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Squiddily Yellows
Hey Gang,
Wanted to share some of the footage from the recent flurry of yellowtail we had in La Jolla. As people found out pretty quick, there was a squid nest up inside the hump in about 70-90' of water. Fish were on the bottom which meant dropperloops and carolina rigs were the go to setups. When you get into these bites, it might seem like the skiffs are practically anchored on top of each other. There is very little room on the sea floor between the anchorlines and people's spread. You don't want to be that guy who causes a huge fustercluck when the fish swim through. Here's a couple tips to help you increase your success ratio on the bed. Fish heavy line. When the yellows roll through 30 fish deep, they are not line shy. I have been fishing straight 50# mono. That way when you get bit, you can button the drag down to full and horse the fish as hard as you can. You have to stay right on top of the fish to keep it out of anchorlines and dropper spreads. Also fishing straight mono makes it easy to retie if your fish goes into the rocks, or gets all twisted up. Don't be the guy who is flylining a greenback through the middle of the squid bite. Its fine to fish the flyline, but stay outside the fleet or around the perimeter. First off, the fish are biting on the bottom so your mack will be ignored. Second, if you do get bit, your fish is going to dive straight to the bottom in whichever way it wants. This will very likely result in a total disaster with nearby anchors. Give the skiffs enough space. Carefully observe the drift line you are taking before you go through a crowded bed. Probably that skiff has been anchored in that same spot all night, so you sliding in too close at greylight will never be met with "aloha". Give enough room and don't drift right through their spread, and you will be tolerated. You might even get a piece of bait or two if you are cool to them. Cant wait to see that big bluefin bring it on guys! <iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/Hy6shNhwGpU" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
Now that is what I call "Ropin' Em" :luxhello:
Feel all the power and every tail beat. |
Awesome Chris. You are a fish catching machine. :notworthy:
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Buena Vista Social Club.......I love that song and that album
P.s. Nice fish |
That is some good catching :cheers1:
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legit.
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Awesome!
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awesome video and great tips. i see youre running a raymarine dragonfly. what settings are you running for your sonar? is everything on auto? thanks again
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I still go braid I had some big homegaurds take weird horizontal runs right in the kelp next to the beds but either way good info
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replaced under westmarine with df5 pro df5pro has a more water tight sd card bay both had issues holding bottom in auto mode also forced to use manual depth setting because of this hate the downgrade in size figured any replacement would also not work properly in auto mode P |
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killer report!
Great video & report Chris!
See you offshore. :sifone: |
Sweet....
Like your fish finder really show the squid and yellowtail
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Nice Vid!
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Thanks
Thanks for the report and the advice.
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Wow Chris, great footage!!! Great report. This will help a lot of
newbies out there. |
Awesome video! Great report and info too!!
Sent from my SM-G935V using Tapatalk |
nice haul! keep em comin.
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Sweet!!!
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