| 
           
            | Dec 21, 2002; 09:55PM - Trout are biting at Irvine Lake California |  
            | Category:  California Southern |  
            | Author Name:  just me |   
            | 
                
                    
                    |   
 The trout are biting at Lake Irvine in California again. I fished with Louis Aguilar from around 9 am to closing on the lake which is about 4 pm. We managed to get our limit trolling Yo zuri Slavko Bugs and yo zuri emperor minnows along with Louis favorite lure the cd 5 in rainbow trout pattern. I managed 5 trout on the slavko bugs and 1 on the emperor minnow also in rainbow trout pattern. I learned that we should have been throwing some spoons that day as the fish were biting them anywhere we had gotten bit that day. Oh well we did fine and I recommend the lake to anyone who just likes to get out and wet a line. Fishing is great and after speaking with someone at a local tackle shop I learned that the fish are biting on roostertails if thrown once bitten on the troll. Good luck if you get out.....Steve
 
 
 |  |  
           
            | Dec 16, 2002; 12:05PM - 'Fly Hooker Daily Report |  
            | Category:  Mexico Cabo San Lucas |  
            | Author Name:  George Landrum |   
            | 
                
                    
                    | 
 FLY HOOKER FISH REPORT FOR DECEMBER 9, 2002
    Today is the third of three for our friend 
David Reese and pals Mike and James.  After the
action on the Dorado yesterday they were hoping for 
a repeat, but it was not to be.  They
returned to the same area but this time the whole 
day was a boat ride.  They saw no Marlin or
Dorado today.  We sure are glad they managed to get 
100 pounds of fillets on the first two days! 
Thanks David, we look forward to seeing you again 
sometime in April!
FLY HOOKER FISH REPORT FOR 10 DECEMBER, 2002
    Today was booked by Dennis Bracken for himself 
and five friends.  He had originally wanted
five days with us but we were only able to give him 
three, so for the last two days he fished
another boat.  Well, he was not able to figure out 
how to call us once he arrived and even though
he knew where the boat was, he booked another boat 
for today.  We found this out this morning
as he and his group passed by the gate to E Dock on 
their way to the other boat.  Wish we had
known as we turned down other charters for him and 
could have gotten a trip for today.
FLY HOOKER FISH REPORT FOR 11 DECEMBER, 2002
    Dennis Bracken and his group showed up at 7:10 
this morning, a bit the worse for wear after
last night.  Juan said they slept most of the day.  
Juan and Manuel worked the area off of the Los
Arcos and Juan said they had one Marlin eat a live 
bait tossed in front of it, but the fish got the
bait, not the hook.  That was all the action for 
the day.
FLY HOOKER FISH REPORT FOR 12 DECEMBER, 2002
    Dennis Bracken had his brother come down to see 
me yesterday afternoon and cancel todays
trip but we were able to put together two of our 
repeat clients who were in town and wanted to
fish.  Mike Henstra is vacationing with his wife, 
her sister and her mother so he said he would be
happy to share a boat with Mike and Teresa rather 
than go shopping.  Juan and Manuel went 25
miles to the south looking for a band of warm water 
that is approaching but found nothing once
they got there, it was on the way back when they 
got a strike and that was a nice 35 pound
Wahoo that Teresa got to reel in.  Good dinner 
material!  
FLY HOOKER FISH REPORT FOR DECEMBER 13, 2002
    Today was a payback to our webmaster for all 
his effort in building and maintaining our
website.  Hats off to Mr. Phil Orr!  Myself, Phil, 
and our friends Leon and Robert were supposed
to go and Phil had also invited a couple of the 
guys he works with at the golf course.  Robert
missed the boat as he ended up waiting somewhere 
else for us and he had a cooler of chicken and
ribs!  Thank goodness Leon showed up with six box 
lunches!  One of the guys invited by Phil
showed up, Miguel, and this was his first time to 
go fishing.  We decided to try deep dropping
some live bait off the lighthouse at the beginning 
of the trip and worked that for about an hour
and a half with no response from the fish except 
for one bait getting scarred and taking a lot of
