
This
year's windy forecast calls for a lot of salmon
Tom
Stienstra
April 1, 2007
This year's salmon season
has the chance to be a triple jackpot. But the problem with jackpots is
that they can take a fortune to hit.
Anglers will get their
first glimpse of the potential treasures next Saturday when the salmon
season opens for the Golden Gate Fleet out of harbors on
San Francisco
Bay
, as well as for boats out
of
Half
Moon
Bay
,
Bodega
Bay
and
Monterey
Bay
.
Here's what's in store:
-- Jackpot 1: 500,000
salmon from the
Sacramento River
are projected to roam the
Bay Area coast this summer and be available to catch.
-- Jackpot 2: Another
515,000 salmon from the Klamath will be roaming off
Northern California
, the best projected season
for the Klamath in years, with enough fish straying south to provide a
significant bounce.
-- Jackpot 3: Last year's
record 1.7 million year-class of three-year-old salmon for the Bay Area
coast had a terrible return due to poor feed and ocean conditions. Many
believe these fish simply stayed offshore, chasing sardines, rather than
return to spawn. So the wildcard is that another 750,000 salmon, perhaps
even more, could return this year to the Bay Area coast this year as big
4-year-olds, the 20- to 40-pounders that jackpots are made of.
The final result: These
fish from different schools or year-classes could mix and create hordes
of salmon and provide bonanza-type fishing, absolute wide-open sieges of
big fish. But remember, even when the odds are right, jackpots take
plenty of luck to hit.
Last year held great
promise with the high salmon forecast, but it turned into an overall
dud. Spring storms and rough seas kept boats tied up many days in April,
May and early June. Schools of feed/baitfish were generally sparse until
early summer, and the southerly wind flow and water temperatures of 58
to 59 degrees were far too warm to hold the fish in the area. As a side
note, conditions were terrible all the way up to
Alaska
last year and just about everybody on the
Pacific
Coast
reported generally poor
salmon fishing.
This year is a whole new
ballgame. There's already been phases of strong north winds, which
creates upwelling and starts the marine food chain. That is because
winds out of the northwest divert surface currents roughly 90 degrees,
and in turn, deep, cold nutrient-rich water then rises to the surface.
Extensive upwelling creates some of the richest marine waters in the
world off the Bay Area coast.
That is why the water is
52 degrees right now, full of plankton, anchovies and sardines (though
krill are again few). Over the past 25 years, cold water full of food
has resulted in our best salmon catches, so the table is set.
The resurgence of sardine
is an unknown variable. "The sardines have the potential to change
the behavior of salmon," said Craig Stone, owner of
Emeryville
Sportfishing
Center
. "Instead of staying
in local waters and chasing anchovies around, the salmon can stay
offshore, because supposedly, sardine is their favorite food. It's
possible that's what happened last year, the salmon went offshore for
sardines. So there could be holdovers this year, absolutely."
If the wind is down next
Saturday morning, it's likely there will be thousands of anglers on the
water, all hoping to hit the jackpot. Over the years, when conditions
are optimal, as now, salmon tend to congregate in a few predictable
spots in early April:
--
Golden Gate
Fleet: Vicinity of S Buoy
(if the wind is down), with the nearby option of hitting 10 miles off
Pedro
Point
at
Pacifica
; Duxbury (if the wind is
up).
--
Half
Moon
Bay
:
Pedro
Point
and S Buoy (if the wind is
down); Deep Reef and Martin's Beach (if the wind is up).
--
Bodega
Bay
:
Point Reyes
to the south, the mouth of
Salmon Creek to the north (if the wind is down); Whistle Buoy or three
miles off Tomales Point (if wind is up).
Keep tuned to Channel 67
on VHF marine radios, where information is exchanged on catch locations.
Most everybody will troll, not drift mooch, on the opener in order to
fish the largest amount of water in smallest amount of time.
This year's rules are
simpler than in the past. Last year's ridiculous 3-mile limit for the
opener (which accomplished nothing) is out. This year you can fish
wherever your heart takes you, with a two-fish limit, 20-inch size
minimum. No more than two single point barbless hooks can be used, which
has been standard for years. Another plus is that the season will run
continuously this year, April 7 through Nov. 11, with no closed dates.
Most trips on party boats
will cost in the $85 range this year, with space still available on
boats for next weekend. It will cost about $1,800 this year to charter a
50-footer for a weekend date (about $1,500 for a weekday), comfortable
for 20 anglers, and acceptable for more.
Rafting the
Upper Sacramento River
at flood stage and other
great paddle adventures are featured on "The Great Outdoors With
Tom Stienstra" today at
10 a.m.
on KBCW-44 (Bay Area Cable 12).
Fishing
report hotline: (510) 654-6696.
Party boat charters:
Wacky Jacky Sportfishing, S.F., (415) 586-9800; Lovely Martha, S.F.,
(650) 871-1691; Caruso's, Sausalito, (415) 332-1015; Salty Lady,
Sausalito, (415) 348-2107; Berkeley Marina Sportfishing Center, (510)
849-2727; Emeryville Sportfishing Center, (510) 654-6040; Huck Finn
Sportfishing, Princeton/Half Moon Bay, (650) 726-7133; Riptide,
Princeton, 1-888-747-8433.
Tackle/fishing info: Hi's
Tackle, S.F., (415) 221-3825; Gus' Discount Tackle, S.F., (415)
752-6197; coastsidefishingclub.com.
E-mail Tom Stienstra
at tstienstra@sfchronicle.com.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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Source:
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/chronicle/archive/
2007/04/01/SPGS3OUKC31.DTL
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