Kayak Fishing at SCI
Jack and I met up with Tim at Dana Point Jet Ski and
Kayak Center (now Pure Watersports) in Dana Point Thursday afternoon. Tim was loading our kayaks on his truck so we
put all our gear in the truck bed. By 2
p.m. we were headed to San Diego to board the Islander for 2 1/2 days of kayak fishing
at San Clemente Island.
A nice seafood dinner at Mitch's
Seafood and it was time to board.
All our gear was loaded into carts and rolled down the ramps so the crew
could load it on the Islander. We wheeled our kayaks down next to the boat for
crew to load. Kayaks were stowed on racks over the bait tanks, paddles on top
of the bait tanks, kayak bait tanks lined the base of the boat's bait tanks,
rods along the side of the wheelhouse and the rest of our gear stowed on tackle
racks. A very efficient operation.
We departed around 7:30 p.m. and stopped at the bait
receiver to pick up bait - a mix of mackerel and sardines. I brought 3 bags of frozen squid from my Rail
Time trip last week which I shared with Tim and Jack.
John Coniff, owner and Captain, told us the weather would
be great but most the Island would be closed for military operations. We would arrive at the island around 5:30
a.m. and we could fish Pyramid Cove until 10:30 a.m., reload the kayaks and
vacate the cove by 11 a.m. when military operations would begin. John said he would call his contact on the
island to see where else we could fish. We
were all tired and hit the bunks by 9 p.m.
I barely slept at all the first night and finally got up
at 3:30 a.m. Friday morning. We were
still traveling but the seas were fairly calm and low clouds obscured the
stars.
Breakfast was at 5:30 and Chef Rick planned and prepared our
meals for the trip. Rick's menu for day one
included banana pancakes, burritos and pork chops. Day two started with huevos rancheros
followed by bacon cheeseburgers and BBQ ribs.
All very good.
While everyone was eating breakfast around 5:30, the
captain anchored the boat in Pyramid Cove. Crew began launching kayaks as soon
as someone was ready.
I decided to let most the other 19 passengers load and
launch so I could take my time setting
up my kayak since it had been several months since I used it. As I expected, I needed help putting in my
seat and attaching cables to my fish finder.
The crew dropped my kayak off the stern, I stood on the swim step and
plopped myself right into the seat of my kayak.
I was handed my peddles, paddle and fishing rods and I was off. We all had our marine radios so we could keep in contact
with the big boat and skiff if we needed anything.
Fishing was slow at first then small calicos bit plus
large schools of blue perch attacked our baits.
I caught a few whitefish as well but no seabass or yellowtail for
me. I was even able to fish the prime spot
where we picked up seabass and yellowtail the previous week on the Rail Time. Unfortunately, we were unable to fish that
spot in the afternoon which is when they bit last week. There were a handful of 8 to 10 lb.
yellowtail caught and Tim caught a halibut and one of the yellowtail.
We were all back at the boat by 10:30, kayaks loaded and
out of the cove by 11 a.m. We traveled
up the front side of the island quite a distance before we were able to launch
the kayaks again. Chef Rick served us
lunch during our travel time.
We fished the front side of the island and fishing was
poor until late afternoon when there was a short flurry of calicos biting.
The weather was wonderful - sunny, hot, and calm seas. Plus throughout the day the skiff picked up our fish, tagged them and put them in the hold of the big boat. At the same time the skiff picked up our fish, it delivered bait, water and cold beer. Nothing greater than sitting in your kayak fishing and drinking a cold beer.
The weather was wonderful - sunny, hot, and calm seas. Plus throughout the day the skiff picked up our fish, tagged them and put them in the hold of the big boat. At the same time the skiff picked up our fish, it delivered bait, water and cold beer. Nothing greater than sitting in your kayak fishing and drinking a cold beer.
I called it a day around 5 p.m. and took a shower and
plugged in all my electronics and batteries to recharge them for the next day. I had put over 14 miles of peddling on my
knees and had been afraid I wouldn't be able to do two days in a row but it
wasn't a problem. Everyone was back
aboard by 7:45 - just in time for our 8 p.m. dinner. As soon as dinner was over, we all hit the
bunks. None of us had trouble sleeping
the second night.
Saturday morning found us anchored close to the
island. About 5 a.m., John moved the
boat out and close to where we started fishing on Friday. Big calicos were biting right away. I was still fishing squid and hadn't even
turned my bait tank on. Mostly I used a
dropper loop on 40# fluorocarbon or sliding sinker on 30#. I hooked a couple big fish that went straight
into the kelp but I lost them. The only
fish I pulled through the kelp happened to be a big sheepshead.
10:30 a.m. rolled around too soon and we were loading our kayaks back on the boat for a move. This time John just moved us around the corner and fishing was much better. Most the fish were big calicos but one big halibut was caught as well. Tim and I fished rockfish for a short time then decided it was too much work fishing 300 feet deep. I did catch a big chucklehead and copper rockfish. Tim caught two reds and a couple other rockfish to go with his catch.
Late afternoon, I was trolling my dropper loop with a
piece of squid dangling from the hook as I was moving up the island looking for
hard bottom instead of eel grass and kelp when an 18 inch calico slammed
me. I stuck him on my game hook and
continued on my way with the same piece of squid dangling and was slammed again
with another 18 inch calico. Normally I
don't keep calico's, however, it became clear that there is no shortage of
calicos at SCI. I caught so many it was
almost boring. By day's end, I was out
of squid and live bait so I fished a dead sardine and was slammed again by a
big calico.
I ran out of all bait at 4:30 and decided to call it a
day. The rest the kayakers stayed out and
straggled back to the boat between 6:00 and 8:00 p.m. We had beer, wine and
ribs and were feeling very fortunate to have had such a fun trip together. Jackpot was settled, we took photos then crew
filleted our fish. The two halibuts took
first and second JP and Tim won second jackpot.
The ride back to Point Loma was flat calm without a
ripple all night long and we all slept like babies. We entered the harbor at 6 a.m. Sunday, docked
at 6:30 a.m. then unloaded, packed up the truck (5 kayaks plus gear and fish)
and on the road home by 8:00 a.m. A
quick stop in Cardiff for breakfast at Swami's (Tim spent his winnings to treat
us all to breakfast. Thanks, Tim.) We also stopped by his new Pure Watersports
shop in Oceanside to drop off one of the kayaks. It's right on coast highway with great
visibility. We were back in Dana around
10:00 a.m. Our trip was over but not
the memories.
1 Comments:
Wow, looks like you had a blast! I'm an avid fisher, but I've never tried kayaking before. It looks like a great way to combine the two hobbies. I'll have to take some kayaking lessons so I can give it a try one day. Hopefully I can practice in a smaller body of water first though, it looks daunting!
Andrea Wilkins @ Get Away Outdoors
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