line but not getting eaten.  Then we went in and 
fished the area off the beach between the
lighthouse and Punta San Cristobal (Los Arcos) for 
Sierra.  Miguel got one to the boat and Phil
farmed one. The action shut down and we headed 
offshore looking for something larger.  Not
until the tail end of the trip did we find anything 
except the large Black Porpoise, and as we were
returning to the marina we hooked up a Dorado right 
outside the lighthouse, where we began the
morning deep dropping live bait!  It was a nice 
fish about 20-25 pounds and delivered up some
good fillets!
FLY HOOKER FISH REPORT FOR DECEMBER 14, 2002
    Our new friends Sonny and Randy fished our boat 
today.  They went out on another boat
yesterday with friend Gary but Gary instructed the 
Captain to return after three hours out, he
didn�t want to get that far away from town.  They 
caught a Dorado yesterday and would like to
catch some more of them today, but Gary is going to 
stay ashore and they invited me to go along. 
We wanted to be sure to get fish in the boat for 
them and started out by working the are off the
beach between the lighthouse and San Cristobal for 
about an hour, picking up two Sierra of about
4 pounds each.  When the action had been slow for 
about a half hour I suggested that we head
offshore to look for something larger.  We worked 
the deep water for several hours until we saw
a Marlin free jumping about a half mile away.  
Another boat spotted it too and were there before
we were.  In the same are there were a couple of 
Frigate birds circling around way up high so we
decided to try and slow troll the area with live 
baits.  About 30 minutes after starting to slow 
troll
there was action on Randy�s bait.  It zipped out 
line a few times and there was a big swirl behind
it.  Juan had the rod in hand, ready to set the 
hook when the rod on Sonny�s side dipped a little
and the line started to sing off of that reel.  
Both of these baits were ones that had been trolled 
on
top of the water, not the one on the planer.  I set 
the hook on the fish that had hit Sonny�s rod and
the fight was on! Lots of jumps were done by the 
Marlin as he made a big circle.  Sonny tired real
quick and Randy got on the fish as it completed the 
circle and swam towards the boat.  Randy
thought the fish had come off so Manuel goosed the 
engines and there the Marlin was, not more
than 20 feet away, still hooked up.  Juan was able 
to grab the leader for a second before the fish
realized what was going on but it pulled out of his 
grip almost immediately.  Another series of
jumps took place and the rod switched hands several 
times before Sonny took the last up and got
the fish close enough to the boat for Juan to try 
and grab it.  it was not easy because the fish had
just a little stumpy bill that projected maybe an 
inch past it�s lower jaw.  The fish was hooked in
the corner of the jaw and the hook was easy to 
remove.  The fish was tagged and released,
swimming slowly away, tired but in good shape.  
After a round of High-Fives another bait was
put out as more rigs were readied.  less than three 
minutes later the one boat that was out got
eaten by a nice 25 pound bull Dorado!  After the 
Marlin action this one was easy and Randy had it
to the boat pretty quickly.  We tried again but had 
no more action and there was no action as we
trolled for the last hour.  Not a bad day though, 
and I hope we have this good of action
tomorrow!
FLY HOOKER FISH REPORT FOR DECEMBER 15, 2002
    Today and tomorrow we have Larry Quinn and his 
adult son Trey as our anglers.  Larry
booked two days fishing as a birthday present for 
Trey.  They were kind enough to be willing to
share the boat today with our friends from Bend, 
Oregon, Mike and Teresa.  Since it is a birthday
gift for Trey, he is supposed to get first fish and 
the guys tried hard but had little luck.  They did
have a Marlin rap one of the lures and had another 
one hook up just long enough to pull line for a
few seconds, but nothing was hooked solid.  
Hopefully tomorrow will be better!
Until Next Week, Tight Lines from George, Mary, 
Juan and Manuel, the �Fly Hooker� Crew
 
 
 |  |  
           
            | Dec 16, 2002; 12:02PM - Cabo Fishing Report |  
            | Category:  Mexico Cabo San Lucas |  
            | Author Name:  George Landrum |   
            | 
                
