, in all there were 6 fish taken, 3 fish released. A minimum weight of 145lbs was required and several big fish were lost, only one jig fish that I know of and it was released unharmed. Capt Hook took the first's day largest fish winning them $16,000. Nice calm weather and they didn't have to travel far. Almost all the fish were caught within 2 miles from Avalon, many of them within a mile off Pebbly Beach . The awards were held at the Country Club and a great slide show was shown.

-Boats fishing for marlin today report casting to fish time and again , perfect greenies, they would not take the baits, JD's Tip--- Marlin in close to the beach/ kelps are more accustom to eating Spanish mackeral, as they get off the beach more the greenies are more of a common bait. Spanish Mackeral, because of all their spines on them require you to give them (the marlin) more time to turn and swallow the baits, give em' a good 10 potato count! JD
-Schools of 20-25 lb Yellowfin in the lee of catalina, Avalon Bank, Shipping lanes, not taking any baits or lures though.


Rosie's Tournament update   Steve Bledsoe     12:10 PM Tuesday 9-11-01
according to Marilyn on the pier in Avalon.....

HOOK is in the lead with a 169.5-lb fish
GAMBLER is in second with a 157.0 -lb fish
C-BANDIT just boated one - no weight yet
BACK OFF released a fish
GAMBLER released a fish
HOOK, KEEPER and VERDICT have all lost fish

Most of the action has been off the Slide
you can call Marilyn at Rosie's Fish Mkt. at (310) 510-0197 for more info....
Steve


JD's Sunday Report    JD's Big Game Tackle    September 09, 2001  
-Light Overcast with good glassing weather.
-Meatball after Meatball inside the 14 Mile Bank (6 off Laguna), even though the waters cool, the marlin are here.
-Boats were baiting sleepers off the Dana Pt. 3 miles out to the 267 Fathom Spot.
-Still the South swell
-Looks like a better day than yesterday.
-When I say "fish" i mean Marlin, most of that other stuff is that other stuff!- something you eat! JD
-There was a big Hammerhead Shark seen yesterday , late afternoon off Newport
-Here come the Outrigger Canoes back over the Avalon Bank and through the Shipping lanes,
-Water temps dropped off today, Avalon Bank 65.5, 67 on the 14 Mile Bank, not much going on there, warmest water 69. 7 off Laguna.
-Boats traveling out to the 118 line, found cold water, no bait.
-If you buy your tackle from M I___, it comes with a CURSE! , if you buy your tackle from JD's Big Game it comes with a 10 Fish Guarantee!
-You know it's marlin season when the football games and the action on the water coincide! its something like the tides or the solunar tables working together
-66 off the Head, it gets colder off the backside of Catalina Island to 64 degees!
Hook-up 12:14, Go get em' Danny! Off the Can Dump, Catalina
High tide today, 1:48 pm these are the best looking tides for Broadbill Swordfish today, Watch for them to "Pop" over the next couple of hours,
the birds are up, 1:17pm, inside the 14
The wind was up
tailers up, 1:18
Best we've seen all day 1:18
one fish lost after an hour.
and the Newport slop blew in
From the Mackeral Banks to the Head tons of tunas, tough to get to bite, it broke your heart seeing the tailers in the afternoon 3:30 4:00 but no bites, 2-4 off the Dome in the lee inside Clemente, cool water, 64-66 degrees
Squid still at Clemente Island, yellows still there.
Yesterdays fish in the afternoon were 9 from Dana 270 from the harbor.
Earthquake!, no wonder they weren't biting today!


JD's Saturday Report    JD's Big Game Tackle    September 08, 2001
-By 7:00 am several marlin had been baited, seen, hooked. I think there are tow or three marlin tournaments going on today, both money and club tournaments.

-The Geneva M's swordfish was lost last night. Those long battles generally go that way, hooks wear holes and tear out as the battle draws to the end, no stretch or cushion in the lines and tensions increase. Swordfish have such soft mouths that unless your hooked to a solid bone or fin section they can pull. Over the years , in weighing in swordfish or counting those that have been caught, not just hooked but the ones that are actually caught, I would have to say that over 75% of those fish weighed are fowl hooked. Where the hook may have pulled out of the mouth and lodged in the pectoral fins or snagged into the body's flesh somewhere. Even the hook and leader have gone into the mouth, been flushed out through the gill plate and catch in the "V" of the tail, hog-tying the fish, which makes for a short battle. To that effect, if the ones that are successfully landed are generally foul hooked, then originally the hook arrangement should be geared to that direction, not to intentionally foul hook the fish but in the event the hook does pulls loose from the mouth a fixed larger sized hook will snag better. An 10/0 or 11/0 #7731 or # 7691 Mustad hook tied tight, not free swinging, and the barbs cut/sharpened short for quick penetration does best. At least 15 ft . 250 to 300lb leaders, Swordfish like to roll in the leader so you need the extra length to prevent break-offs. They don't run a long ways ,they just stay at levels or plateaus which have to be broken. You've got to pull hard, either you pull the hook or you break their will, Best of Luck- JD

-A jig bite and another boat just baited some sleepers, inside the short bank (267) 6:31am
-There must be fifty boats fishing inside the 14 Mile Bank/ 267 area. those working below Dana Pt, this morning not much happening, the area above the Avalon Bank was also quiet as the water temps dropped a bit from yesterday.
-Maybe 10 12 marlin caught/ released yesterday inside the 14.
-Add into the situation there were some 25 or so outrigger canoes with their escort boats paddling from Newport to Avalon, right through the fishing grounds!
-A few fish seen just south of Church Rock a couple miles
-Feeders up 9:26am, High Tide at 12:57 pm this afternoon, the mid day bite should develop by then, yesterday at sunset there was an afternoon show right on the Avalon Bank as the tide turned.
-We're bit, one mile off Avalon! 11:51am
-Albacore reported N/W of Northwest Harbor San Clemente Island
-By noon the colud cover had burnt off and the wind began to freshen
-Several more marlin caught/ released off Avalon. as feeders came up on the slack tide and tailers began to show in the wind waves 1:12pm
-All and all kinda quiet for the fleet so far.
-11 or 12 fathoms off South Laguna Beach ( 25 line, loran) trolling Rapalas the cattleboats have scored once in a while on the yellowtail.
-A different day today than yesterday, with the swell from the southern storm mixed with the wind swell out of the west, Question which way do the marlin tail in this type of weather? , Absolutely, Yes
-Jig Fish, hooked up- 3:27pm (marlin)
-All and all a different day.
-The charter boats out of Newport scored again on the Albacore and a few skipjack, I beleive fishing above/west of Northwest harbor.-
-Turning down hill towards Dana Point in the Newport Dana afternoon slop, two miles off Dana Point a double was hooked up, one fish released the other still being fought, 6:50 pm
-they both were caught!
-they came up in the afternoons sunset! birds, tailers, feeders, another one or two were hooked! 7;00pm


