Cabo San Lucas, Mexico

Cabo San Lucas

Cabo Bite Report FLY HOOKER SPORTFISHING Captain George Landrum [email protected] Cabo Fish Report Sept. 12-18, 2005 WEATHER: Speaking of the weather this week, one word will pretty well paint the picture for you. Hot. Our daytime highs have been hovering right around 100 degrees and with the humidity it sometimes feels like 110. Thank goodness things were dropping off at night, at least down to the low 80’s! We are still using the air conditioner at night; there has not been enough wind in town to keep us cool with the windows open. We had very little cloud cover this week, it was mostly clear skies. WATER: The water continues to warm up as our summer advances. At the end of the week we had water as warm as 90 degrees in our area. Water between 86 and 89 degrees extended 30 miles to the southwest and on the Sea of Cortez it was hard to find water cooler than 86 degrees, most of what we fished was in the 88-89 degree range. At the start of the week there was a very defined temperature break that ran north-south just along the outside of the San Jaime Bank and up to the Golden Gate, that has since been pushed out of our range, and has dissipated as well. The warm water has pushed it’s way up into the Pacific, as far as 20 miles north of the Golden Gate. BAIT: Most of what we saw this week was Caballito at the normal $2 per bait. Up toward San Jose you could get Sardinas early in the week, but large swells made the capture of these little guys a bit more difficult than usual, so late in the week they were hard to find, if you could they were the normal $20 per scoop. FISHING: BILLFISH: It was quite the week for billfish as almost every boat that wanted to catch either a Striped Marlin, Sailfish or Blue Marlin had action. Not so hot and heavy on Black Marlin, but there were a few found. Most of the action was concentrated, both as far as a general area and time. Good fishing for all species except Black Marlin was found in the area of the 1150, and some boats were getting sweeps, catch multiples of several species. My best day was Friday when we released two Blue Marlin estimated at 250 pounds and one Sailfish. Another boat released two Blues, two Stripers and a Sailfish. Outstanding fishing! There were almost no fish on the Pacific side at the beginning of the week. The concentration of Striped Marlin that had been on the Golden Gate banks seemed to have moved on, perhaps following the water edge as it moved north. At the end of the week there were fish beginning to show to the south and on the San Jaime Banks. Live baits were working well for the Sailfish; lures in almost any color for the Blue Marlin and the striped Marlin were a pretty even mix between the two. YELLOWFIN TUNA: I didn’t hear of may large Tuna this week, in fact almost the only action on Yellowfin I heard of was on football and slightly larger fish up at Punta Gorda, caught by using Sardinas, and a pod of Porpoise holding school fish in the 25-35 pound range up to the north of the 1150, between there and the 1,000 fathom line at Punta Gorda. Like I said Sardinas for the footballs, and the school fish were biting dark colored feathers and live bait dropped to 50 feet. DORADO: As an almost repeat of last weeks action, there were plenty of small fish in the 7-10 pound size just off the beach to 8 miles out if you were fishing the Sea of Cortez side this week. Small feathers and small straight running splashers in bright colors worked well on these fish and it was not difficult to get a half-dozen in the boat. Out on the Pacific side later in the week there were fish a bit larger, some to 50 pounds but most of them in the 20-30 pound class. These were not running in schools like the smaller fish, but in pairs. Dropping back a live bait after getting one close to the boat often resulted in a double. WAHOO: The full moon resulted in a fairly decent bit for Wahoo this week. There may have been a decent concentration somewhere, but for the boats getting these great tasting fish, two of them between 30 and 50 pounds were about the top catch. Of course many more were lost due to mono leaders getting bitten through! The majority of the action took place along the 50-100 fathom marks just off the beach and there was a bit of action at the San Jaime and the Iman Banks. Blue water fish were caught as well, real surprises to anglers looking for Blue Marlin and having a 30-pound Wahoo cut up their lures instead. INSHORE: Just like last week, most of the normal inshore fisheries were on hold as the Panga fishermen attacked the Dorado just off of the beach. There were a few Roosterfish reported, but most of the Pangas were getting Dorado, small Yellowfin and Bonito. NOTES: I have been busy this week; the number of charters has increased, as the fishing has gotten better. Muchos Gracias to Linda Wilson of the IGFA for the great Certified Observers course put on in Newport Beach several weeks ago. Also a big thank you to Beth at the Outdoor Channel for sending copies of the 2005 IGFA/Rolex Offshore Championship Tournament program, all the Captains and deckhands are going to enjoy it! Until next week, Tight Lines! I have to go, got a charter this morning!

Troy

troycreasy

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