Archive for June, 2010

Juniors AM 1/2 Day on the Amigo – June 30th

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Report by Floyd Spangler

I arrived at the landing early.  Robert asked if it was a family trip or one of our other kids’ trips.  I said it was a family trip and he replied, “Oh, then it will be out on time.”  Everyone was there on time and checked in with me.  We boarded the Amigo. With Captain Tom at the helm and Ichoro and Tyler as the crew.  Ichoro whipped up his usual great breakfast sandwiches. With great excitement and energy on the deck we proceeded to the bait barge.   At the bait barge we had our Fiber trip meeting. There we went over boat rules and Santa handed out goody bags.  Afterwards the boat turned north and we moved up the line out in front of the power plant.  Our first stop gave up a few sand bass.  Captain Tom then moved to another pile of stones and we started catching fish, mainly sand bass.

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Then our old friend, the wind(getting really old), showed up.  With the wind came white caps, virtually stalling all fishing.  We spent the rest of the morning moving around and attempting to find biting fish.  The morning ended without finding any fish that wanted to bite.  On the way in Captain Tom invited any that wanted to help pilot the boat.  Captain Tom was on deck and really great with the juniors.  The food was wonderful as usual.  Tyler was a great help on deck, taking care of fish and untangling line.  A big thanks to the crew of the Amigo.  Big fish went to Zepher Chamlers for a 2.7 lb. sand bass.  Jessica Diment with her little princess rod was the hot stick on the boat.  She landed 8 fish with a 6 lb. line. A good time was had by all.  Good job dads and granddads for taking a kid fishing.


Reverse 1.5 Day Charter aboard the Outrider

Saturday, June 26th, 2010

Report by, Jayson Quimby

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At 11AM on June 23, eight FIB’ers assembled on the docks of 22nd street landing in San Pedro ready for a reverse 1.5 day charter aboard the Outrider.

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Anticipation ran high at the sight of tanks filled with live squid, and the upcoming full moon, but we lowered our hopes, because a cold patch of ugly green water had killed the White Seabass bite for the days preceding the trip.  The captains for the trip were Paul and Jim. The deckhand was Manny and the owner, John Pittman, would be holding down the galley.

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We made it to the front side of Catalina in what seemed like no time at all, and we were fishing by about 3:00PM. After resetting the anchor on our first spot, and only catching mackerel, Captain Paul determined the conditions were not the same as he found there a few days prior when they hooked a couple of nice WSB, so he decided to head west to check out a couple more spots on the front side of the island. Poor WSB conditions prevailed at each of the front side spots, so we made our way to the famous West Cove on the backside of the island. Again, we were greeted by tons of mackerel, but not the best WSB conditions. We continued to work our way down the backside of the island, stopping at “known” WSB haunts, but finding nothing but mackerel. A little after 6:30 or so we came around a corner and spotted a private boat anchored up in what looked like excellent WSB conditions. It didn’t take long for us to realize that the owner of the boat was a friend of Tom and Val’s who works at Performance tackle, and Captain Paul decided to give the spot a shot.

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After setting the anchor, we  watched the other boat catch a couple nice WSB, but we had not gotten bit yet, so Captain Paul decided to pull the anchor and set up a little below them. All the while, anticipation was building rapidly, because we watched the guys in the skiff catch a couple more WSB. After a quick steak dinner, the first to get bit by the “right kind” was Walt Galen! The most interesting thing was that Walt was fishing the bow of the boat.  While Walt fought his fish he instructed us on where he had cast and that his bait was on the bottom. Immediately, I put on a heavier sliding sinker and cast my live squid in the direction Walt pointed out. Almost immediately after my bait hit the bottom, I felt it get picked up by a fish and I prayed, “Lord, please don’t let this be another Mackerel. Pease let this be the right kind!”  As the line coming off my reel began to pick up speed, I counted to 6, put the reel in gear, turned the handle as fast as I could, and gently lifted the rod. Immediately my fast-action 8 foot rod went bendo and 50 pound spectra was ripping out of my reel; after seeing Walt’s 33pound WSB hit the deck,

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I knew my prayer was answered and after a nice hard battle and a trip around the boat, my 38 pound WSB was brought to color, and Manny made a perfect gaff shot bringing 38 pounds of fun aboard the Outrider.

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By this time, it was getting dark and nearly everyone aboard was fishing the bow and picking away at the big WSB. When one fish broke off, we were all reminded that these fish do have teeth and that it is imperative to retie your hook above the chafe their teeth put in your line when you catch one. The bite lasted until just after 9:30, and when the dust cleared, 12 beautiful WSB, ranging from 20-38 pounds were put on ice.

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Since the limit is now three fish per day, we all had hopes of catching more WSB during the morning tidal swing and everyone went to sleep around 11:00 with the idea of waking up at 3:00 AM for what we hoped would be a classic “In the Gray” bite. I decided to stay awake and soak squid, because I know that a WSB bite will develop at the craziest times, and it is rare when someone can predict it. I figured since I was the charter master on the trip, it was my responsibility to test the waters all night, and if a bite developed, I could finish out my limit with the rails completely void of anglers, and then wake everyone up………Not really! Honestly, I knew we stood a great chance of the fish biting in the middle of the night, and I did not want our boat to miss out on what could be the WSB bite of a lifetime. Well, staying up all night is not easy, but for my troubles, I was able to pull on a huge Bat Ray for about 20 minutes. It was huge and very tough to subdue. At times I even used the rail to help me put more pressure on it. 3AM rolled around, then 4AM, and by 4:30AM all of us were at the rail casting out our baits with high hopes of the big WSB turning on again, but all we caught was Mackerel. With inside information that the WSB bit there the morning before, coupled with more inside information that none of the other boats were catching WSB, Captain Paul made the decision to stay put and wait the bite out. We figured we were in the right spot because over and over again, sport boats such as the Dreamer, Ultra, and Pacific Quest would pull in and out, but no WSB were caught during The Gray; only Mackerel, small Calico Bass, and perch.