                    
                    |   
 CAPT. GEORGE LANDRUM
�FLY HOOKER� SPORTFISHING
gmlandrum@hotmail.com
CABO SAN LUCAS FISH REPORT     DECEMBER 9-15, 2002
WEATHER:  Keeping cool in Cabo!  I check my outside 
thermometer every morning and on
Saturday it showed 55 degrees!  Sweater, long pants 
and socks were my dress for the morning! 
Our daytime highs have been a comfortable 85-88 
degrees with a slight breeze.  The desert is now
blooming from all the rain we received during the 
Thanksgiving weekend so a drive out there is a
nice thing to do.  We have not had any rain since 
then but we did have quite a bit of cloud cover
in the early part of the week.  (Deck The Halls)
WATER:    The surface temperatures continue to drop 
as we go through the transition from
summer water to winter water.  This week the 
highest I found was around 79 degrees.  Most of
the water around the Cape has been in the low 70�s 
but there has been a bit warmer water from
25-30 miles to the south.  The surface conditions 
have been great with small swells at the
beginning of the week, getting larger as the week 
ended but with plenty of space between them
and no wind chop on top of it.  (1st Nowell)
BAIT:    Almost the only thing you could find this 
week was Mackerel in the 8-10� range, a bit
small but they worked well.  There were only a few 
Caballito and I have no idea if there were any
Sardinas or not.  The bait was the normal $2 each.  
(Shepherd�s Night Watch)
FISHING:
BILLFISH:    The only species around right now is 
Striped Marlin as the water has become too
cool to be comfortable for Blue Marlin.  There were 
not a lot of fish found this week but a few
lucky boats were able to hook one or two and get 
them to the boat.  Most boats were lucky if
they were able to get one to toss bait to, the fish 
were scattered out and not staying on the surface
very long.  Most of the fish that were caught were 
found while deep dropping live bait off of
Punta San Cristobal and Golden Gate Banks or while 
slow trolling live baits in the same areas. 
They have been averaging about 110 pounds with a 
few fish reaching the #140 class.  (Festival of
7 Lights)
YELLOWFIN TUNA:  I did not see nor did I hear of 
any boats finding Yellowfin Tuna this week,
but I did see a few boats flying Tuna flags.  I 
checked with the anglers from one of them and
found that they had caught Skipjack Tuna that the 
crew had flown flags for because they wanted
to be able to fly something.  The others may have 
found Yellowfin, you never know, but I heard
no word.  (O X�mas Tree)
  
DORADO:   Even the Dorado bite was a bit slow this 
week as most boats were very lucky to get
three or four fish, and most came in with just one 
or two.  Slow trolling live bait or pulling
brightly colored lures in the 9� range were what 
seemed to work.  Most of the action took place
on the Pacific side of the point and in the same 
areas as the Striped Marlin were found.  The
basics worked well, find the bait and work the 
area.  Hook up one Dorado then toss a live bait out
behind it as it comes in, there might just be 
another one or two following it.   (Away in a
Manger/Island X�mas)
WAHOO:    A few Wahoo were caught this week and 
they seemed to prefer dark colored lures. 
Most of them were in the 30-40 pound range and 
there was no concentration to them, the catches
were reported from a wide area.  (Morning Glory)
INSHORE:  Most of the inshore action took place on 
the Pacific side between the lighthouse and
Punta San Cristobal.  This area is where a school 
of Sierra has been working the beach and the
best action was in water between 15 and 60 feet 
deep.  The fish were biting on small hootchies
and Rapalas in bright colors, the favorite being 
orange/red and the fish ranged from 3 to 7 pounds. 
The average catch was two to 6 fish before the bite 
stopped, around 9 am.  A bit farther out, in
water from 60-150 feet, there were a few schools of 
Dorado found and a few boats found some
Amberjack and Snapper on the bottom around the 
rocks.    (We Three Kings/Santa Fe X�mas)
NOTES:  We are in the transition from warm summer 
waters to cooler winter water and the
fishing has shown it.  The action has not been hot 
and heavy but most days there was some fish to
be found.  Checking my log book for last year the 
same thing was going on.  We can look
forward to some continued Dorado action and the 
Striped Marlin should become more numerous
and the football and school Tuna should show up 
very soon.  This weeks report was written to
the sound of music for the holidays by one of my 
favorite artists, Ottmar Liebert.  The CD is
�Poets & Angels�, a 1990 Higher Octave release.
 
 
 |  |  
           
            | Dec 9, 2002; 10:43AM - 'Fly Hooker Daily Report |  
            | Category:  Mexico Cabo San Lucas |  
            | Author Name:  George Landrum |   
            | 
                
