
East Cape Fishing Report
12/1/07
The
biggest news in the past few weeks is the
resurgence of the yellowfin tuna bite here
in the waters off the East Cape. While we’ve
had tuna in the area all along, the
numbers—and average size—of the fish really
exploded. Fish are averaging 25-35 pounds
(compared to 10-20 a few weeks back) and a
few larger 40-60 pounders are hooking up as
well. Multiple schools are available. A
chummed mix of chunk squid and live sardines
is getting the feeding frenzy going and
boats are fishing the schools both on the
surface and down 20-40 feet. Everybody who’s
tuna fishing is pretty much limiting out!
Lots of plates of sashimi and sushi are
being passed around the bar each afternoon,
tuna steaks are on the dinner menu, and
coolers are going home full!
Dorado
numbers are excellent as well, with anglers
hooking up on 15-30 pound fish while
trolling for striped marlin and also
encountering rogue fish on the surface.
Sardines are aiding the hookups there.
Plenty of mahi-mahi are in the mix!
Striped marlin numbers have dropped quite a
bit from the incredible 2007 billfish bite
that went from March—November this year.
Some stripers are still around, as well as a
few sailfish, but not too many boats are
getting multiple hookups per day, as was the
norm more or less for months on end.
Granted, with the tuna bite so strong, the
number of hours spent trolling for billfish
is way down in tandem. A large blue marlin
and an even larger black marlin were caught
last week as well.
Inshore,
juvenile roosterfish continue to feed
aggressively on sardines, and chumming/slow
trolling near Las Cuevas Arroyo is producing
roosters, as well as plenty of sierra
mackerel. Some pargo and cabrilla snapper
also are available, plus plenty of wahoo for
anglers trolling close to shore to the south
of Los Frailes.
East Cape Fishing Report
11/15/07
Fishing
is excellent on the East Cape right now!
Leading the way are good numbers of
yellowfin tuna in several distinct schools
in our area of the East Cape right now.
Although the fish are mostly running
small--in the 10-20# range--lots of fish are
being caught, especially in the mornings.
Schools have been located out from La
Rivera, near Cabo Pulmo, Los Frailes, and
further south. All of these schools are
being targeted with chummed sardines and
drift fishing with live bait, and light
gear. The fish are somewhat line shy. A
school of larger yellowfin also was located
25 miles east running with porpoises, and
boats were trolling hootchies for hookups in
this school of larger tuna (15-40#). Many
boats in the fleet are coming in with 4-10
yellowfin per day.
Sierra mackerel have invaded the shoreline
near Punta Colorada and La Rivera, and are
congregated in great numbers near the inflow
of Las Cuevas Arroyo between La Rivera and
Rancho Leonero. Most of the fleet is
stopping for sardines from bait boats here
in the morning and then slow-trolling
sardines for multiple hookups of delicious
sierra mackerel. Trolling with small X-Raps
and Rapala Magnums (rigged with light wire
leaders!) also is very productive.
Roosterfish
are abundant but small. These are the
juvenile fish spawned in the Sea of Cortez
and range from2-4 pounds. However, they are
great fun on light tackle, and can be caught
with sardines or topwater lures thrown to a
surface feeding frenzy. Many roosterfish
also are around the Palmas de Cortez and
Playa del Sol docks.
Offshore, striped marlin fishing is
excellent. There are plenty of big sailfish
around as well. Trolled lures are raising
fish and producing multiple strikes and
hookups, with double and triple hookups
possible as pods of marlin attack the lures.
We don't have any live mackerel for bait in
the area right now, so our only pitch baits
are frozen ballyhoo rigged on a #7 bait
hook. Many hookups are coming on ballyhoo.
Boats are coming in with 2-8 blue and red
flags flying on the outriggers, with blue
signifying a billfish caught, and red
signifying release of the marlin or
sailfish.
There
are quite a few wahoo being caught
near-shore in the morning, especially near
Las Destiladeras to the South, on trolled
Rapala Magnums, Yo-Zuris, and Marauders.
Most of the fish are 20-40 pounds.
Dorado fishing dropped off this past week
after going hot and heavy for most of
October and into early November. Some boats
are still contacting a few dorado while
drift-fishing for tuna or while trolling for
marlin. A couple of boats are catching as
many as four dorado in a day.
Rounding out the report is good inshore
bottom fishing for pargo, cabrilla, and
amberjack. Seas are calm, the sky is bright
blue, and daytime air temps are 85 degrees.
Sea surface temps are 81-83 degrees. It's an
awesome time of year to be sunnin' and
funnin' on Baja's East Cape!
East Cape Fishing Report
11/1/07
Fishing remains excellent on the East Cape.
We’ve seen a downturn in overall numbers of
blue marlin in the past couple of weeks, but
they are still showing up in the lure
spreads and on the hooks almost every day.
Some boats are getting multiple shot, and
most of the blues are in the 200-350# range.
Striped
marlin numbers are solid, and some big fish
are available. One boat had two stripers
estimated at 190# and 250# caught and
released one day last week. Any stripers
over 200# are HUGE for our area! The world
record is only 447#, but that’s from New
Zealand—a region where they consistently see
fish exceeding 300#. In the Sea of Cortez,
our striped marlin range from 120-200# most
of the time.
Rounding out the billfish report are
sailfish, which we’re catching in high
numbers. Some boats are running into pod of
fish while trolling and reporting multiple
hookups and catches, including as many as
6-8 fish caught and released per day. For
the blues, stripers, and sails, most fish
are being teased up and hooked on a variety
of trolling lures (petroleum, orange, green,
and blue/white are reportedly the best
colors) and some fish are being taken on
pitched dead baits (ballyhoo) as well.