JD's Friday Report    JD's Big Game Tackle    September 07, 2001
-Light Overcast with good glassing weather.
-With the upcoming marlin tournaments this weekend and the overall fishing effort, many boats are scouting around today, working up the inside of Catalina and west to the 172 fathom Spot,, back south towards the Avalon and 14 Mile Banks, down 7 miles off the Domes /Dolly Pardons( San Clemente), and out the the 289 Fathom Spot (half way from the "Ridge" 181 to San Clemente Is,/ Pyramid Head, and tight to the beach/ lee of Clemente Island. if there are many marlin out there watch out here they come!
-Up west (above Catalina), good looking water, birds/ bait but no marlin seen
-Hook up, 10:30am We came up to a kelp paddy, tossed a mackeral to it, up comes this Sunfish jumping, it's still jumping! 20 jumps does that count in the tournament as the "other species"?
-one Yes/ three No's, next sunfish we catch, we'll put a broomstick on it!
-one marlin caught allready this morning by the Capt. hook, fishing at 26/54 (inside the 14)
-The skies started to burn off by 10 am
-Several others jumpers seen 10am to 10:30 am
-A good temp break inside the 14 Mile bank 67/69 degree
-Boats traveling south of the 14 found conditions not to their liking so returned back northwards.10:45am
-We just baited a "purple" one, but couldn't get him to go, Worked towards the San Clemente Island still seeing those yellowfin, but hard to get to bite, glassy slick seas, no Dorado or Yellowtail under the paddies, the Sunfish crowded them out!
-Just got hooked up, jig, (pink & green), but it broke off, now I'm watching the jig bounce around on the fish , no line on it 11:34am
-Another marlin hooked, fought and finally broke off at the boat, 3/4 mile off Main Beach Laguna this morning, caught on live sardine, soak it with a Penn 965 reel with 20lb line (maybe 150yds of line on the reel, good battle!)
-A few Dorado off Dana Point, under the kelps
-2 inside the Avalon Bank towards Long Point, a couple of quick feeders, Beautiful 69 degree blue water, not a whole lot of life, it was a 20 second feeder, we were there in 30 seconds, no bites 1:24pm,
-I think 3 marlin were taken so far from around or inside the 14 Mile bank so far. 2:14 pm
-the fish taken off Avalon/Casino was a baitfish, and I think a couple of jig fish and two other bait fish so far, another fish may have been been taken off the backside/ Silver Canyon


Thursday KENDAN Fish Report     Marty Morris      09/6/2001 10:00:11 PM
Every week the demand to receive the "Ken-Dan Wednesday Report grow louder and the list of subscribers grow longer. Today, with the Labor Day Holiday pushing things back a day, we bring you the famous "Wednesday (+ 1) Fishing Report." To get the maximum information from today's report - sit back, close  your eyes and imagine the following: Get up at 0430 at Shelter Island, run up to the Crystal Pier, make some bait, run out to the 178, put the lines in the water, turn right, troll down the entire length of the "9," past North Island, down to the 425, turn right and then another right heading back up the line a little further to the west, angle towards Pukey, cross the bottom of the "9", pull in the lines and then head for home.

Now that you have that picture clear in your mind pretend that the date is - oh, let's say - March 6th - not Sept 6th. OK? March ???? did I say. Yes, and exactly what you might have expected on March 6th happened today, on Sept. 6th. Zippo Yesterday there was talk of large YFTs just outside of North Island - not today. Not only no YFT, but no porpoise, no fish, no birds, no life - nada, zilch, gor nisht, Somehow I don't believe the participants in the Offshore Invitational will be seen in these waters. Talk is that many, many fish are seen up there off Dana, but only for short bursts and, talk about time of day. They pop one time and then poof! The tournament participants ought to have fun. The other "item" is that "Big John" the little swordfish boat who fishes locally is quoted as "seeing marlin almost every day in the waters 5 miles off the beach from Mission Bay to La Jolla." I suspect that if you are desparate to contribute to the fuel docks gross receipts this would probably be the place to go.

Of course, the Albacore count is soaring and we heard that many of the fish are even "bigger" (as in '10-15 pds'). One can only imagine what the "smaller" fish look like.Sorry I couldn't make the report more exciting, but, like one of the medical colloquialisms for amenorrhea -"ain't seen nothin!" Marty


JD's Thursday's Report  JD's Big Game Tackle    September 06, 2001
if your going out today, bring a sweatshirt!. Drizzle, overcast skies calm glassy seas.   Good bait at the Newport Bait receiver small sardines and good hook sized Anchovies,

Another batch of feeders came up on the inside of Catalina yesterday, one fish caught there.

Mackeral fishing off the outer oil derricks was tough.

Cattleboat skippers also report a batch or two of feeders off the lee of Catalina this morning, bait is scattered from Catalina to the Oil Rigs.

One other bite this morning 10 miles off the beach, I think inside the 14 Mile Bank, and another boat on the Bank was reported backing down, (black diesel smoke) seen but no response on the radio from them.

The bongos boats came in the harbor late this afternoon, one boat flying a shark flag, (release) the other boat came in with a Albacore Flag and a Tuna Flag, where they were fishing . I wish I knew, I believe ( a guess) they had run down to the outside of the 43 Fathom Spot or possibly the Butterfly Bank,


DESTROYED..! part 1   DanKauai    -  Southern California Marlin On-line     Sep-06-01, 12:52 PM (PDT)
I had a visit from HER yesterday….    When I booked the call, the gent said they just wanted to catch Anything, not looken for a trophy… a 6 hour trip....    We started out trolling the 40 fathom ledge, (240 ft.), I’ve been picking up Wahoo, Mahi & school tuna there the past week late in the mornings & was hoping for more of the same for the family of 5 that were visiting from Wyoming.

After an hour of not much happening on the ledge, I got a call from another charter that was working the outside, 1,000 fathoms…
He said the BIG Skipjack were still there & biting fair, he had three already 18 to 25 lbs. but the school was on the move, since it’s only a few miles, I asked the group & we decided to give em a shot.

