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Old 02-15-2011, 08:49 PM   #1
Matt
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Nice job Mike!!
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Thanks Matt F.
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Old 02-15-2011, 08:58 PM   #2
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Croakers

I saw a school of about 40 Spot Fin cruising in the surf at La Jolla last weekend, It was pretty sweet. Looked like something you would see in Florida on the flats.
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Old 02-15-2011, 09:04 PM   #3
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Awesome! I grew up fishing J st. Always proud to hear that dirty old backwater can produce a surprise now and then. Between the bones, turtles, jellies and corvina, it's got to be one of the more unpredictble spots.
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Old 02-16-2011, 07:46 AM   #4
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Cool
I need to mark that off my species list.
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Old 02-16-2011, 12:52 PM   #5
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I've speared a few over the years but that was my first spotfin on rod and reel. They're not rare but usually don't eat plastics. Onetrip, you're right there are some surprises in the south bay. I've caught the bonefish, vina, and seen the turtles and hammer heads. I get a kick out of the osprey and enjoy the 5 mph speed limit. Some day I hope to catch the jack creval that very occationally get caught down here. Or who knows what else. Mike
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Old 02-16-2011, 01:23 PM   #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by taggermike View Post
I've speared a few over the years but that was my first spotfin on rod and reel. They're not rare but usually don't eat plastics. Onetrip, you're right there are some surprises in the south bay. I've caught the bonefish, vina, and seen the turtles and hammer heads. I get a kick out of the osprey and enjoy the 5 mph speed limit. Some day I hope to catch the jack creval that very occationally get caught down here. Or who knows what else. Mike
You gotta be kidding me! There are Jack and Hammers around there too? From the ages of 8 to 15 it was the only spot I could fish consistently within reach of home. It took years to find the sweet spots but once I was mobile enough to use a boat or a kayak I never really looked back. Now I'm 33 and wondering if the place deserves another look!
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Old 02-16-2011, 06:14 PM   #7
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Thanks for posting

That's my backyard and I fish it a lot. I remember getting a small spotfin when I first started tubing J street, but none since I took to the yak. I've hooked leos, smoothhounds, guitars and bat rays down here, but never a hammerhead. That's freaky to know they get in there. Seems I always manage to scratch out something at J street, but it's been slow for me there (and everywhere else I fish, also) for several weeks now. Guess I'm just sucking at fishing. I'm stoked that the power plant is shut down and they've pretty much finished dredging to open a salt pond (meaning more fishable habitat). I hopethat the drop in water temperature due to the power plant closing will be more than offset by the fact that it won't be killing millions of eggs, fry, and fish by taking in water to cool the plant. I once heard on a radio news report that when it was running, the power plant circulated 15% of the total volume of water south of the bridge every day it ran. That's a whole lotta water, and it amazes me what a rich fishery it's been since I started fishing it a few years ago, despite the duress the habitat was under. I notice I haven't caught bonefish in probably six weeks and I'm wondering if they'll leave the bay and head up or down the coast in search of warmer water now that the "thermostat" has been turned off. There've been periods of weeks where I've caught more bonefish than bass at J street. Thanks again for posting.
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Old 02-17-2011, 11:49 AM   #8
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Deffinately the power plants in So cal kill more fish, larval fish that is, in a day than all other methods kill in a decade. And the larvae of every other creature in the area as well. driss, if that 15% water use per day number is correct than that plant is killing the vast majority of all marine life that spawns in the south bay.

I know 2 different people that have caught jack creval in the south bay. Also when I worked for the Hubbs institute's white seabass program we had a gill net sampling team that went all over So Cal looking for our tagged WSB. Of course with gill nets they also caught other things as well. On one of there South SD Bay samples they caught 2 scalloped hammerhead sharks at 5 1/2 and 6 feet long. I saw these sharks with my own eyes.
Mike
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