Running large skirted, rigged ballyhoo while
trolling with lures also is taking many
stripers and sailfish. They are a lot of
adult flying fish in the water right now.
Fishing
for yellowfin tuna has seen an uptick in the
past two weeks. Several schools are
accessible, with the most consistent bite
coming from just 2 miles off Cabo Pulmo and
the Lighthouse area, where boats are
catching tuna ranging in size from 10 up to
80 pounds. The fishing is going in cycles,
with one day yielding only footballs and the
next producing little fish as well as some
bruisers over 50#. Chumming with chunk squid
and live sardines to raise the schools, and
then long-lining both baits in the chum, is
hooking fish. Light line tactics are getting
more bites, but those big ahi will spool
light gear in seconds! Secondary schools of
tuna are off Los Frailes and points south,
and some are running with tuna 12-20 miles
offshore where anglers are catching fish
trolling cedar plugs and hootchies as well
as with bait.
Dorado fishing is fantastic. Fish are
hanging around surface debris and can be
caught with sardines or topwater Rapalas
like Skitter Walks. Many fish are also being
seen on the surface and caught with pitched
dead ballyhoo. Some dorado are hitting
marlin lures. The fish are ranging in size
from 10# chickens up to 35 pounds. Another
offshore bonus: lots of big wahoo are in the
area, with fish between 40-75# being caught
on trolled Rapalas and Marauders, especially
first thing in the morning.
Many
boats are stopping three miles offshore for
15-30 minutes in the morning to hook up 2-3
“Diablos Rojoso” squid to use for chunk
bait. These are the four-foot Humboldt Squid
(“Red Devils”) that you may have heard
about. They are a dangerous species for
divers—we had to work hard at the Sushi/Pool
bar last week to convince a Japanese
photographer who was visiting to get shots
for a Japanese tourism brochure that he
could NOT get in the water with his scuba
gear to film a Diablo Rojo being caught
because the school would likely attack him
and skin him alive! Our boats are dropping
glow squid jigs down 250 feet for the squid
and jerk-reeling them back up to hook the
squid, which put up a tremendous fight back
to the boat. They must be short-pumped and
reeled very slowly back to the boat to avoid
tearing the hooks from their fleshy
tentacles. Once on the transom, the mate
swiftly fillets off the head (and the
business end) and the remaining body is
chunked into pieces for bait fishing. A
great snack for yellowfin!
The downside to the annual appearance of
Humboldt squid is they chase most of
mackerel schools out of the area and out of
reach of our bait boats, so we are limited
to dead ballyhoo and live sardines for bait.
There are hoards of sardines at the mouth of
Las Cuevas arroyo near the town of La Rivera
right now.
Rounding out the fishing report are the
welcome addition of delicious sierra
mackerel just offshore from La Rivera and
Punta Colorada, and schools of small
roosterfish (10# fish) that can be caught in
the same area. A few dogtooth snapper and
yellow snapper, plus some jack crevalle,
also are available inshore.
East Cape Fishing Report
10/2/07
The
month of September has produced some of the
best fishing on the East Cape waters in
recent memory. The Sea of Cortez is really
an amazing fishery! Although the
all-important fish numbers go up and down
with the seasonal movement of the many
different species we have prowling our
waters, the summer of 2007 will be
remembered as one of the best on record.
Leading the way have been strong numbers of
yellowfin tuna. With one caveat: the fish
have been much smaller than we expect to see
during summer. Usually, anglers come to the
East Cape from July through October seeking
tuna of legendary size, meaning numbers of
fish over 100#, with shots at 200#, and
maybe even the fish of a lifetime--ahi
exceeding 300#. While we see few fish of
this girth in any year, they do exist. A
couple of years ago we had big ones all over
the place! This summer has been The Summer
of the Football, with acres of 10-20
pounders and a few up to 40-50 pounds.
Occasionally, an angler has hooked into a
100-150# class fish and that’s really been
news. The upside to all the football tuna?
Great sushi and sashimi at the pool in the
afternoon and plenty of meat to bring home
in your cooler. Those little fish eat better
anyway, right? Tuna have been found in
schools in varying locations, including two
miles out from Palmas de Cortez last week,
but also 3 miles from La Ribera, off Punta
Arena, to the south, and straight east 22-40
miles (bigger fish). Trolled cedar plugs are
working on the big offshore schools;
inshore, anglers are chumming sardines and
drifting with live bait for most hookups.
Dorado
have been on fire for a month now. Last
week, boats targeting dorado nearshore were
catching multiple fish, with defined
flurries in the morning and again in the
afternoon. Chumming with sardines near La
Ribera and drifting down current with live
sardines and dead mackerel was doing the
trick. Some boats working the schools hard
were limiting out, while most were hooking
2-4 fish in just a short amount of time
before heading offshore for billfish. Most
of the dorado are small—10 to 25#--but very
numerous. A lot of boats have been picking
up on the aggressive early morning tuna
bite, swinging past a dorado hotspot for a
few hookups there, maybe stopping near Cabo
Pulmo to deep jig the reefs for pargo,
snapper, triggerfish, and grouper, and then
going marlin fishing. Even some amberjack
are being hooked.
Inshore, as dawn approaches, sardines,
mullet, and other baitfish species have been
boiling the surface in fear as small
roosterfish and some nice-sized jack
crevalle and pompano begin the daylight
feed. There is an incredible amount of bait
both inshore and offshore right now and the
predators are feeding aggressively. Most of
the roosters are just 5-10#, and the pompano
5# or less, but some of the jacks are 30-35#
and put up a bruiser fight on a surf rod.