As I trolled into the deep, I pulled out the Marauder from the Short position & replaced it with my Purple Soft Head lure, telling the folks, `Might as well…. There might be a Marlin following the Skipjack tuna…. & I made note that we still had the peanut lures out for the smaller eatable fish that Also cruse the deep waters.

The 19 year gent (the kid) immediately said, “I’ll take THAT rod when it gets bit… I Smiled & said it has his name on it now…
His sister `a year younger was saying how, “ANY Fish that can eat THAT lure will be too big for you… I smiled & said,” It’ll be “SPORTING”… looking at the 5’6” rod & the Penn International 50SW two speed packed with 80 lb. mono. & I told the young miss, “you get That rod, pointing to the 40 lb. outfit with my Mahi killer on it… `the rest of ya’s kin fight it out…”

It was a beautiful day… a couple fluffy white clouds passing by in the 13 knot winds, the sea was as Blue as it can be & the swell was nice & spread out, making the lures behind the boat swim as they were designed to…

The day was going great, Kauai a couple miles in the background, the sun still not high but enough to warm everything without being hot… the family was kiken back enjoying the ride, I had the young miss up on the bridge with me, (I wanted to show her a flying fish )…

Off in the near distance, I pointed out the other charter boat as it made a pass thru the birds & stopped, I showed how they were kina just keeping a slow forward movement so it was probably a Skipjack they hooked…
Then…
I saw a Giant Frigate Bird & a couple Red Footed Booby's hanging, the booby’s were swooping like they do when after the Mahi that are after the Flying fish… `the young miss had a `cute smile at the name of the bird & thought I was lying… It’s true, we get Red Footed Booby’s & Blue Billed ones… I prefer the booby’s with red feet over the Booby's wit blue nose & often tell folks so.… When they are in pairs, `mo beta’s…
Cool….
As we got close, we saw the Frigate swoop down & grab a 10 inch flying fish out of the air & fly up high so it could piece it out to swallow it, I always like it when folks from the flat lands get to see this, I Still get a big kick out of it myself…
The booby’s were still swooping & I pointed out the neon Blue Mahi swimming under it, I kept pointing at it & the family saw it as it saw the peanut lure & swam over a GRABBED it… it was the rod ran off the bridge so when it went off, it was only a foot from the young miss….

SNAP ZZZZzzzzzzZZz…it’s Jumping..! ZZZzzzzZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
I told the her, “That’s your rod…. I’ll hand it to ya when ya get on the deck…

`get the belt on, OK, cool, DON’T jerk… ok, try & do the lift n wind I showed ya earlier… `good, I reeled in the other peanut lure & put a slab of Tuna belly on it & let it back as the young miss worked the nice sized Mahi, having a hard time I might add… I reeled in the short lure & stowed it & gave mom the 30 lb. rod with the slab on it & told her to “just hold it there & when n if another Mahi comes to it, give it a little & when I say, put it in gear & crank…

The young miss was in the zone, keeping great tension on the line when she could, without jerking, cranking as the Mahi jumped, just holding as it ran… `a Natural…
& WHAT a Smile….BEAUUTIFUL… …she’ll make some lucky guy a great wife….

I told the Kid ta watch, take notes as that is how I’ll Expect him ta work HIS rod when it goes off laters….

OK..! Look, there’s Another… `Mom ya see it..?… “WoW..! I do…look how Blue it is…
Ok, it’s got your bait, give it a little….. OK, put it in gear…ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZzzz…
It’s Jumping…
“We get a double going folks..!…Nice ones too..!”

`interesting only the ladies are bent… `Hmmmm… how does that happen..?

I got out a bait rig & put another slab on it & gave it to dad showing how to work the reel & said he can put it out if n when another Mahi comes around…

I put my gloves on, telling the young miss to reel till the swivel gets to the rod tip & if I let go of leader to `Hold On… her Mahi was tired & laid out perfect for the gaff, I closed my eyes & swung…
EYEBALL Shot…
NICE WON !!!!…`Easy 30 lbs…

OK dad, there’s another…let yours out… ok cool, it sees it, `let en have a little…OK, put it in gear…
ZZZZZzzzzzZZZZZzzz…Ah dang…`missed it….

“Oh Well”… mom’s still tight, maybe another will come around, if so, the kid gets it,
`dad, you had your shot…LOL….
I put another slab on & told the kid the same as dad a few minutes before…

Meanwhile the 8 year old boy is watching with glee… I told him, “we’ll get you one soon… he said , “I’m READY !!! with a smile from ear ta ear…

We quickly took pictures of the young miss & her Mahi & I put it on ice…

Mom’s fish was close & gave one of the best jump sequences a Mahi can, close to the boat with perfect sun, the light gear helps here, mom didn’t have the technique her daughter had but since it’s hooked on bait, that’s ok as the hook is probably deep… so I was able ta make joke about what the purpose of the handle on the reel is… We All got ta Smile Big…

She got it close & I asked her too ta reel till swivel got to rod tip & “be ready…
This time, the Mahi didn’t lay there for the gaff so when I closed my eyes & swung, I got it in the gills & brought on board & kicked it into the corner, explaining why I ware the big boots…

Had to smile as the bloody Mahi spread it’s blood around, I also wondered `Again, why many folks ware White close fishing… LOL…

So there we were, All bloodied up, a couple 30 pound Mahi on ice, trolling towards the other boat that has gotten farther away while we worked the Mahi but not too far ta catch up to.

We now were Really having a great day…. & we `still had 4 hours left…

So there we were…. 10 AM, 5 miles off the southside of Kauai, `a third of the way down the mountain with 6,000 ft. of water under the boat, nice sunny day, 15 knot winds, chest high swells & me & the family enjoying the ride….
I now have the 8 year old up on the bridge, driving the boat, his mom n dad relaxing on the bench seat midship watching the lures pop & swim behind the boat & the kid standing watching forward at the Big group of birds just ahead of us & the young miss sunning on the back deck, I’m liking the new style of swimwear, `I mean how the lures are swimming….

