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Cabo san lucas
January 7th to January 13th, 2005
WEATHER CONDITIONS: Several overcast days,
usually days started out sunny then clouded over by afternoon.
Seas great on non-windy days once the wind picked up we had
popcorn seas.
BEST LURES: Live bait.
BILLFISH
We had a pretty fantastic week here in Cabo, with
lots of striped marlin; in fact Pisces anglers totaled one
hundred and twenty-one for the past seven days. Fishing was
great nearly every day with the few exceptions on windy, colder
days when fish didn’t bite as well, or when anglers
couldn't take the seas, preferring to turn back. Seventy-five
percent of charters were fortunate to hook up to striped marlin
in the 120 to 180 lb class. Jeff Leitzinger fishing aboard
Felina on a recent trip got a first hand look at how the food
chain works. Jeff hooked a 160 lb striped marlin that unfortunately
died; back at the dock they discovered a complete baby sailfish
(around 5lbs), in it's stomach, which in turn had a small
mackerel inside it. January 10th turned out to be one of the
better days on this date Bernie Litman from Essex, England
was thrilled to release seven striped marlin, (as well as
losing a deckhand momentarily overboard) aboard Kathy Too,
four miles off of Cerro Blanco. Ruthless did well too with
five releases this day just three miles off of Moro Prieto,
for the Andersons from Wi. Ruthless scored another five
the following day this time for David Geis Sr. and Jr. from
Barrington ILL and Tucker Ca. respectively. The Zebco team
from Oklahoma were here testing their new saltwater line of
reels and ending up getting a surefire work out for their
products on January 12th aboard Ni Modo when they released
six stripers in one day. Early in the week fishing started
out at Golden Gate on the Pacific and the moved to the area
off of the Old Lighthouse up to Chileno on the Cortez side.
Of the marlin fought by Pisces anglers one hundred and eighteen
were released.
OTHER SPECIES:
Not a great deal happening on smaller game, with
just twenty percent of charters catching dorado and even fewer,
(eleven percent) landing tuna. The dorado catches were
incidental, taking lures intended for marlin. Catches were
usually of just a single fish and weights were from 15 to
25 lbs. Yellow fin tuna catches were on a par with those of
dorado, though we did have a few boats that caught three and
one with five, but again, these were mostly incidental catches.
We did hear of some long range boats, cleaning out huge tuna,
fish over 300 lbs. It was quite surprising to see several
sharks caught this week, most on soaked baits on the Pacific
side. We had two average size Makos released and Josephine
landed a 300 lb thresher shark, which put up a fight tougher
than a big blue according to the angler Russell Gallaway from
Sacramento Ca. The fish was over 10 feet long and took a live
bait intended for a tuna (see photo below). Inshore
we had some nice red snapper catches, the odd sierra and skipjack.
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