Cabo Bite Report

  • Fly Hooker Sportfishing
    Cabo San Lucas Fishing Report
    Capt. George Landrum
    gmlandrum@hotmail.com
    http://www.flyhooker.com


    Feb. 8-14, 2010


    Weather:


    Two weeks in a row now we have had rain for at least one day,
    and a decent plant watering rain at that, not the window spotting stuff we
    normally get. On Wednesday of this week we received over a 1/2 inch
    during the day and almost the same that night. The rest of the week was
    partly cloudy to mostly cloudy. Our nights were as low as 58 degrees
    while the days were averaging 80 degrees. We had two days of strong
    winds that kedpt most of the fleet working close to shore on the Cortez
    side of the Cape, but that was all right as that was also where most of the
    fish were found.


    Water:


    Water temperatures on the Cortez were in the 74-75 degree range while
    on the Pacific side north of a line between the Cape and the San Jaime Bank
    it cooled off to 71-72 degrees. Tuesday and Friday of this week the wind
    was blowing stgrongly enough from the northwest that the Pacific side was
    extremely uncomfortable to fish. The rest of the week water conditions on
    the surface were good on the Pacific, but the fish were scarce. Conditions
    on the Sea of Cortez were much better, but once you got north of Punta
    Gorda the wind started to pick up.


    Bait:


    Caballito were the bait of the week at the ususal $3 each and there were
    some Sardinas available in the San Jose area at the normal $25 per scoop.
    There were few if any Mackerel to be found this week.


    FISHING


    Billfish:


    For most of the week the Marlin and Sailfish would not bite, you could
    find them but they were not hungry. Finaly at the end of the week the bite picked
    up a little and boats began to get them to bite on both bait and lures. Most of
    the fish I heard caught were found on the Cortez side of the Cape and the majority of
    them were Striped Marlin. There were some Sailfish caught as well, a real suprise
    considering the water temperature. The area outside of the 95 spot to the 1150
    produced fish for a number of boats and a few were able to release as many as three
    marlin per trip, not the numbers we have been expecting considering the last several
    years production, but not bad.


    Yellowfin Tuna:


    The catch on Tuna is still spotty, a few fish found here and a few found there, mostly
    it seems to be a matter of luck by boats that are actually in the historicaly producing
    areas such as west of the San Jaime, due south 40 miles and outside the 1,000 fathom
    line anwhere on the Cortez side. The fish that were found were smaller school fish to
    35 pounds, but most of them were footballs at 5-15 pounds. All the fish found were
    associated with porpoise.


    Dorado:


    We had almost no Dorado in the area at the beginning of the week, but just after the
    first heavy winds came throught there was a big school of small fish (and some of them
    were really small, smaller than Sierra) just off of the beach between Gray Rock and the
    Westin on the Cortez side. These fish were within a mile of the beach and unfortunately
    they were hammered hard by the fleet, many of the boats were keeping fish that only weighed
    four or five pounds. The school was blasted quickly and by the end of the week the fish were
    almost gone. There were a few larger fish found offshore on the Cortez side with some
    of the fish going as large as 35 pounds, and most of these were caught on lures by
    boats looking for Marlin.


    Wahoo:


    I did hear of a few Wahoo being caught this week, and they were found close
    to the beach by boats working for the Dorado in the area. None of the fish were
    large, averaging just 15 pounds, and a few more were lost due to monofiliment
    leader, but it was still nice to see a few around.


    Inshore:


    Once again the inshore fishery was the way to go if you wanted action. While the action
    offshore was slow, there were plenty of Sierra on both sides of the Cape to keep rods
    bent and fishermen happy. Along with the Sierra were the occasional showing of Yellowtail,
    Snapper and Grouper. Combine these traditional inshore species with the Dorado action and
    everyone had some luck this week.


    Notes:


    Whale watchers were excited this week as there seemed to be action wherever you
    looked, breaching whales, blowing whales, singles and small pods. Inshore was where the
    fishing action was this week, but we hope the Marlin start to show up on the Pacific side soon!
    This weeks report was written to the music of "Yes" on their 1999 Beyond Music release "The Ladder".
    Until next week, tight lines!

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