                    
                    | 
 �FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR DECEMBER 2, 2002
    Returning client Roy Tull is here with his 
friend David for a few days and today is their 
fishing
day.  And that is what it was, a fishing day, not a 
catching day.  Roy said it was a good day to be
on the water and that the fish got lucky.  Juan and 
Manuel again worked the Pacific side of the
Cape out to a distance of about 10 miles, and up 
the coast about 15 miles but found no fish that
were willing to bite.  In a few days Roy and David 
will be fishing for one day on the East Cape.  I
sure hope you guys have better luck up there!  Let 
me know when you return, ok?  Tight Lines!
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 3 DECEMBER, 2002
    Our friend Harry Hudson is here with his friend 
Nolan for four days of fishing with us.  Nolan
has never caught a Marlin and that is to be the 
target for all the days on the water.  They would
like to be able to catch a Dorado each day so they 
have fresh fish for dinner, other than that, the
target is to be Marlin!  Juan and Manuel took the 
boat 10 miles out from the lighthouse on the
Pacific side and worked their way up the coast.  It 
was raining a bit in the morning but by about
9am it cleared off and at 9:30 they got a Dorado in 
the boat, dinner in the box!  Around a half
hour later Manuel spotted a Marlin on the surface 
and ran the boat over to him to toss a bait.  As
he slowed the boat down the lures sunk and instead 
of eating the bait he ate the lure on the bridge
rod!  Nolan made pretty short work of him, getting 
him to the boat in about 15 minutes, then the
continued the search, but got nothing else for the 
day.
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 4 DECEMBER, 2002
    Fishing started about 12 miles straight out 
today and then Juan and Manuel worked the boat up
the coast the same distance as yesterday.  Today it 
was Harry�s turn to catch fish and he got to
reel in dinner, but that was all.  Juan said that 
they had one Marlin strike that did not hook up.  I
sure hope things get better tomorrow!
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 5 DECEMBER, 2002
    Juan called me at 5:30 this morning to let me 
know he was sick (something he ate) and would
not be coming to work so it was me and Manuel on 
the boat today.  Harry and Nolan invited our
friend Chewy to go along.  He is 19 and has never 
been on a boat before but is always asking
about the clients fishing trips.  Manuel let me 
know that the bite had been good off of Los Arcos
yesterday so that is where we started for.  We got 
an early start and were one of the first boats to
the area.  I marked no bait on the depth sounder 
and saw only a few Porpoise on the surface and
no birds at all.  We actually put the lines in the 
water shortly before Los Arcos just in case the 
fish
had moved and I continued past Los Arcos in case 
they may have headed that way.  With no signs
of life there and the Golden Gate Banks being only 
7 miles away, I decided to go and check that
area out.  Once we got to the Banks, there was only 
one other boat there, I spotted a couple of
Frigate Birds working and big splashes underneath 
them.  Big Yellowfin Tuna, in the 150-200
pound class were feeding on small bait.  We tried 
for an hour to get them to eat something,
anything, but had no luck with lures or live bait.  
Eventually a few more boats arrived and we
tried deep dropping live bait for about a half hour 
with no results.  I headed back to the Los Arcos
area and when we got there I realized that is where 
I should have stayed as it must have been a
tide associated bite.  One boat was fighting a 
Marlin and just before we got to him we had a 
strike
on the bridge rod.  I did not see the fish, only 
the splash but Manuel said it was a big Dorado. 
About five boats were working a very small area and 
suddenly two Frigate Birds swooped down
and there were a pair of Striped Marlin under them!  
They were only about 50 yards in front of us
and by the time Manuel got a bait hooked up to toss 