The same scenario occurs with the bite in
the afternoon, and again at dusk. Rapalas,
surface poppers, iron, and meat have been
doing the trick there.
Blue
marlin have really been a story this year.
Pretty consistently starting in August—but
really picking up speed here in
September—are the numbers of shots we are
getting on blues per week. We’re averaging
around 100 shots a week for our fleet, about
double the usual number. While many of these
shots aren’t hooking up, it’s always
magnificent to see big blues rise up in the
spread. We’ve seen some real bruisers this
year, fish of maybe 600-700# in the spread
as seen by trained eyes. We’ve also hooked
into some monsters, and landed our fair
share. An estimated 800# blue marlin broke
the line after a 40-minute battle last week.
Numerous blues 200-350# have been caught and
released, as well as a few in the 400-500#
range. A couple 400-500# blues also have
expired during the fight and come to the
scales. Numbers of boats are enjoying
multiple blue marlin hookups in a single
day, including some doubles with both fish
released after the fight. Trolled lures are
raising fish and producing most of the
strikes, and live mackerel and live
caballitos are providing the bait-n-switch
hookups. A 550# black marlin was brought to
the scales mid-month. Please try to release
these adult spawners!
Striped marlin fishing has been excellent.
Last week several boats were getting 4-9
billfish per day, mixing together sailfish
with striped marlin. These stripers are our
younger “juveniles” that probably were
spawned in our area 3-4 years ago, with most
of the fish running 100-140# as compared to
120-200# stripers we usually see from
February through June, which is spawning
season. The upside is even these smaller
stripers in our waters now are hard fighters
despite the warm water, and are great fun on
25-30# test live bait rods. Again, trolled
lures are hooking some fish, but most are
biting a live mackerel dropped back in the
spread to charging fish, or pitched to
stripers seen tailing on the surface. A few
bigger dorado are being caught on trolled
lures as well, plus some nice wahoo are
showing up.
Fishing Report! 9-4-07
After a couple of weeks of
“insane” fishing, we had a week “lull” in
the action. And to call it a lull is a
mischaracterization! Fishing’s just great
here on the East Cape!
We were really spoiled for most of August;
although it’s consistently a great fishing
month, things were really over the top there
for a few weeks. Hundreds of marlin hookups
per week, huge schools of yellowfin, ample
dorado numbers (and big ones too), plenty of
roosterfish, jacks, and snapper, you name
it.
The
awesome numbers of marlin, especially
stripers, that were schooling on bait a
couple of weeks ago have dispersed. There
are still many, many striped marlin in our
waters, but contacting them has returned to
the traditional methods of trolling them up
with lures, or spotting fish on the surface
and pitching live bats to them. For awhile
there, fish were congregating in such
numbers on bait that you could get double
and triple hookups. Nice fish, too: 125-200
pounders. Catch and release these beauties
for the future of the Sea of Cortez! While
some boats were hooking as many as ten
striped marlin in a day, now the numbers are
more realistic of 1, 2, 3, or 4 per day
caught and released. Four marlin flags in
blue and four red release flags waving on
the outriggers after a day’s fishing is a
wonderful thing!
Blue marlin have really been a hot story
this year. The East Cape is enjoying one of
the better blue marlin seasons in recent
years. In the past week, numbers of fish
300-500 pounds have been caught and
released, with most of the fish on the lower
end of that measurement. Smaller blues
150-300 also are being caught, and most
released. For some perplexing reason, some
anglers still find it necessary to kill
these magnificent apex predators to hang
from a chain for “photos”! We certainly
strongly encourage catch and release for ALL
billfish at our hotels, but will permit
guests to make a choice. Remember, virtually
all blues (and black marlin) over 200 pounds
are adult females, 6-7 years old at least,
and prime spawners for the future of the
world’s oceans. Last week, a 485# blue
expired during the fight and was weighed
(big fish!) and another 345# also died from
exhaustion during battle. Several fights
with big blues last week went 5-plus hours
before the fish were released.
Yellowfin
tuna schools are in several locations, with
many boats that find the porpoises and tuna
hooking up on limits of fish to bring to
shore for processing. The story this year is
the same—not many big yellowfin (usually one
of our favorites!). Most of the ahi are
schoolie-size, 10-30 pound fish. Fish over
100# are sometimes seen leaping from the
water during feeding, but these fish are not
consistently hooking up. A few 80# class
fish have been caught. We’re still hoping to
see schools of yellowfin this summer
featuring numerous 100-200# bruisers our
region is famous for! And maybe a few over
300# too!
Dorado are numerous, to the south near Los
Frailes, to the north off Punta Pescadero,
and in the vicinity of the “Ocho-Ocho”.
We’re seeing tremendous size for mahi mahi
right now with plenty of fish 20-40# and
some awesome bulls of 50# plus. A lot of
sailfish also are being reported to the
north. Striped marlin are in all locations,
and most of the blue marlin action is being
reported to the south near Gordo Banks and
straight east of our hotels from 12-25 miles
offshore. Ample bait, from mackerel to
caballitos to sardines, remain available.
Inshore,
some boats stopping near Punta Colorado,
Punta Perico, Las Barracas, and Los Frailes
are reporting consistent catches of
roosterfish, especially in the mornings.
Many of the fish are in the 15-20# range.
