Fish Sniffer On Demand Digital Edition Issue 3707 March 16-30, 2018 | Page 32
32
“
T
March 16 - 30, 2018
BAJA ROUNDUP
VOL.37 • ISS. 07
Cabo Anglers Mix It Up With Marlin
his week the marlin numbers
jumped back up again, with 70%
of boats catching striped marlin,” reported
Capt. Tracy Ehrenberg of Pisces Sportfish-
ing. “Dorado numbers remained strong, but
the tuna bite was nonexistent.”
“Overall fishing was a little tougher
this week, not as consistent, but those that
did find fish, found many, with top boats
catching up to 6 striped marlin each. Our
The Riddle of Fluorocarbon
A
few years back, the hush
hush wink wink top secret
really-gets-the-fish-trick was ... “use
fluorocarbon”! And in the years hence,
the use of this futuristic material has
skyrocketed as more and more fisher-
men are jumping on
the fluoro bandwag-
on.
Whether or not
fluorocarbon lines
and/or leaders make
a difference really is
still up for discussion.
What really makes
the water muddy in
the discussion is that
there are as many
types of fluoro as
there are nylon mono-
filaments, that is to
say, fluoro from one
company can be vast-
ly different than fluoro from another
company. We are almost dealing with
apples and oranges in many cases.
Originally, the fluorocarbon material
was made to be used in gill nets. Its
characteristics seemed to make it as the
ideal material for these types of nets. It
was the most invisible material under
water, it was stiff enough to minimize
tangling, it tended to sink rather than
float like nylon monofilaments, and it
was mostly UV resistant which gave it
a half life of like a thousand years.
Then some smart guy decided that it
would make a good fishing line, and I
suppose that is how it came about. The
big flaw in the plan was that fluoro-
carbon is much stiffer than most nylon
monofilament lines so it handled poorly
on most reels, although it made for a
great leader material.
Of course, line manufacturers had
to get on the ball and figure out how
to make the line softer and more reel
friendly, and so fluoros have become
more user friendly than before. Being
so much more expensive than nylon
monos, I suppose it would make line
makers happier if you filled your reels
with this line instead of tying only five
or six feet of it as a leader.
As fluoro lines are constantly
evolving, it is hard for me to pin-
point exactly how to take care
of your fluoro lines in the off
season. If you are using fluoro
strictly as a topshot or long lead-
er, it is nothing to simply cut off
that part of your line and splice
in another fresh section of line.
That is the easy part.
The hard part is when you
have fluoro as your main line. I
have two reels rigged thusly; a
Daiwa Legalis 2500 filled with
8 lb. test Seaguar Red Label and
a Daiwa Lexa 100 filled with 12
lb. Seaguar Abraz-X.
Fluoros are pretty strong and can
take some abuse, but one of their
problems is memory. Memory has two
phases, the common one is where the
line gets coilly and stays coilly, and
the other is where when the line is
stretched it comes back to the origi-
nal length. (Think of how when you
stretch a rubber band and then you let
it go and it comes back to original size
and shape.)
When a line has memory such that
it does not come back to the original
length, that is when you have the
situation where I was just casting and
it broke in the middle!” or “I just set
the hook and POP! the line broke just
like that!”
If that is the case, there is nothing
you can do but cut back to where it
was heavily stretched and splice in
some fresh line, or replace the entire
line altogether.
SALTY TIPS
by Steve
“Hippo”Lau
A beautiful Beach Resort located
half way between La Paz and
Cabo San Lucas, right on the Sea of Cortez
Fish Baja’s
East Cape at
Martin verdugo’s Beach resort
Cruiser Packages Include:
Room for 4 nights, 5 days, 2 days of fishing,
tackle, breakfast & lunch,
28 ft. supercruiser w/captain & mate
Call Now For Information!
3203
Martin verdugo’s Beach resort
Call Toll Free: (888) 567-8552 www.verdugosbeachresort.com
(949) 226-7169 Or 01152 624 141 0054 E mail: martinverdugo@prodigy.net.mx
On February 18th, anglers from Louisiana,
top boat this week was Pisces 28’ Adriana,
Gary Bonner, George Ackal and Nick and
who showed the most consistent fishing
Tyler Girolamo caught and released their
this week, landing fish every day. They also
marlin out at Golden Gate on mackerel bait.
caught a vast array of different species. For
example, anglers from Georgia, the Wright’s With the largest weighing about 150 lbs.
and Raymer’s, caught and released 1 striped They also landed a nice dorado of about 20
lbs on mackerel. The Pisces 42’ Yahoo has
marlin of about 150 lbs and 1 dorado of
been very consistent this month, with top
about 10 lbs, both out at Golden Gate on
mackerel. They also caught 3 grouper, 4 red catches every week. The Saville and Martin
snapper and 4 triggerfish of about 4 lbs each families had a great day, catching and re-
leasing 4 striped marlin out at Golden Gate
by chumming closer to shore at Golden
on mackerel. The marlin weighed between
Gate area. Pisces Adriana caught marlin
120 and 160 lbs each. Later in the week,
all days, except for one. Totaling 7 stripers
anglers from Texas caught 5 striped marlin
caught in the week.,” said Ehrenberg.
and 2 dorado. The stripers were caught out
“As for our marlin catches this week,
at Golden Gate on mackerel and weighed
the Pisces 31’ Rebecca, caught the most
striped out of any other boat on Wednesday, between 130 and 140 lbs each. The dorado
were also landed on mackerel and weighed
with the Hayes family, Chris, Kelly, and
their young daughter Elizabeth catching and about 18 lbs,” reported Ehrenberg.
releasing 6 strip-
ers total. They
caught all marlin
on mackerel bait
out at Golden
Gate, which
averaged about
130 lbs each.
The family fished
previously in the
week aboard 31’
Pisces Ruthless,
catching and
releasing 3 striped
marlin of about
120 and 140 lbs
each, again out at
Golden Gate on
mackerel. They
also caught 2 red
snapper and about
15 triggerfish by
chumming closer
to Migriño. A
total of 9 striped
m