they were just off the bow and went down. 
Norman said that if he had a very long handled tag 
stick he could have free-tagged him!  No luck
for us there and as we continued towards the Marina 
we saw a monster concentration of boats off
of the lighthouse.  Lots of Frigates working and 
boats zooming here and there showed that they
were trying to get some Tuna in amongst the 
Porpoise but we saw no one hooking up.  There
were at least 50 boats in there!  We made it back 
to the Marina with no flags but at least Manuel
and Juan have a target for tomorrow!
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR DECEMBER 6, 2002
    Juan was feeling better today so the worked the 
boat as crew. Manuel had decided to spend the
day working the area off of Los Arcos and Harry and 
Nolan were all for it.  They spent all day
and saw lots of bait and lots of Porpoise, but 
never got a strike.  Harry said that he and Nolan
thought about going somewhere else but that every 
time they started to say something the bait
boiled to the surface and the area looked so fishy 
they changed their minds!  Well, it was not a
very productive four days of fishing for the guys, 
but Nolan did get his first Marlin!  Both Harry
and Nolan are fishermen and they acknowledged that 
sometimes you strike out, hopefully next
time their luck will be better.  Until then, Tight 
Lines!
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR DECEMBER 7, 2002
    For today and the next two days we have our 
good friend David Reese fishing aboard the �Fly
Hooker� and he is here on a �Guy�s� vacation 
with his friends Mike Shane and James Fu.  We
promised David�s wife Peggy that we would try and 
keep the guy�s out of trouble!  Today Juan
and Manuel tried once again to fish the area off of 
Los Arcos, on the Pacific side.  There is just so
much bait there and so much going on that it is 
hard to keep away.  You just KNOW that with all
that bait there has to be some predators around the 
area!  Well, at about 9am to 10am they did
have two Marlin hook-ups, but they both came 
unbuttoned.  The first fish they thought they were
going to have a good chance at but no...it threw 
the hook after a few minutes.  The other fish was
just a strike and quick pull before it came off.  
They have decided that no matter how good it
looks there they are going to try somewhere else 
tomorrow!  We will keep our fingers crossed for
them.
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR DECEMBER 8, 2002
    The second day of fishing for David, Mike and 
James was a lot better than yesterday�s trip!  No
Marlin strikes today, but that may be because they 
went elsewhere in the morning.  Today was
Manuels day off and we had Chino working the deck.  
Juan pointed the bow of the boat to the
south as they left San Lucas Bay and ran out about 
9 miles than began to troll.  At a distance of
16 miles they saw a boat stopped and went over to 
check him out.  The boat had found a piece of
wood floating in the water and was hooking up 
around it, getting some nice Dorado.  It turned
out to be a good thing that David had purchased 20 
baits instead of the usual 10 pieces!  The live
bait turned the Dorado on and Mike and James had a 
blast!  Dave was the beer server and coach
most of the time, but when they had six fish hooked 
at one time he had to step in and assist. 
About four or five fish were lost due to tangled 
lines that broke but they ended up with 10
Dorado, a limit for five people (including Chino 
and Juan).  It was not until they were down to
two live baits that Dave told them to start using 
chunks, otherwise they were going to run out. 
With a limit of Dorado in the box they started to 
look for Marlin or Wahoo or Tuna, but there
was no other action.  The Dorado, weighing between 
15 and 30 pounds, filleted out to 83 pounds
of meat and Dave decided to have it vacume packed 
and frozen to take home.  Tomorrow
anything goes, and hopefuly they will come across a 
Marlin willing to eat!
 Until next week, Tight Lines!
George, Mary, Juan, and Manuel , the �Fly Hooker� 
crew!
 