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Around 8AM Floyd caught a nice WSB and our hopes were renewed again, that a bite would develop, but we stayed on the spot until 2PM, and we never hooked another legal WSB.  We went through a ton of bait and were even given a couple passes by the Big Game 90. Our baits were constantly being ripped off by the Mackerel and perch, causing us to reel our lines in, put another squid on, and send it back out into the zone.

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We were all a little disappointed a bite never developed again for us, but we counted ourselves blessed to have caught the 13 WSB that we did, and we posted up the best results for that day!

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No one went home without fresh WSB to put on the BBQ the next day.  We enjoyed every aspect about the Outrider. The crew was very knowledgeable, friendly, and helpful. The food was delicious. The bunks are spacious and clean, and with the limited load, the boat fishes a lot more like a private skiff, than a 50’ charter boat. I am looking forward to the FIB’ers chartering the boat again next year! Thank you Lord for a wonderful trip!


Calico Coastal – Tournament Report

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Report by Dave Shill

On Saturday, June 19th the FIBers held our annual Coastal Calico Bass tournament out of Long Beach. This is a 2-man team catch and release tournament with a 3-fish limit – artificial baits only. Prize categories went to the heaviest 3-fish bag, the single heaviest fish, and the heaviest fish weighed by a junior angler.
Although conditions for the 5 teams competing appeared to be good for a nice calico bite, most teams found the fishing in the Palos Verdes area to be a bit tough that day. One team however, managed to put three nice fish in the tank. Congratulations to the team of Eric and Jerry Bent, who not only had the heaviest bag of 9.43#, but also the heaviest single fish at 3.55#. No junior anglers participated. Thanks to all those who came out again this year for this event.


Cory Sanden Comes Out “Sluggin!”

Friday, June 18th, 2010

June Monthly Meeting – Guest Speaker: Cory Sanden of  MC Swimbaits

Even though game 7 of the NBA finals was taking place simultaneously, many loyal FIB’ers came out to participate in this month’s meeting. The meeting began with Floyd giving us a devotion.IMG_4543

 

Tom and Val were awarded their prize money for their 2nd and 3rd place finish at last month’s Newport Harbor Bay Bass Tournament.  Tom and Val each weighed a 1.80 Spotted Bay Bass.

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Following the awards, Walt Galin gave us all a fish report from his trip aboard the 6 pack Options. Walt shared about staying up all night only to catch their first fish around 4:30AM and then the bite broke wide open on 30-40 pound White Seabass. One tip he shared was that when you are fishing the dropper loop, try to only use enough weight to keep your bait near the bottom. They discovered that if you had too much weight on the seabass would sense that and then spit the bait back out.IMG_4552

 

 

It was an honor to have Cory take time out of his busy schedule to drive all the way up from San Diego to be our June guest speaker. Cory is the sole owner and operator of MC Swimbaits, and he still pours every single lure himself!

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June 9, 2010 Kid’s Ministry trip report

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

Written By Del Brunning:

On Wednesday, June 9th, 20 kids from Olive Crest, their counselors and FIB’er volunteers met at Newport landing for a 1/2 day fishing trip. The day was overcast and it was “sprinkling” on us. Not a pleasant beginning. To add to the day, the traffic from Riverside County delayed most of the participants such that we didn’t depart, on the Agressor, until after 8:00 AM. The kids were excited as we left the Bait receiver and Captain Brian headed the Aggressor South down the coast anticipating some great fun and fine fishing. The swells were up a bit as the wind pushed against us. The kid’s were enjoying the ride. It was great!  Shortly, we arrived near Crystal Cove and set anchor off some kelp on a rock pile and set our lines in the water.  Fishing started off slow and remained that way for most of the day. We used a combination of live bait and squid and fished on the bottom. Squid seemed to be the better bait. The currents were moving pretty good in the area and there were times when fish would move in and around the rock pile and then move on. During those times, we managed to land a good number of fish with a few quality ones in the mix.  This gave us encouragement to keep our lines in the water. We moved further South, one time, to try some deeper fishing with about the same results. All-in-all, the kids had a wonderful time and the Aggressor crew was great as they treated each participant to a breakfast sandwich and drink. The sun finally came out as we headed back to the landing and the kids played with the bait (always fun to watch). Captain Brian made a circle around the bell buoy and the kids enjoyed watching the Sea Lions on it. For such a “gloomy day” start, we had a “fantastic” ending. Final fish count: 1 Calico bass, 17 Sand bass, 1 White fish, landed. Also, 50+ Mackerel and 1 White Sea Bass (16”) released. Praise goes to God for the opportunity to bring love into the hearts of these kids on trips like this. Thanks go to the FIB’ers volunteers who unselfishly give of their time and are blessed for it; Floyd Spangler, Don White, David Weeks, Phil Faubert, Jerry Bent, Mike Kaneen, and Rick Chalmers.

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