Jack crevalle, pargo, and some triggerfish
also are being caught. Huge schools of
baitfish can be seen darkening the waters
close to shore, and the water occasionally
boils as hungry predators like roosterfish
and jacks attack these schools.
Water temperatures range from 79-90 in our
fishing grounds, with a lot of mid-80 degree
water offshore. We received a much-needed
4-hour downpour from the remnants of
Hurricane Dean passing through last Friday,
but other than that it’s been sunny and blue
and HOT on the East Cape all summer long!
See you here!
Fishing Report! 8-20-07
It's
an understatement to say that fishing is
going berserk right now in the Sea of Cortez
off the East Cape. Our charters are
reporting tremendous fishing overall and
some big catches of some of our most popular
species.
Leading the way are the striped marlin,
which are being seen in tremendous numbers
right now. Multiple hookups are being
reported for many boats, and on a consistent
daily basis as well. An abundance of bait,
including mackerel, ballyhoo, caballitos,
and sardines are causing quite a schooling
effect as the billfish feed voraciously in
our waters. Much of the action is close to
shore from points to the North, straight
east, and to the south of our resorts. Most
action is being reported only 1-6 miles
offshore.
Sailfish number also have increased
dramatically in the past couple of weeks,
with the sails mixed right in with the
stripers close to shore feeding on ample
schools of bait. Some multiple hookups are
being reported.
Blue
marlin numbers continue to impress.
Typically, in a strong blue marlin season we
might expect 50 or so fish in the spread or
on the hooks in a given week, and those
numbers are pretty accurate as to what's
happening right now. Live bait is productive
for hookups, but most fish are being trolled
up on lures. A few boats are bridle-rigging
live football tuna for blues as well. In the
past several weeks, a number of 400-pound
class fish have been caught. A couple of
black marlin--our least common marlin
species--have made appearances as well.
Swordfish are absent.
Overall
yellowfin tuna catch rates spiked in the
past week. Fish are being found within a
couple miles of Cabo Pulmo, and offshore
16-30 miles. Many of the tuna are
football-sized, but some nice 20-30 pounders
are mixed in along with the occasional
bigger ahi. We still are not seeing the
giant yellowfin typical in our waters in
mid-late summer. This has been an off year
so far for yellowfin exceeding 200 pounds.
Dorado numbers remain strong as well, with
plenty of big bulls 30-40 and a few popping
the 50-pound class. Most of the dorado are
within a few miles of shore gorging on the
same bait schools that are drawing so many
billfish to our fishing grounds.
Inshore, roosterfish, amberjack, snapper,
and pargo (dogtooth snapper) are available,
mostly on live bait presentations. Our water
temps are in the 81-89 degree range, keeping
those fish metabolisms running high.
Fishing's really incredible on the East Cape
right now! The weather's scorching hot, but
the fishing's the same way! See you on the
Sea of Cortez.
Fishing Report! 8-1-07
Well, it's been one heckuva
month down here in the Baja, with the overall fishing
numbers skyrocketing in tandem with soaring sea surface
temperatures, calm seas, and plenty of charter fishing
action. The hotels are very busy and everyone is getting out
and catching fish.
Leading the way are awesome yellowfin tuna
numbers, with most boats catching all the tuna they can.
Although the overall size is below normal, with lots of
10-25 pounders, the action is steady. Several larger tuna up
to 150 pounds also have been landed in recent weeks. Trolled
cedar lugs, hootchies, feathers, and live bait have all been
working for tuna hookups. Numerous schools are being
targeted, from 20-50 miles offshore.
Dorado numbers also are up, with many fish
in the 15-35 pound classes. A few bigger bulls also are
showing up in catches. Fish are striking trolled marlin
lures and fish spotted on the surface are susceptible to
live mackerel.
Striped marlin continue to lead the way for
overall billfish catches, with several hundred fish per week
being reported hooked up. Sailfish numbers also are
increasing, and good numbers of blue marlin are starting to
appear also, with some of the biggest fish ranging to the
500-pound class. Great news as the East Cape Bisbee
Tournament is underway! A few large wahoo, including a few
approaching 90 pounds, have been caught offshore as well.
Inshore, excellent numbers of roosterfish
are being found to the North off Punta Pescadero and to the
South off La Rivera and Punta Colorada. Pargo and red
snapper numbers also are strong for inshore anglers. A few
amberjack are being caught. Fishing's awesome on the East
Cape!
Fishing Report! 7-1-07
It’s been a crazy couple of
weeks for the fishing here on the East Cape.
Just as the overall fishing started to
really get nuts as it usually does in June,
we’ve had a fall-off in total numbers of
fish just when things were about to break
loose. While fishing is still consistent,
with good numbers of fish available, it’s
simply not up to our summer standards here
in the Baja when we expect to see acres of
yellowfin tuna boiling the surface coupled
with nonstop action for big dorado, marlin,
and roosterfish, as well as availability for
numerous other species.
A combination of environmental factors are
contributing to the situation. For one, a
big swath of cooler Pacific water (surface
temps in high 60’s) has been forced around
the Cape and north into our waters by
uncharacteristically strong southern winds.
What makes our region such a great fishery
for ten months of the year is our warm
water; only in mid-winter are the Pacific
currents warmer than in the Sea of Cortez.
Secondly, the full moon coincided with this
temperature inversion, leading some fish to
feed more aggressively at night. Third,
ample schools of baitfish in our area are
keeping the predators well-fed. Our rich
ecosystem is conspiring against us this
week!