Suddenly, dad says, “WoW !!! Look at all the birds…
The boys n me smile & the 8 year old says in a “Knowingly way, Dad, they have been in front of us for 20 minutes, were trying to catch up with the school…`Duh…
I Smile BIG inside…
& ask him to go ahead & get on the deck as his turn might be up if we get a pass & the 40 lb. rod gits bit…

The Skipjack are feeding on Nehu, a 2 inch bait fish that balls up tight, the birds really like this as it provides a easy meal. It also gives us an easy pass at times & this is one of em…

As the group of birds get close, we can hear the birds squawking at each other, they are in groups tight to the water, in area’s 50 ft. in diameter with nice splashes coming up from underneath… & hundreds flying around everywhere ya look in an area a half mile around the boat, Quite the show, the Frigates are chasing the Shearwaters trying to get them to spit up their food as they don’t have the wax on their wings & can’t get wet like the little shearwaters, all on board are enjoying watching the big bird harass the little one & are amazed by how well it can maneuver for it’s size & Why it would put so much energy into such small bait, I still can’t answer that without thinking they are just bully’s as they often do it, at times relentlessly…

Here we go….
SNAP…ZZzzZZzz Another…`Snap ZZzzzzzzzZzzz…! DOUBLE ..!!!

OK, your up..! get the small belt on, dad, you might want to help him, the kid can have the one off the rigger….
As I slow the boat, I can see both rods seem to be paying out line as if hooked to the Skipjack that are boiling all around the boat & are both going deep.
I reel in the short lure’s & stow it while telling the kid ta, “take it easy…Watch what your doing, your just yanking line off the reel, if it’s running, just hold it & wait…
Dad n the 8 year old are doing good, just holding on, might be cause the lighter line isn’t giving much choice, these big skipjack are Tough.
I turn the boat downhill & take it out of gear so’s not to be pulling line off with the boat & making it easier for dad n son team & allowing the kid ta crank his in mo easy on the 50SW… it doesn’t take long for his to get to color, I get my small gaff ready in case it’s not hooked good & ask again to crank to swivel & be ready, as I pull the 20 foot 400 lb. leader, I can see the 10/0 hook from my Richard Cranium lure is solid in the tunas mouth & just lift it onboard, I take the hook out of it’s mouth, slip it into the artery under the chin to bleed it & hold it upside down while the pool of blood goes out the scupper, the kid asks if he can hold it for a picture, as mom has the camera ready…

I Smile n say, `Sure… checking that mom & the young miss are out of the way but dad n son are close by…
I let the kid grab it, knowing he will never be able to hold on…
`sure nuff… as soon as he lifts the 18 lb. Skipjack, it shakes the rest of it’s blood ALL over as it drops to the ground…
I tell him again, but mo serious this time that he Really needs ta hold on… LOL

Now we can concentrate on dad n son, `in their Pink Poka Dot clothes trying ta get some of the 40 lb. string back on the 4/0 reel…
With only the short rigger lure out, I’m able to keep the fish off the stern & stay out of gear so they actually do a good job teaming up on the fish, dad lifting / level winding & the 8 year old cranking… saying how, “he JUST Can’t Believe his fish is the same size as his brothers as his is So Much stronger…

I sit on the bridge watching as this family from the flatlands get ta experience Blue Water Fishing…

As the fish gets to color, about 60 ft. under the boat, the 8 year old sees the Big Blue / Silver flash & Exclaims how he was rite about the size…
Then….ZZZZzzzzzZZZZZZZZZZzzzzzzz `OK, just hold it..!…ZZzzzzzzZZZZZzzzzzz…..

I smile as I hear that “Knowing Voice” again, saying how he, “KNEW HIS Fish was MUCH BIGGER than big brothers…
& the Smile was priceless on everyone on board…

After that last run, the fish came up quick… I again explain they need ta be ready when I pull it to the surface in case it wants`ta ta run… As I pull the 16 ft. 200 lb. leader, I see the 8/0 hook on the peanut only has a little of the tuna’s mouth & part of the gill hanging on it so I put a gaff in it’s head & bring it on board…

WoW..! `It IS bigger…this one will go 25 lbs `Easy… The “Knowing voice” says, I Told you..! We take a family picture, give high fives & pack the fish in the ice, `Sashimi tonight…

I have the `8 year old pro… drive towards the birds as I put the lines back out… Telling the kid, “there Really Should be a Marlin swimming around with these tuna… `Keep your eye on that Short lure…. So there we were… All bloodied up, chasing them booby’s again…

`ta be continued…    I have ta go to the Farmers Market…

"DESTROYED..! `part 111."
So there we were….   TOO MUCH FUN ALREADY…
I’m feeling pretty good, we got “My target of 100 pounds” on board, a Very Nice Day, a Fun Family Enjoying the trip & my Dawg isn’t even sick this day…   `What more could one ask for..?

Since the schools of Skipjack are still feeding, I decide ta put a lure on the 30 lb. rod out along with the rest, the big Skipjack are great fun on that reel… `Sport Fishing….   We’re now trolling 6 lines, a 30 lb., a 40 lb. & my 4- 50SW’s with 80 lb. line…

As we approach the birds again, it seems they are not quite as active as they were earlier but still moving & busting bait at times, it looks like they have done their number on the bait schools & it’s only taking them a minute or so to eat em now & move so, the chance of getting a pass is Very short.

We chase the school for a half hour before the next opportunity to get just ahead of em with the boat & turn in front so the lures can ride over the main concentration, when we do….

Pac ZZzzzzzz…Snap ZZzzzzzzz…Snap ZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
TRIPLE !!!! Cool…..
ooP’s one came off…`another `off…. But we still git one going, on the 30 lb. rod no less, I think I ripped the lips off on the one the ate the R.C. lure off the rigger `Skipjack have real Soft mouth, & the peanut on the 40 lb. just missed, `usually it gets em, I guess 2 out of 3 strikes is ok for it so far today….

Dad ends up with the rod bent, the Skipjack Smoked him on the 30 lb…
I go down & clear the Soft Head on the short corner, thinking it Really should gitbit with All the Skipjack around & I stow it & the other lures that missed that time around, leaving the long rigger & long corner out…

Dad does a fine job working the fish to the back of the boat, it holds up a time or two not wanting to get close to `whatever is pulling on it but after 20 minutes it’s at color, dad is a bit fatigued & excited & keeps lifting too hard & not winding fast enough on the drop & is yo-yoing the fish, this gives good opportunity ta explain how the pump n grind works, it’s like fighting a big fish on big tackle, a great match on the 30 lb. rod & 20ish lb. Skipjack.

Suddenly…
The Skippy takes a Hard Long Run….
HuH..? At first I thought he hit the freespool but on the star drag, that is hard ta do…
Dad is in disbelief as he sees All the hard fought line disappear into the deep blue water….
I’m trying ta figure out where the fish got it’s sudden burst of energy & was Quite relieved to see it slow & Finally stop taking line…..   Dad works it back up towards the boat straining `Like he hasn’t been in a 35 minute Arm Wrestle before….