 
 |  |  
           
            | Dec 9, 2002; 10:39AM - Cabo Fishing Report |  
            | Category:  Mexico Cabo San Lucas |  
            | Author Name:  George Landrum |   
            | 
                
                    
                    |   
 CAPT. GEORGE LANDRUM
�FLY HOOKER� SPORTFISHING
gmlandrum@hotmail.com
CABO SAN LUCAS FISH REPORT     DECEMBER 2-8, 2002
WEATHER:  It�s starting to get a bit cooler here 
in Cabo so we know that its winter time!  Our
morning lows have been in the 60-63 degree range 
while our daytime highs have been in the mid
80�s.  Early in the week we had mostly cloudy 
skies as we had a front move over us and on
Tuesday we got some rain in the morning and the 
afternoon.  After the rain last week you should
see the desert out there, green as can be and the 
flowers just shooting out!  Right now we have
clear skies and light winds from the NNW for the 
mornings at around 5-7mph with it picking up
to around 12-15mph in the late afternoon.  (Trade 
Winds)
WATER:    Just as our air temperatures have cooled 
a bit, so has the water temperature.  Last
week we were looking at surface temps in the 80-81 
degree range out front and now we have
them in the 78 degree range.  Looking at the area 
in the larger sense we are not seeing the 80-81
degree water unless you go up past Golden Gate 
Banks or at least 35 miles to the SE.  Within a
15 mile radius of Cabo it is an even 78 degrees.  
25 miles to the southwest we have a finger of
cold water moving in from the Pacific that is 
showing temps of 75 degrees with a well defined
edge.  There have been no swells to speak of and 
the surface conditions have been great.  Most
mornings there has been just a light wind riffle 
and in the afternoons just a light chop on fairly 
flat
seas.  Good blue water everywhere you go!  (Oceans 
Apart)
BAIT:    There were some Mackerel early in the week 
and now it is mostly Caballito.  The
normal price of $2 per bait.  I have not asked for 
nor have I heard if there are any Sardinas
available.  (Holding Back The Years)
FISHING:
BILLFISH:    Not too surprisingly with the lowering 
surface temperatures the number of Blue
Marlin being found has dropped considerably.  There 
were a few at the beginning of the week and
almost none at all over the weekend.  The main 
Billfish for the week was Striped Marlin, a
situation likely to continue now until next summer.  
Just because they are the most numerous
though does not mean that they are out there in 
great numbers.  Most boats have been able to find
at least one or two a day and a few lucky ones have 
been able to catch up to three a day, judging
by the flags I have seen flying on boats coming in.  
Most of the fish were being found on the
Pacific side and were pretty evenly mixed with 
about half coming from the area to the south of the
Jaime Banks and the other half coming out of the 
area between the lighthouse and Los Arcos, out
between three and ten miles.  The average size is 
down a bit with most of them in the 100-120
pound range and the bite has been mostly on live 
bait.  Boats have been finding them just as you
usually look for Dorado, spotting Frigate Birds 
working then racing over to toss a live bait under
them.  (Blue Universe)
YELLOWFIN TUNA:    Very few Yellowfin were caught 
this week although on Thursday if you
had been out at the lighthouse on the Pacific side 
you would have thought that the bite was wide
open!  There was a giant group of Porpoise working 
the area and clouds of Frigates working
them.  The action attracted about 50 boats that 
were tossing live bait right and left, dropping 
bait
down hopeing to get bit and pulling every lure 
known to man in the hope of a Tuna bite.  Any
time the Frigates would re-form and start feeding 
again there would be a race with around a
dozen of the closet boats running full throttle 
into the middle of the mess, tossing out bait as 
the
slid to a stop.  I only heard of one boat getting a 
Tuna out of it!  The same day I was up at the
Golden Gate Banks earlier and there were Tuna in 
the 100-200 pound class feeding on very small
baits, Manuel said they were Bullito (sp?).  We 
worked them for a while until other boats showed
up and the fish went down.  The few other fish that 
were found this week were footballs,
unassociated with any Porpoise.  They were caught 
on feathers pulled for Dorado.  (Dream
Catcher)
DORADO:    It seemed the key to getting  numbers of 
Dorado this week was to find some
floating debris.  If you did, and there were not 
too many boats working it at the time, you stood a
good chance of picking up a limit.  Most of the 
fish caught under debris were caught on live bait
or chunks.  If you wee not one of the first few 
boats there, and if you were not getting bit on
fly-lined baits, it sometimes helped to rig them 
with a 2-4 ounce lead about 5 feet away and let
them down around 60 feet.  There were a few 
scattered fish found within 3 miles of the shore 
and
they were most often spotted under working Frigate 
birds.  Best lures were 6� feathers in bright
colors with some of the larger Dorado going for 12 
inch plastics in rainbow hues.  (Feelin�
Alright)
WAHOO:    There were some Wahoo caught this week 
and I heard of a few in the 80-90 pound
class.  Most of the fish I heard of were found off 
the coast on the Pacific side while boats were
working for Dorado and Striped Marlin.  There were 
a couple caught at the Jaime Banks that
were over 60 pounds but most of the fish were in 
the 30-40 pound range.  Best lures were Braid
Marauders in purple/black and chromed jet heads of 
at least 6 ounces with dark skirts.  (Midnight
Swim)
INSHORE:  While not seeing them myself, I heard 
reports of a halfway decent bite on Roosterfish
on the Cortez side of the Cape, with one boat 
getting a fish in the 50 pound class and getting a 
lot
in the 15-20 pound size.  There are Sierra showing 
up as well and they are 3-5 pounds average. 
The Roosterfish were hitting live Mullet and the 
Sierras were biting on Clark spoons and on small
Rapalas. I have also heard reports of a few 
Yellowtail being found as well.  Most of the Pangas
have been focusing on Dorado since there have been 
a few nice sized fish within their reach. 
(Dipsea Trail)
NOTES:  While the weather and the water were very 
nice this past week, the fishing has been
just average.  A fair selection to be found, but 
nothing in any great quantities.  It may have
something to do with the new moon on Wednesday, but 
things should start to pick up real soon. 
The Whales are starting to show up in force and 
have been sighted on every trip this week.  This
weeks report was written to the music of one of my 
favorite guitarists (I have a lot of them!)
Craig Chaquico on his 1997 Higher Octave Music Inc. 
release �Once in a Blue Universe�.  On
this album he is joined with artists such as 
Richard Elliot, John Klemmer, Dave Koz, Douglas
Spotted Eagle, 3rd Force and Peter White.  As you 
can tell, this is a great Jazz and Rock mix!
 