Leading
the way are still the striped marlin. The
fish are everywhere on the surface, and the
fleet is averaging a couple hundred hookups
per week. However, based on the thousands of
fish being seen in our area, the fact is
that the fish aren’t biting as consistently
as usual. Many fish are being live-baited on
the surface but not eating. A lot of fish
are attacking trolled lures in the spread,
whacking the baits with their bills, and
then not hooking up. While it’s true that
the Sea of Cortez remains one of the world’s
best locations for striped marlin
fishing—again, our hookup rates just aren’t
what we’re used to. When dark nights return
this week, expect fishing to ramp up in
tandem. There are still awesome numbers of
billfish in our area!
Dorado
fishing is steady, but again, not up to the
numbers we expect. The average size is
excellent, however, with numerous big dorado
in the 25-40 pound class. Fish are taking
pitched live baits and also smashing trolled
lures and feathers. Because the overall
numbers are not up to par, fly fishing is
tough right now for the mahi mahi.
Yellowfin tuna numbers, after climbing
week-by-week in May and June, have fallen
off this week. Fish are averaging 15-35
pounds with a fish bigger brutes mixed in,
and a number of schools have been located
between 17-25 miles offshore, to points
north, south, and east. The solid fishing of
a few weeks ago has tapered, however.
Optimism abounds nonetheless, as we are
entering our hottest months and the best
fishing period for BIG yellowfin—from now
through November.
The best news is the roosterfish. It’s true
that so far this summer we are seeing some
of the best inshore fishing in recent
memory, with large numbers of big
roosterfish in our area. Some anglers are
averaging 30 pounders in a morning of
fishing. Live mackerel and fly presentations
are hooking most of the fish. The surf right
in front of Punta Colorado, Punta Arena, and
south along the coast near Cabo Pulmo are
the best fishing spots. Our namesake
“Roosterfish Capital of the World” is living
up to its billing!
When we dodge the cool finger of Pacific
water, our fleet is finding surface temps
from 79-88 degrees. Along with our beautiful
95-degree daytime temps and soft breezes,
it’s a great time to find yourself sipping a
cool drink and doing some fishing on Baja’s
East Cape!
Fishing Report! 6-13-07
The yellowfin tuna bite is
going absolutely crazy in the waters of the Sea of Cortez
right now. Although many of the fish are running small at
10-20 pounds, some nice fish in excess of 40 pounds are
starting to show up in overall catch rates as well. Multiple
hookups from vast schools of tuna are being reported, with
most fish being encountered 20-25 miles offshore. Trolled
cedar plugs, hootchies, feathers, and live sardines are
catching the tuna.
The dorado bit also has ramped up in recent
days, with many 20-25 fish being reported. A few 40-pound
class bulls also are showing up. Trolled marlin lures and
pitched live bait (mackerel and sardines) are successful
tactics.
For billfish, no blues, blacks, or sailfish are
being reported. However, impressive numbers of striped
marlin continue to show up, with some boats encountering
multiple hookups in a fishing day. The fish are close to
shore, in some cases just 1-2 miles out from Cabo Pulmo and
Los Frailes, but are being spotted on the surface and caught
far and wide across the Sea of Cortez.
Roosterfishing has improved dramatically.
Nearly 100 fish were caught and released last week alone.
Action is hot near la Rivera and in front of Punta Colorado,
and south to Los Frailes. Live mackerel are the ticket for
the roosters.
Water temps ranging from the mid-70s up to 84
degrees are being reported in our fishing grounds. The
weather's hot, the fishing's even hotter--here on the East
Cape!
Fishing Report! 5-24-07
The
best news of the past two weeks is the
invasion of the yellowfin tuna. A number of
schools are in the area, with the biggest
numbers of fish being found 30 miles
straight east of the resorts. Several
smaller schools are located to points north
and south, and some fish also are close to
shore (north near Punta Pescadero and south
near Punta Arena). Although many of the fish
are on the smaller size---10-40 pounds--the
action is fast and furious and these little
guys make for excellent eating. A summer of
monster tuna (100+ pounds) is right around
the corner! Trolled cedar plugs and feathers
and live bait are taking most fish.
Striped marlin action remains excellent.
Fish are in all directions, and are
susceptible to trolled lures and live
mackerel and ballyhoo. Dorado action is off
a little bit, but still relatively good,
with 15-30 pound fish most common (being
caught on trolled lures, hootchies, and live
bait). Quite a few wahoo up to 40 pounds
have been showing up, caught on Rapalas and
Marauders.
Inshore, very few roosterfish are being
seen, although fishing is great for pargo
and other snapper species. Water
temperatures are in the high 70s-low 80s in
most of our fishing grounds. Hot
weather--hot fishing--awesome summertime
action on Baja's East Cape!
Fishing Report! 5-3-07
The biggest news to hit in the past week is
the arrival of the yellowfin tuna. Several
schools have been located, with the largest
school located 30 miles straight east of Los Barriles, and other schools are closed in
near Punta Arena and La Rivera. Although the
fish are primarily footballs of 10 to 20
pounds, there is plenty of action on trolled
hootchies, feathers, and cedar plugs, as
well as live bait action on mackerel and
sardines. Water temps are 72-76 degrees and
the fish are in!
Dorado
action likewise picked up this week, with
average size and overall numbers both
increasing. 15-30 pound mahi mahi are
available; fish are being caught on trolled
marlin lures as well as on pitched live
baits, especially mackerel. Best action was
reported to the north off Punta Pescadero
and near Isla Cerralvo.
