Saturday, 18 hr Giant Sea Bass Trip
Wow, what a trip.....long ride.....heavy sinkers...electric reels.....huge coolers.....cold/breezy.......
Anyway, left the dock after midnight (Sat morning) with 30 anglers on-board the 110 foot Thelma Dale. Took us seven hours to get to the first fishing spot. With all that time, what did we do? Yep, sleep. I slept in the lower deck. With the noisy motor humming away and the boat rockin' and rollin' in the waves, it was a bit hard to sleep.
We finally got there, maybe 80 miles out. Dropped line with clams and squid on double hook rigs, and BAM, we got immediate hits. Lots of sea bass action. Depth was about 250 ft. It was cold and breezy, but the action helped me ignore the pain. Everyone was catching fish.
After a few hours, we went to another area and picked up a few more bass. After that, we went to a third spot for tile fish. The current was stronger there. Depth was about 600 ft, so I used a 32 oz sinker! After a short while of fishing there, we headed back in for the five hour ride. Reached the dock about 8:30 pm.
Nearly half the anglers limited out on giant sea bass (20 at 12.5" min). Several guys caught citation sea bass (over 3 lbs), and one bass weighed in over 6 lbs. I didn't limit out on sea bass, but caught a bunch of sea bass (largest 18") and tilefish. One guy caught a flounder. Several guys caught big blues (over 30").
They said they usually catch more fish and this trip was "just OK." It was my first 18 hour trip. A long trip, but I was happy with my cooler of fish. I would do it again.
Pics:
A blue got a tasty bite of bass
My cooler of fish
We use the whole squid for tilefish
Anglers holding up their big bass
Wow, what a trip.....long ride.....heavy sinkers...electric reels.....huge coolers.....cold/breezy.......
Anyway, left the dock after midnight (Sat morning) with 30 anglers on-board the 110 foot Thelma Dale. Took us seven hours to get to the first fishing spot. With all that time, what did we do? Yep, sleep. I slept in the lower deck. With the noisy motor humming away and the boat rockin' and rollin' in the waves, it was a bit hard to sleep.
We finally got there, maybe 80 miles out. Dropped line with clams and squid on double hook rigs, and BAM, we got immediate hits. Lots of sea bass action. Depth was about 250 ft. It was cold and breezy, but the action helped me ignore the pain. Everyone was catching fish.
After a few hours, we went to another area and picked up a few more bass. After that, we went to a third spot for tile fish. The current was stronger there. Depth was about 600 ft, so I used a 32 oz sinker! After a short while of fishing there, we headed back in for the five hour ride. Reached the dock about 8:30 pm.
Nearly half the anglers limited out on giant sea bass (20 at 12.5" min). Several guys caught citation sea bass (over 3 lbs), and one bass weighed in over 6 lbs. I didn't limit out on sea bass, but caught a bunch of sea bass (largest 18") and tilefish. One guy caught a flounder. Several guys caught big blues (over 30").
They said they usually catch more fish and this trip was "just OK." It was my first 18 hour trip. A long trip, but I was happy with my cooler of fish. I would do it again.
Pics:
A blue got a tasty bite of bass
My cooler of fish
We use the whole squid for tilefish
Anglers holding up their big bass
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