The “Knowing Voice” is giveing All the encouragement & Advice needed, I just sit & watch / wait, wondering about what he really has on…

When it comes to leader, I again ask ta reel to swivel & I get the 15 ft. 200 lb. leader & start pulling, as it gets close, I can see it’s tail wrapped, must of happened when dad was yo yoing the fish & that explains the hard fast last run.
I put the little gaff in it’s head & bring the 20 lb. Skipjack on board, `had ta Smile when Everyone cleared the deck when I popped the artery…`cept the 8 year old, I think he kina likes the RED stuff… LOL

So there we are…   Trolling along, we are back to the 6 lure pattern, & the birds are spread out looking like it’s over for the morning so I head back in a back track of where the fish came from, hoping for more Mahi… or
`Really hoping the Short Lure Goes OFFFFFFFF…

The “Little Pro” is talking about how his tuna is the biggest so far, `”Of Course”…. & the little miss is reminding him that Her Mahi is bigger, mom n dad are getting some Very Quality Family time & the kid is up crowding me off the bridge… so, I tell him where we’re heading (have ta keep the sun on the deck) & go down on the deck letting him drive while I talk with the family… & pack the fish,

`Have ta Admit, the Big Skipjack are like watermelons, `Purple ones… I lay them on their backs, covering em with ice & lay the Mahi over em…. Explaining how the Mahi will be best prepared sautéed while the Skipjack is Great on the Q…

After a mile or so… The kid points out a couple booby’s & I see there is also a Frigate & a couple Tropic birds with em up ahead, since we used up the tuna belly I had already, I took out the smallest Skipjack & took the belly off of it & cut it into strips in case we had more Mahi action… I had the kid switch places with me so I could drive & maybe get a pass on what ever the birds were working….

When we got close, I could see it a school of Bottle Nosed Dolphin, a pretty big school to…  Hmmmm….. `maybe some Big Yellowfin under them….  I look to see the lures are running good, then go down & reset the drags, `had em set a bit light for the Skipjack but they are gone…

As we get into the dolphin, they give us Quite the show, at first, a few Big scouts come over & have a look at the boat, then we get into the middle of the school… I told the folks that at times, if they bend over the gunnel & splash the water with their hands, often, the dolphin will swim rite up & look at them…

The young miss gave it a try….….   & it worked, a nice big one came & said high, it came within a foot of her hand, turned on it’s side & looked rite at her…  When the dolphin did this, the young miss let out this excited happy squeal type sound, I thought about…   `things….

After 20 or so minutes of cruising with them, we just got out of the part of the pod that had the mom n baby dolphin….
I looked back & said…

“WoW !!!…Look how BIG THAT ONE IS !!!
I was a bit surprised at the tone of my voice… & the hair Standing up on my neck…

I pointed to the big Shadow as it came in from the blue part of the third wake….    It kina turned towards the short lure & disappeared….

`stay tuned,
I’m Still trying ta remember how the next two hours went… 

DESTROYED..! `part 1111.

So there we were….

Cursing the Purple Blue deep Pacific, `me, my dawg, an 8 year old that was Fast becoming an Old Salt & his family… the boat is riding the chest high swell quite comfortably with the sun almost overhead yet still a little to the front of the boat, the lures behind the boat swimming along pushing water & carrying their bubbly trail thru till their next surfacing…

But… the Hair on the back of my neck was telling me in a subconscious way there was a BIG Fish readying itself for Battle… interesting how that works, over the years, That has become the one thing I live for, when everything goes into Slow motion, almost like time stands still & the Only thing I can see, hear & feel is the Ocean, my boat & the hook, however it is attached….

But…   I see nothing… the Shadow that swam thru disappeared into the depths as quickly as it appeared & now I wonder if it was even a reality….    `was it just a big Dolphin..?

We are just out of the pod & that is where the Big Scouts cruse…

But… it sure was Big, kinda deep gray/blue in color too…. It did kinda swim without moving, normally with dolphin, ya kin see their tail moving in the up n down motion but this one more glided thru the water with no movement visible, `Fast Too…

Just in case, I go down & unhook the rubba holding the short lure in position & give it a couple Quick cranks & stopping it while putting the reel in freespool holding my thumb on the spool so the lure was running just in the bottom of the trough so if a fish were to come up behind it, I would have a clear view & the lure would be free to drop down the `hopefully Open mouth….

Nothin…. Hmmmm….
So I drop it back to the next wave, with just slight thumb pressure on the spool, hoping to feel it pick up momentum as the fish grabbed it on the drop…
Nothin…

So I drop it back to the next wave & hold thumb pressure…
Nothin… Hmmm…

So I give it a few Quick cranks bring the lure back to it’s original position, Watching, Hoping but seeing…`Nothin…

I scan the other lures & wake back behind the boat while doing this, looking for any tell tale signs of a fish under any of the other lures only to see everything looking normal…

But… `Why are my legs shaking… & the hair on my neck standing on end..?

So… I let the lure back again, letting it drop back in freespool a yard or so, stopping it with my thumb, feeling for pressure & letting it back a few more yards only to feel just the pressure of the big lure pulling on the line… So… I crank it hard & fast, bringing the lure up on the surface bubbling away while watching for the shadow to appear behind it….

But…`Nothin….
I hear behind me, a voice asking, "do you Have it..?
`oh yea… there are people with me…
& I turn & say, "You would Know if That was a Fish & it Bit…

I stand watching the lures & water behind the boat, looking for Anything that might be a sign of a fish but see only the blue water with the lures bubbling along the surface mixed in with the white water from the boat….

I put the ruba back on the clip on the short lure & go back up on the bridge, looking, hoping… looking….

Now, I’m really wondering if it was a fish or just a dolphin…

I thought to myself that I better turn & go back thru the area, `heck, I Knew I would be in that area for the duration of the trip & probably the next, I Knew by `The BuZZ… I felt, that it Had to be a fish, Instinct & Subconscious are Rarely wrong.

 As I made my turn, I hear the folks talking below me on the deck…

"what is that bird doing back there..?

As I turn to see where they are looking, I see they are pointing above the lures behind the boat at a Giant Frigate hovering 30 feet above the lures…

I look at the lures that are now lined up behind the boat from the angle of the turn….

Suddenly..

Behind the Short lure, I see a Dorsal Fin of a Marlin… it just rose out of the water without making any disturbance in the surface…

& IT WAS BIG..!

