Bluefin Tuna Invade Southern California Waters:
Anglers are finding Pacific bluefin tuna in excess of 100 pounds within easy range.
-
Evan Salvay / Cousins Tackle
After hearing reports of
Pacific bluefin tuna feeding close to the Southern California coast,
Cousins Tackle
pro-staffer Evan Salvay took his bay boat out and caught a 117-pounder
-- one of many fish over the century mark caught this past week by
boating anglers fishing from San Diego to Santa Catalina Island.
Pacific bluefin tuna
have invaded the waters off Southern California, and anglers in boats
of all sizes are scoring fish in excess of 100 pounds within 8 to 10
miles of the coast. There are reports of breaking fish from San Diego to
Santa Catalina Island. Not only are the fish close, these Pacific
bluefin tuna are early. Ordinarily, the fish don't show until later, and
they ordinarily first appear much farther south, in Mexican waters.
Evan Salvay, a pro-staffer for
Cousins Tackle,
caught a 117 pounder in his bay boat over the weekend on the submerged
ridge east of Catalina Island known as the 277. He landed the fish after
a two-hour battle on 40-pound-test line. His catch is just one of many
reports of local bluefin tuna over the century mark caught this past
week.
Many of the fish are being caught on live mackerel or sardines, slow
trolled far behind the boat in areas where fish are seen jumping or
marked on a fish finder.
Salvay / Cousins Tackle
After hearing reports of
Pacific bluefin tuna feeding close to the Southern California coast,
Cousins Tackle
pro-staffer Evan Salvay took his bay boat out and caught a 117-pounder
-- one of many fish over the century mark caught this past week by
boating anglers fishing from San Diego to Santa Catalina Island.
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