Striped marlin action is still off the
charts, with most boats reporting multiple
hookups daily, with sightings of as many as
40-50 stripers per day. Fish are seen
tailing on the surface and are being baited
with live mackerel, and numbers of fish are
also attacking trolled lures. Average size
remains around 140-160 pounds. The spawn is
also in full force—a single adult female,
170-200 pound class, will be seen lazily
swimming on the surface with three or four
smaller male fish (120-150 pounds) trailing
her. Cool to see, but these fish will
completely ignore live bait offerings. Most
of the marlin are being caught within 4-8
miles offshore, to the north near Pescadero
and Punta Perico, off Cerralvo, and
south/east off Punta Arena, La Rivera, and
Las Barracas.
Numerous gray and humpback whales remain in
the area, as well as manta rays and schools
of porpoises numbering in the hundreds.
Ample mackerel and sardines are available
for bait. Inshore, roosterfishing is slow,
but some nice pargo 10-30 pounds and also
some sierra mackerel are being caught, near
Punta Colorado and also just north of Palmas
de Cortez and Playa del Sol off the Tuna
Slides. Cabrilla are numerous. May is going
to be an awesome fishing month!
Fishing Report! 4-12-07
The striped marlin fishing is off the charts
on the East Cape right now. Seas are flat
calm, with daytime highs in the 90's, and
the stripers have congregated in earnest
within just a few miles of Punta Arena,
about 12-17 miles from Hotels Palmas and
Playa and just 3 miles from Punta Colorado.
Boats are reporting multiple hookups, with
the best boats catching and releasing up to
ten striped marlin in a single day. Many
marlin are spotted tailing on the surface or
feeding on needlefish, trumpetfish, and
mackerel. Very few boats are getting hookups
on trolled lures; the vast majority of
marlin are being caught on live mackerel and
dead sardines pitched to fish seen on the
surface. On some days, individual boats are
presenting baits to as many as 40-50 marlin.
Occasionally, boats are getting double and
triple hookups on trolled lures or on
multiple pitched baits--the marlin are
feeding aggressively.
The
stripers are averaging 130-150 pounds, and
the low mortality rate impressive. It's
extremely important to release these apex
predators for the future, especially since
the striped marlin are in the East Cape
region for the annual spring spawn right
now. Virtually all stripers over 140# are
females, and the fish we are catching now
are adults of 6-9 years of age. One day last
week, our hotels caught and released over
100 marlin with only three fish brought in
because of hooking mortality! Great ratio!
A 350#-class swordfish was seen last week
leaping from the water right next to one of
our cruisers, and another boat hooked up on
an estimated 250# sword that fought for over
two hours before the leader parted.
Dorado fishing is up and down. Some nice
fish are being caught--up to 42 pounds--with
numerous dorado 15-25 pounds in the area. A
dead seal gave up three big bull dorado to
one boat last week. On some days, no dorado
are being seen or caught, and on other days,
boats are getting multiple hookups,
primarily on trolled feathers, skirted dead
baits, and live bait. With most of the boats
fishing close in for hot marlin action, this
is also where the dorado are being caught.
A school of tuna has been located 45 miles
out, but with reported 10-20 pound fish, no
boats are making the long run--again,
because the marlin fishing is so incredible
close to shore.
A few sailfish are being caught and released
along with the marlin and dorado.
Inshore, excellent fishing for cabrilla,
pargo, and a few roosterfish is available
near Punta Colorado, La Rivera, and to the
North near Punta Pescadero. Sardines and
mackerel are doing the trick there. A couple
of 30# dogtooths were caught. Likewise, jack
crevalle are schooling and taking marlin
baits on the surface--in some cases
outrunning the marlin for the baits--and
jacks can be seen busting schools of mullet
right in front of our hotels each morning
and evening as well. 20#-plus jacks are
being caught nightly from the docks.
Occasional humpback whales are breaching in
our waters, and a few gray whales also are
spouting on the surface in our fishing
grounds. With water temps in the mid-70's,
calm seas, and bright sunny days, summer's
coming and hot fishing is already here right
along with the hot weather! See you on
Baja's magnificent East Cape!
Fishing Report! 4-12-07
The weather is fantastic, 90 degree days and
cool breezes at night, and calm conditions
prevail here on the East Cape. Tremendous
numbers of striped marlin have invaded the
area, with most boats reporting multiple
hookups each day. Because the fish are
ranging far and wide across the Sea of
Cortez (rather than congregating on
baitballs in tight areas), most boats are
hooking up 3-6 marlin per day instead of
6-10 that is possible this time of year.
Trolled lures and live mackerel are catching
the fish, with many marlin being spotted on
the surface before presenting the bait. The
fleet is running east 18-30 miles and
finding fish in all areas.
Dorado
fishing was slower in the past week than in
the previous month overall, but several
boats are catching 6-10 dorado in a day. The
best news is the average size has increased
dramatically, with numerous bulls in the
35-45 pound range showing up in catches.
Just two weeks ago, a "good" dorado was
15-25 pounds, and while many fish of this
size are still in the area, some bigger fish
are showing up.
Tuna remain hard to find. A few boats are
contacting fish at 32 miles out among
porpoises, but the fish are 10-20 pounds.
With so many marlin and dorado closer in,
most boats aren't running for the poqueno
(little) tunas.
A few blue marlin have been showing up
already this year. One boat had a
350-pounder on the hooks for awhile last
week before the fish shook off, and another
blue marlin of similar size was caught three
days ago, but also spit the hooks during the
fight.