It was as wide as the Soft head lure it was following…

Then it sank out…

I could now Only hear my own heart beat & Only see the lure & about 5 yards of water around it as I turned the wheel straitening the boat…

& there IT was again… The Dorsal behind the short lure….

As I watched…. I saw HER come up behind the lure with HER mouth open fully behind the lure…

It looked like a 50 Gallon drum…. & the Big lure Really `Wasn’t, at this time…

I saw the White of the underside of Her Bill, it was like someone’s Arm in Size as it rose above the lure revealing the Bucket underneath for the lure to drop into….

So….

By instinct I guess….
I reached over & dropped the throttle down, thus almost stopping the boat & the Lure in front of HER mouth…
The World Stood Still….
I could see the lure disappear as she engulfed it & turned to the outside of the wake…
The World Stood Still….
`again, by instinct I guess as it felt as if I was up with the Frigate watching this happen from above…
I Gunned the Throttle…
Thus Pulling the line & lure tight in the Big Marlins mouth…
I watched as the line came tight to the ruba, streached it out & SNAPPED…!
I can still hear the sound of the reel as it paid out that First few yards…
ER..ERRR…ER..ERRRR..ER.ER……ERRRRRRRRRZZZZZZZZZZZ
OH SH!T !!!!    SHE HAS IT..!!…We’re HOOKZED..

I changed my mind…. `Part V......  Sep-10-01, 01:43 PM
It’s funny how one puts in so much time & efforts, waiting…looking…waiting… hoping for a GIANT FISH to swim up behind the boat & Eat a Hook.

After All, SHE is what ALL the other "Practice Fish" have been leading up to… All the years of talking with others about what the possible best way of dealing with Her… The ones in the past that have won the battle… & the stories of others & how they handled them, won or lost…

All the times one has fought That Epic Battle out in their mind…

One thinks about how they will handle it, about the confidence they have in their tackle, their boat & they wonder about the person that will be the one on the reel, that is one of the factors that is pretty uncontrolled when working a charter boat that takes out most anybody that calls from various places around the world…

One Thinks they are ready for HER…
Then…
They one day… actually SEE HER…

As I held my hand on the throttle after dropping down to just over idle, watching the spool, the rod… & the Big fish as she sat there with her head out of the water, slashing back & forth, trying to free whatever it was that has grabbed a hold of her mouth… waiting to see what will come next…. I can see the 11/0 stainless hook planted in the side of her bottom jaw, the leader coming off it with the Purple lure halfway to the swivel, it’s really quite amazing how clear this view was…

I hear a voice from below; it kind of throws me off as it has quite a bit of Fear in it as it asks…
"YOU CAN’T BE SEARIOUS… THAT’S NOT A FISH..?
`is it?"

I look down on the deck & dad is standing there, his mouth open in his pale face… looking at the giant thing that is behind the boat with a very small piece of string coming from it’s mouth to the rod that is bent, pointing towards it.

I watch as the kid grabs the fighting belt & puts it on, I watch to make sure he takes the clip off the rod as he takes it out of the holder, as he gets pulled almost off his feet while being dragged to the back of the boat….

I’m thinking to myself about how he is moving with nice smooth unhurried movements… & I think about how nice it is we already went thru this routine a few times this day…only with the much smaller `Practice fish…

I’m Also watching the fish as it sinks into the water out of sight…still shaking her head…

ERR…ER..ER..ERRRR…ER…ER..ERRRRRRRRRR…..

I hear the reel pay line slowly, I can see the rod has a heavy bend & the line disappearing into the big hole left behind the boat…

This all seams like an eternity but was only less than a minute in reality…

but then…`What is REALITY..?

"YOU, REEL IN THAT ONE… YOU, REEL IN THAT ONE…`NO…!, LEAVE THEM IN THE HOLDER… I say, as I’m reeling in the rod that sits on the bridge, I’m telling the family to reel in the other lines so I can have a little freedom with the boat… OK, leave them IN the water, I’ll put the lures away…

OK, Just Hold it, she’s running, `No, you Can’t do anything, just hold her…

WOW.!!! LOOK HOW BIG THAT FISH IS !!!!

IT’A MARLIN…IT’S A MARLIN..!!!!!

I hear the young miss exclaim as the Giant Marlin clears the water 60 feet behind the boat, we can see the water rolling off it’s sides, could see her big eye looking down, like she is trying to see what is in her mouth…

She makes two more jumps, clearing the water both times, flying at an angle away from the boat just enough so we can see her full length & girth, & the now small looking lure dangling just past her tail as she swam thru the air in a graceful arch… then she swam with her shoulders just out of the water & her tail kicking up water similar to a jet… & it turned into just a big splash with a dark monster in the middle as she swam away from the boat on the surface before disappearing into the depths again…

I watched in AWE at the Power displayed & Her size…. Her body looked like two picnic tables joined together…

I’ll admit, she was a quite Intimidating… she was looking more like a boat back there than a fish… & my little gold reel was now Humming in a way seldom heard… She was now Running away Fast…

I hear the scared voice again asking…

"What do we do now? You can’t think were going to catch THAT do you..? `gulp…

As I pull up the outrigger to clear the side of the boat & toss the unhooked rods into the cabin telling the family to be careful of the hooks attached to them, listening to the reel pay out line, not really wanting to see how much is left… I go back up to the bridge, putting it in reverse & giving hard throttle so the stern will kick around, giving momentum for the hard turn I would make to get the boat after the place the line was heading…

I tell the kid that it IS Very IMPORTANT that he keeps as much pressure on the line as he can so I can see the direction it is going & not get on top of it with the boat… as I tell him he needs to stand All the way in the corner & keep the rod pointed towards the line, Not the fish…

As he starts to crank against the spinning reel, I tell him to wait till he can actually gain & Then crank, keeping pressure, he appears to be listening…

I can now see the Big Marlin skipping across the surface ahead of the boat on her belly throwing water from side to side with the strokes of her tale & her back shimmering ahead of the white water…

I hear the reel stop paying line…

`CRANK !!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I look down to see the kid cranking as fast as he can & the line not in the strait line it holds under full pressure… I turn the boat, giving angle, hoping for it to come tight as the kid asks,
"did I lose it..?

`CRANK !!!!!!!!

I watch as the rod loads up & the reel starts humming again….