 
 |  |  
           
            | Dec 2, 2002; 09:57AM - Fly Hooker Daily Fishing Reports |  
            | Category:  Mexico Cabo San Lucas |  
            | Author Name:  George Landrum |   
            | 
                
                    
                    | 
 �FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 25 NOVEMBER 2002
     Rick Harris is in town again on a short notice 
vacation and today he went fishing aboard the
�Fly Hooker� with a friend of the family, Kyle.  
Juan and Manuel took the boat up the Pacific side
and worked the area about three miles offshore of 
the Margarita/Los Arcos area and had a lot of
fun with Dorado.  Rick only wanted to keep a little 
bit for dinner so they started releasing fish.  A
total of 8 large Dorado gave them a lot of jumps 
and lots of fight and they were back at the
Marina by 12:30!  Thanks Rick, we look forward to 
seeing you again next year!
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 26 NOVEMBER 2002
    Walt Ehnat and his grown sons Tom and Marty 
were our anglers today.  This is their third day
of fishing on this vacation and they had a blast!  
Well, everyone except Marty.  He crawled out of
the cabin when the boat got back in at noon and 
wanted to know when we were leaving!  A little
bit of the old �Tequila Flu�!  Well Walt pretty 
much took it easy since it wasn�t too long ago 
that
he had a triple bypass so it was up to Tom to do 
most of the fishing.  Juan and Manuel were able
to keep him busy by hooking up 9 Dorado, 2 
Yellowfin and letting him fight an estimated 310
pound Blue Marlin for over an hour before tagging 
and releasing it!  I sure hope the fishing stays
this good.
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 28 NOVEMBER 2002
    It clouded up last night and this morning, just 
after the boat left the Marina with John and Ray
aboard for a half day of fishing, the skies opened 
up and it poured!  This was the first time for
John and Ray to do any kind of fishing and one of 
them had a very worried wife.  About mid day
we were able to calm her down with the report that 
the guys were catching fish, were not seasick
and would be coming in on time.  Manuel and Edgar 
went back to the Pacific side, up off of Los
Arcos and caught 7 Dorado and 2 Yellowfin Tuna.
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 29 NOVEMBER, 2002
    Brothers Zach and Brian Eastman  are fishing 
today and tomorrow and they really want to
catch a Marlin.  We had our fingers crossed when 
they left this morning.  Juan and Manuel went
back to the Pacific  side and were able to get 4 
Dorado in the boat but no Marlin.  They did have
strikes from 4 Striped Marlin and saw lots of them 
on the surface and jumping but were not able
to get a hook to stick in any of them.  Hopefully 
tomorrow! 
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 30 NOVEMBER 2002
    The second day of fishing for Zach and Brian 
was not as eventful as yesterday.  Juan and
Manuel returned to the same area as yesterday but 
the fish had moved on.  Today they didn�t even
see a Marlin and they only caught one Dorado.
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR DECEMBER 1, 2002
    Zach Eastman decided to give it one more try 
and Brian decided that he wanted to do the Sand
Dunes ATV excursion.  Zach invited me to go along 
and I was happy to get the chance.  Lines
went in the water outside the lighthouse on the 
Pacific side and for the next three hours we had a
boat ride as we worked our way up the coast toward 
the Golden Gate Banks.  About three miles
short of the Banks Juan spotted a turtle in the 
water and as we passed by him we had a very large
Bull Dorado come and grab the long rigger lure.  
The fish didn�t stick and we worked the area for
a little bit with no luck.  We even dragged a live 
bait by the turtle, hoping that there were more
Dorado under it.  When we got to the banks there 
were 12 boats there and all of them were
trolling, with no luck.  At about the same time 
everyone stopped trolling and dropped down live
bait.  We gave it a shot for about a half hour but 
with no luck.  We were told that the bite had
been early using the deep dropped bait.  Lots of 
bait balls, schools of Mackerel on the depth
finder, but no interested Marlin.  It was not until 
we were almost all the way back, just about 4
miles off of Los Arcos, that we finally had a 
Marlin strike.  The fish grabbed the shotgun lure 
but
did not hook up.  I dropped back a live bait and we 
saw the Marlin come in and grab it.  I ended
up farming the fish!  He ran with it for a few 
second, stopped to eat it then ran again.  I set 
the
hook on the second run and I guess I didn�t wait 
ling enough because I had good solid weight for
a few seconds then could feel the hook pull loose.  
That was our only shot of the day and I blew
it!  Again, I�m sorry Zach!  Our fingers are 
crossed that next time will be better.  Until then, 
Tight
Lines!
    