Inshore, some excellent cabrilla and pargo
fishing is being found straight north near
the Tuna Slides, Punta Pescadero, and Punta
perico, and many sardines (pilchards) are
available for live bait. Many cabrilla are
5-10 pounds and some nice dogtooths near
15-20 pounds are being caught also. To the
south near Punta Colorado, some small
roosterfish 10-20 pounds are in, and the
occasional 30-pounder is being found also.
Sierra mackerel have slowed down with the
warming seas, but some fish remain near
Punta Arena/Las Barracas near the
lighthouse.
Sea surface temps are in the 72-75 degree
range in most of our fishing grounds,
although a big finger of cooler Pacific
water in the 67 degree range pushed up as
far north as Los Frailes (about 90 minutes
south of our resorts), which seemed to move
the fish east and north and even closer to
us! On the Pacific side of the Baja
Peninsula, conditions are extremely rough
and windy, but on the tranquil Sea of Cortez
side, our waters are flat calm and warm and
gorgeous! Slight east/south breezes are
making for beautiful days on the water!
We'll see you on the East Cape soon!
Fishing Report! 4-3-07
Right now the fishing along the East Cape of
the Baja Peninsula is starting to throttle
up to wide open! In the past week, two large
tuna schools were located, one about 25
miles straight east and another offshore
from Cabo Pulmo and points to the south,
along with many porpoises. The fishing was
hot and heavy for the yellowfin, with most
fish being trolled up on cedar plugs and
some of the larger
tuna grabbing live mackerel. Although most
of the fish are running 10-20 pounds, a few
large brethren are mixed in. The huge
schools—and hoards of bigger fish—will be in
any day now as the Sea of Cortez waters
continue to warm (currently 72-75 degrees in
most of our fishing zones). Striped marlin
also continue to invade the Cape in strong
numbers, with many of the fish running
140-180 pound and some of those 200-pound
females mixed in. Remember to release all
billfish—they are in our region to spawn and
these apex predators are too precious a
resource to kill as a food source or for the
vanity of a photo! The tuna and dorado will
fill all the coolers you require. And
speaking of dorado, it’s interesting to note
that the overall catch rate for them
diminished in the past week as the tuna
fishing ramped up. Dorado were numerous
throughout February and March to this point.
It’s possible catches were down as anglers
focused on the tuna more aggressively.
Usually in the spring of the year, points to
the south (where tuna are currently located)
also hold good numbers of dorado and also
some wahoo. Sierra mackerel continue to lead
the inshore bite, in two primary areas near
La Rivera and also to the north off Punta
Pescadero. Roosterfish are being caught near
Punta Colorada, although the fish are
running small. The bruisers will be here
soon! Overall, the fishing already is
fantastic here on the East Cape!
Fishing Report! 3-23-07
Striped marlin continue to lead the way this
spring here on the East Cape. Water
temperatures ranging from 72-75 degrees in
most of our fishing grounds has the stripers
arriving in bigger numbers every day.
Fisheries biologists have shown in studies
that the preferred surface water temps for
striped marlin are in the mid-70 degree
range. Fish are being taken on trolled
lures, with fish attacking the spreads or
being "bait-n-switched" when they appear.
There is an abundance of a favorite marlin
and dorado food source in the Sea of Cortez:
mackerel. Fish spotted tailing on the
surface also being caught on live mackerel.
The
dorado are active and numerous as well. Fish
are still running small, at about 10-25
pounds, and are being caught on trolled
lures as well as live mackerel. Fresh
mahi-mahi for dinner, or served as ceviche
on crackers at the bar! Yummy!
Roosterfish are being caught near Punta
Colorada in shallow water, but the fish are
very small, mostly around the ten-pound
mark, so the bite isn't a big draw, and
these smaller fish are very difficult to
catch on mackerel. When the bigger roosters
appear, mackerel will do the trick there.
Lures and sardines are an option. Inshore,
many sierra mackerel are being caught on
bait as well as slow-trolled Rapala X-Raps
and other diving crankbaits. There are quite
a few snapper around also.
The big question remains: where are the
tuna? Usually some schoolie yellowfin of
10-30 pounds are in our region virtually all
year, but we're now going on two months
without finding tuna. With so many stripers
and dorado around within 8-15 miles
offshore, most of the fleet is not running
25+ miles out. Perhaps there are some tuna
schools out there, but no-one is looking
for/finding them. No worries, the yellowfin
will be in any day now!
Daytime temps are in the low-90's,
absolutely glorious weather that's heating
up the Sea of Cortez quickly with our deep
blue, cloud-free skies. Hot weather, hot
water, and hot fishing go hand in hand! See
you in the Baja!
Fishing Report! 3-1-07
We’re
delighted to report that fishing in the Sea
of Cortez near the East Cape is about three
weeks ahead of the normal spring schedule.
Striped marlin, our most common billfish
species, have already begun to arrive in the
region in great numbers. Migrating to the
Baja Peninsula annually in spring to spawn,
the stripers are aggressive feeders and
thrilling to catch and release! Most
billfish anglers will say the striped
marlin—pound for pound—is the toughest of
the marlin species. Perhaps only the
broadbill swordfish—a rare species in the
Sea of Cortez—puts up a tougher battle. The
stripers are feeding on large schools of
mackerel—a preferred baitfish species—and
fattening up for the spring ritual. Boats
are finding the fish 12-15 miles offshore in
72-75 degree water and raising fish on
trolled lures, as well as pitching live
mackerel to fish seen “tailing” on the
surface. Some multiple hookups are being
reported. As always, we encourage 100%
release of all billfish species. There are
plenty of other fish that make for great
eating and a cooler full of fillets to bring
home.