I look to see the family watching this happen & I wonder if they even know what is happening, everything has been moving so fast, I hardly know what was going on, even though it was going in Slow motion…& I look at the reel in the kids hand, I can see it is two thirds empty, the fish must have over 400 yards out & is only just begun her first run…

I realize we have we only have less than 200 yards left & a boat that only goes 14 knots…

But… We were Still TIGHT……

Dan
plenty mo fo`learn


Pinapple 1--1010 trench      Affordable Marine             Date: Tue, 4 Sep 2001 08:04:43 -0700
Dear Dennis:     I hope you can post my message today to all the fishing vessels that were on the 1010 trench Saturday [Sept 01,01] who visit your great website so I can personally thank the many fishing brothers that came to our assistance as Pineapple 1 was taking in major water and in process of sinking....Especially the SEAROSE AND MONEY PIT. The crew and captain for the SEAROSE was a God send who came to our assistance's as well as other boats in the area. The SEAROSE was able to put us under tow so we can at least get the boat stabilized. As we were under tow the MONEY PIT CALLED IN ASSISTANCE for the Coast Guard because we were taking in serious water that had the water line 5 inches below the top of our transom. THANK GOD THE SEAS WERE FLAT. A hour later a helo from SD came out to lower us a portable gas bilge put but mind you not one but 2 pumps were needed , and believe me that was a major difference when you can get one of those portable gas pumps going. Our fruitless bailing was at no end in sight for us to saving Pineapple I without the boats helping and COAST GUARD COMING OUT TO THE 1010 TRENCH.. PLEASE CONVEY MY HEARTFELT GRATITUDE and THANK YOU TO THOSE BOAT CAPTAINS AND COAST GUARD and the multitudes of other boat I couldn't get the names of who had lent assistance!!

Ps. To the captains of the SEAROSE AND MONEY PIT AND THE THIRD BOAT WHO I TRANSFERRED MY FISHING GEAR, ... MY HATS OFF TO ALL OF YOU FOR A JOB WELL DONE! I also have some equipment i.e. tow rope and bilge pump so I can return them,,,,,thanks     Mahalo!!!   Russell


Bigeye 256lb in 1 day range        Johnny  Allcoast   Sep-04-01, 11:18 PM (PST)   
The fish ended up weighing 256 on the certified scale at Seaforth. We started trolling for albies about 6 am on Monday, Labor Day, and got a jig strike at about 6:15 for 6 dodos. Continued on for a couple scattered skippie and mini-albie strikes until about 7:15 am, when we stopped on a paddie with good yellowtail marks. Hooked a couple 5 pound yellows, and then they turned into albies, big-time! We ended up driving away from them to preserve what bait we had left in case we ran into some yellowfin or yellows on paddies, (this was a two day trip on the Aristokat six-pack out of Seaforth), and because we were only about two HOURS into our trip. Around 11 am we decided to put out a couple of marlin jigs just to be doing something instead of looking around and not fishing. They were both Zukers 3.5M marlin jigs, one mean joe green and one bright pink. Somewhere around 2:30 in the afternoon, both jigs got slammed. When they were both into the spectra before the boat could even be taken out of gear, we had an idea they were bigger fish. Tim the captain said they had to be bigeye or marlin, and since they weren't jumping, they were probably bigeye. I had grabbed the heavier outfit, and from the pull it definitely felt bigger than the 85# bluefin I got last year. The fish just kept taking line, slowly and steadily. I wasn't really worried about getting spooled since I had 500 yards of 80# Izor spectra topped with 200 yards of Izor mono (one of Basil's topshots). When the fish was out somewhere around 400 yards, it took a 300 yard run straight at the boat. I had been hoping that it would kamikaze the boat and it would be over, but at about 100 yards out, it turned around and screamed out another 200 yards. This repeated a couple of times over the first hour or so, and then they had Mike's fish at color. I knew his was on my other rig with a 50# topshot, so I guessed that his was either smaller or I had a really mean fish on. About an hour and fifteen minutes after the original jig strike, Mike's fish was gaffed and they dragged it into the stern. I heard/felt a loud *thump* and then the screams when his fish came aboard. When everyone came back up from the stern, no one would tell me how big the fish was, so I had to wait until I got dragged back there by mine. I guessed 150#, which is what I had originally guessed the one at the end of my line was, but at this point I realized that mine was a lot bigger and got kind of scared. I've read about a lot of 70-120 pound bigeye being boated locally, but very few in the high 100's, and at this point I was on my knees in the bow trying to gain line...
Not long after Mike's fish came up, mine actually started to show some signs of tiring, and eventually it came to color. It just sat under the bow sulking for about 20 minutes, with Tim and the crew coaching all the way on what to do at each stage and how to react depending on what the fish did. (the crew was great at coaching every step of the way, and I'm sure I wouldn't have gotten the fish without them). The fish finally came all the way up (once it got to 80 feet deep, we could see it on the fish finder, and Richard Fischer, also an Allcoaster, gave us reports on it's depth), and we realized that the troll jig had a 12 foot marlin leader, and with the swivel wound all the way to the top roller, the fish was still JUST out of gaff's reach. Major dilemma. Well, we kept trying, and on the third circle, one of the crew members reached WAY out and hit it in the head, and the other two gaffs went in within the next second. At this point I was estimating the fish at 200#, which was already amazing. It took four gaffs to lift the fish onboard, and when it hit the deck, it cracked the non-slip coating/finish on the deck. Tim and I looked at each other and agreed. 250. Then we started yelling and high-fiving each other, and decided to end the trip and head home to weigh the fish.
By the way, does anyone know what the CA record is? We thought it might contend, but have heard everything from low 200's to well over 300 as the record. We got the weight certified and I have the rod with knots attached still, and the other problem is that no one from DFG verified that it was a bigeye, though we all were able to identify it and hopefully it looks obvious in the pictures. I will have them developed in the morning and post them as soon as I can get them scanned... Now I've got to take some aspirin and get to bed...
Forgot to mention- the bigger one was taken on a Penn 50S modified by Cal to fish 80#, on a Calstar 655XXH fiberglass rod, and the smaller on a 16S modified to fish 50-60# by Cal on a Calstar 660H glass rod, both obviously custom wrapped by BGI...     Knee-buckler: Aristocat Capt. Tim Linskey (left) and angler Johnny Wong show off Wong's 256-pound bigeye tuna, caught in Mexican waters 80 miles south of Mission Bay.   

010906-BET.jpg (12201 bytes)

Brought to his angling knees  - Man battles 256-pound bigeye tuna off Aristocat   By Ed Zieralski
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
September 6, 2001

It's bigeye tuna season, and no one knows that better than Johnny Wong of West Covina.   One of the bigeyes, called gorillas for their massive size and sheer strength, dropped Wong to his knees as he fought it Monday aboard Capt. Tim Linskey's Aristocat out of Seaforth Sportfishing.

Wong and fellow angler Michael McLain of South Pasadena were trolling marlin jigs, 3.5 Zuker's pink, in order to avoid getting stopped by albacore or skipjack about 80 miles south of Mission Bay, north of the 1010 Trench. They had a double jig strike, and the rumble was on.

McLain boated his fish, a fine 132-pound bigeye, an hour later, but Wong stayed fastened to his, belly to the rail and, at times, knees on the deck, to withstand the battling bigeye.

"At one point, I was at the bow, on my knees, the rod on the rail and just trying to reel it in," Wong said.

Wong fought it for 2 hours, 15 minutes before Linskey, his two deckhands and McLain stuffed four gaffs into it and muscled it over the rail and into the Aristocat. It weighed 256 pounds.

"I was completely dead at the end, just kind of hurt," Wong said.

Wong said the sheer weight of the tuna cracked the fiberglass deck floor of the Aristocat.

"It's the biggest tuna at the landing in the 25 years I've been here," said John Yamate, part owner and general manager at Seaforth Sportfishing on Mission Bay.

Wong used 80-pound Spectra backing with a topshot of 80-pound blue Izorline on a Cal Sheets-treated Penn 50S reel and a Calstar 655XXH rod.

As big as the fish is, it isn't even close to an IGFA world record, line-class or all-tackle mark. The record for bigeye on 80-pound test line is a 375-pounder caught last April off Ecuador. The California state record for a bigeye caught in offshore waters is a 240-pound, 10-ounce fish caught at the Butterfly Bank on Aug. 1, 1987, by Steve Hutchinson. But this fish was caught 80 miles south in Mexican waters.

Wong wraps rods in his spare time and has an on-line fishing tackle shop, www.biggameinternational.com, where he sells the rods, reels and fishing tackle. His previous best catch was an 85-pound bluefin last year that took him about 30 minutes to land.

"This catch dwarfs that one," Wong said. "We have a lot of pictures of me fighting the fish, but the one with me on my knees at the bow . . . "    That says it all.

Bigeye 256lb in 1 day range     Eric C. Meins     Allcoast    Sep-04-01, 07:51 PM (PST) 
976-tuna is reporting that one of the 2 bigeye that the Aristocrat landed today was 256lbs and in 1 day range!!! Now were talking. Imagine pulling up to Shelter Island with a very fresh, not a popsicle, fish like that strapped to the back of your boat like a long ranger coming back from a 16 dayer. Kill bag and flying gaffs anyone? Just knowing there swimming around out there makes a long boat ride a little nicer.    Eric
Edit: Checked 976-bite which had a few more details and said that only 2 lines were being trolled quite close and both hooked up. 1 marlin jig was a mean joe green and the other was a hot pink feather. Said they were down around 80 miles. The other tuna was a mere 132lbs. The bigger fish took over 2 hours to land.


San Diego Marlin Club LABOR DAY TOURNAMENT - SEPTEMBER 1 AND 2 
BOB WOODARD, Jr
., on his new boat "Drop Back", with a jig strike hooked a 106 pounder.  BOB was fishing just off North Island. Since the L.D. tournament is limited to "Members Only" the High Male Angler and High Boat Awards will go to BOB WOODARD, Jr and his "Drop Back."


JD's Labor Day's Report, Monday  J.D.'s Big Game Tackle   
-Calm seas , overcast skies, WIND NW 10 TO 15 KT...INCREASING TO 15 TO 20 KT DURING THE AFTERNOON. WIND WAVES 2 TO 3 FEET. SWELL NW 5 FEET. PATCHY DENSE FOG IN THE MORNING
-Coast Guard reports a small 15 ft boat overturned in the San Pedro Channel, keep your eye out for it.
-Two sleepers reported 2 miles south of the 14 Mile Bank this morning. sunk out. 7:03 am
-The Full Moon has slowed thing down.
-Fish baited 7 miles off outside the Domes yesterday, Dolly Pardons, some quick feeders, a scratch of fish seen off San Clemente Island
-Water temps 70 degree just outside the 267 Fathom Spot, the colder water side of the temp break seems to be holding more life
-From the Satilite images/ Swell mode it looks as though there is a large swell out of the West on the outside, no wind on it .- -The few marlin that were in tight to the beach (in the lee) at San Clemente Island (off the windmills) 1 to 2 miles moved down the island towards the Domes on Sunday, pushed by the early wind out of the N/W the cold water (64) crept in from the west and came down the island. Yellowfin were still in the area but hard to hook, they were on that small mini bait.
-Jumpers , quick feeders seen off Clemente, not taking the baits or jigs .
-The 289 spot looks real good,
-A big 8-10 ft. shark seen with a white dorsal fin seen?
-About a hour ago we saw a sleeper just tipping, sunk out. had a couple zips, knockdown this morning for about a 45 minute show. (I think outside the 14- JD) 1:15 pm
-Another jig fish or two strikes this morning during the AM high tide today, Green/ Yellow, Green / White
-Several boats have drifted the overnight these past few days, full moon, Sharks , no swordfish , at least confirmed.
-Got the glasses on at least one marlin, 1:35
-seals, birds, jumping sunfish lots of life, on the 14 mile bank, 1:35pm
Saw one big batch of feeders earlier today, it's been quiet for the past few hours since.
-The marlin were feeding early and late in the afternoon, during this full moon phase. scattered batches of feeders from inside 14/267 to outside the banks


178 LB Bigeye taken @390   gofish    Sep-03-01, 08:03 AM (PST)
The boat Solud landed a 178lb (scaled) bigeye at the 390 proper on Sunday. The fish was landed on a short daisy chain with a 7" black and green Zuker at the end.
xxx large tuna    Landshark    Sep-03-01, 01:51 PM (PST)
when leaving SI ramp on sunday afternoon, there was a tuna hanging at the marlin club that looked like it was over 150 lb. It was by far the biggest tuna I've seen in person. Anyone else see that? And was it a local fish?  


JD's Sunday's Report    J.D.'s Big Game Tackle   
-By 9;00 am the wind began to freshen, a couple of sighting of marlin, a number of young sharks molested and some tuna under the dolphin.
-The sauries really got pushed up here, we didn't see a fish but the baits up now.