Inshore anglers also are experiencing
excellent fishing. A few roosterfish were
being caught near Punta Colorada and Punta
Arena a few weeks ago, but now the species
(one of our May—October species) has
temporarily disappeared. The sierra
mackerel, however, are more than filling the
void. The sierra fishing is simply off the
charts right now for action, numbers, and
size. Many fish are being taken on trolled
Rapalas. Sierras (Spanish mackerel) make
delicious table fare, and our chefs will
happily prepare your catch as an hors
d’oeuvre or as a meal, lightly seared or
pan-fried and seasoned with garlic salt and
pepper. The tender white meat melts in your
mouth. Sierra fishing is going strong just
offshore from Rancho Leonero, La Rivera,
Punta Colorada, Punta Arena, Las Barracas,
and to the north near the Tuna Slides, Punta
Pescadero, and Punta Perico—all areas that
are easily accessed by our charter fleet.
The best fishing is during the morning
hours. Also inshore, pargo and yellow
snapper are being caught on both jigging
spoons and live bait.
Offshore, in addition to good action for
striped marlin, numerous dorado are being
caught in the 12-25 pound range. Although
well shy of our summer size average of 30-40
pounds (and last July we were seeing fish
touching the whopping 60-pound mark!), the
“chicken” dorado we are catching right now
are filling coolers and adding tasty treats
to the dinner table, both at the resorts and
after being transported back home.
All in all, February fishing has been
excellent and from here on out it only gets
better and better!
Fishing Report! 2-20-07
The 2007 Fishing Season is already going
gangbusters! The month of February thus far
has been delightful, with warm temperatures
and calm Baja breezes. The northerly trade
winds have diminished for the most part, and
that means tropical sea surface temperatures
have made their way up the East Cape and
deep into the Sea of Cortez. The result?
Excellent fishing! Water temperatures are
between 72-76 degrees in most of our fishing
grounds, which is about two weeks ahead of
schedule, so fishing is more typical of
mid-March right now than mid-February.
Striped
marlin are leading the way. Numerous fish
are being spotted in the area, including
several roving packs of fish corralling bait
balls and feeding aggressively. Mackerel are
plentiful. Most boats are trolling lures to
raise fish, or spotting marlin on the
surface and pitching live mackerel to the
fish. Some multiple hookups are being
reported. Most of the fish are 12-15 miles
offshore. The stripers are ranging in size
from 120-190 pounds.
Dorado are delightfully numerous as well,
although the average size is typical for
this time of year at about 10-20 pounds.
These "chickens" still make great eating,
served on crackers as fresh ceviche at the
bar after fishing, or as an appetizer or
meal at dinnertime. Filleted and frozen or
smoked and packed in a cooler for the trip
home means you can bring the "Taste of Baja"
back home with you after your East Cape
fishing vacation!
Some boat captains are scanning the horizon
for signs that yellowfin tuna are moving
into the area. Schools of porpoises have
been spotted, but the tuna are not running
with them as of yet. With warming waters,
the schoolie tuna will be arriving any day
now. Humpback and gray whales are moving
through the region as well.
Inshore fishing similarly has ramped up
early. As usual, sierra mackerel are being
found close to La Rivera and Cabo Pulmo, and
a number of roosterfish have been caught in
the past couple of weeks by anglers
slow-trolling live mackerel close to shore
near Punta Colorada as well as south in the
area known as Los Frailes. Small dogtooth
snapper are rounding out the inshore
opportunities.
All in all, the fishing is excellent and the
weather is beautiful. All the anglers who
have been fishing the East Cape in
February--and those traveling to Baja in
March and April--sure are lucky!
Fishing Report! 1-30-07
We’re
experiencing a typical January with cooler
temperatures (daytime highs in low 70’s) and
afternoon trade winds putting a chop on the
Sea of Cortez. Our surface seas temperatures
dipped below 70, but now are starting to
rebound with a thick band of warmer water
curling up along the East Cape coastline
from the south. The fleet now can run
southeast to encounter temps in the low
70’s, and here is where the boats are
contacting both striped marlin and some
dorado. Although a few fish can be found to
the north, more consistent success is being
met with to the south, in the region
approaching the Gordo Banks. The stripers
are nice-sized fish 120-180#, but the dorado
are small. Trolling lures and live bait are
both taking fish. There aren’t any tuna
schools around, but inshore anglers are
finding some sierra mackerel and a few
snapper species, primarily pargo.
Fishing Report! 1-4-07
Even though our “quietest” timeframe for
fishing is December 15 through January 15,
anglers who are getting out fishing are
encountering striped marlin, dorado, and
schoolie yellowfin tuna in the mix. The
fleet is running southeast for the warmest
water in reach of the East Cape. Trolled
lures are raising marlin and providing most
of the hookups, while some fish are being
taken on live bait, primarily mackerel. The
fish are in the 120-140# range. Dorado are
numerous, but most of the fish are running
small, which is typical for this time of
year. There are a few yellowfin tuna around
as well, again of the smaller “off-season”
variety. Wahoo are being found to the south,
and a few sierra mackerel are available
inshore near La Ribera. Pargo and cabrilla
snappers round out the inshore
opportunities. Our water temps have cooled
to 70 degrees now. Look for expanded fishing
reports starting in February, coinciding
with the start of our new season, the
invasion of striped marlin by the thousands
for the annual spring spawn, and the return
of huge numbers of dorado, tuna, and the
many other gamefish species that make the
East Cape of the Baja Peninsula one of the
world’s greatest sportfisheries! |