Until Next Week, Tight Lines form George, Mary, 
Juan and Manuel, the �Fly Hooker� Crew!
gmlandrum@hotmail.com
 
 
 |  |  
           
            | Dec 2, 2002; 09:52AM - Cabo Bite Report |  
            | Category:  Mexico Cabo San Lucas |  
            | Author Name:  George Landrum |   
            | 
                
                    
                    | 
 CAPT. GEORGE LANDRUM
�FLY HOOKER� SPORTFISHING
gmlandrum@hotmail.com
CABO SAN LUCAS FISH REPORT     NOVEMBER 25-DECEMBER 
1, 2002
WEATHER:   Our week started out very nice with the 
nighttime lows in the high 60�s and the
daytime highs in the mid to low 90�s.  On 
Wednesday we began to get clouds moving in strong
and checking the weather maps found the Pineapple 
Express had moved right over us.  We have
had cloudy skies and showers everyday since then 
but it is clearing up now.  No really heavy
gullywashing downpours, just enough to mess up the 
streets and wash trash into the Marina.  The
cloud cover has caused the temps to drop and we are 
now seeing low 60�s to mid-high 70�s.  The
desert is going to be beautiful in a week!  
(Tropical Legs)
WATER:  Both the Pacific and the Sea of Cortez were 
calm all week long but there was some
pretty choppy conditions on Wednesday as the front 
moved over us.  The inshore water dirtied up
on Thursday due to the rain but out past a mile it 
gets blue again.  Our water temps have lowered
a bit as well with water outside the Cape reading 
in the 80-81 degree range.  Our warm water is
now on the Pacific side but the temp breaks are 
far, far away.  (Amazon)
BAIT:  Most of the bait available this week were 
small 8-10� Mackerel and the price was the
usual $2 per bait.  A few Caballito were in the 
bait boat tanks as well.  I have no knowledge of
Sardina availability.  (Magic In Your Eyes)
FISHING:
BILLFISH:  What a strange week!  I was not 
expecting much in the way of Marlin but I was
surprised.  There were still Blues and a few Blacks 
being caught this week, and a lot of Striped
Marlin being sighted and caught.  Toss in a mix of 
Sailfish and just about every billfish we have
available here in Cabo was around this week.  
Naturally the Striped Marlin were the most
common, and most boats were able to get at least a 
couple of them hooked up.  Live bait was the
ticket and most of the fish were spotted tailing.  
For lures, anything in Dorado colors seemed to
work well on all the Billfish, likely because there 
are so many of them around right now.  Most of
the bite has been on the Pacific side, up in the 
Los Arcos area from 2 miles to 10 miles offshore,
and including the Golden Gate Banks.  (Calypso 
Getaway)
YELLOWFIN TUNA:  The Tuna bite dropped off a lot 
this week and almost all of the fish I have
seen or heard about have been footballs to 20 
pounds.  There have been a few schoolies in the
25-35 pound range as well but no large fish.  The 
fish have not been associated with Porpoise,
most of the strikes have been in the blind while 
fishing for Dorado.  6� feathers and hard plastic
lures in smaller sizes worked well with no specific 
color mentioned by anyone.  Due to the effort
put in this week  Dorado, most of the Yellowfin 
found were caught within 5 miles of the Pacific
coast.  (Dr. Macumba)
DORADO:   Last week I said that it looked like the 
Dorado bite was going to keep getting better
and it has.  The average size is up to around 20 
pounds and there has been plenty of them around. 
Most of the boats were working the Pacific side up 
to 10 miles offshore.  A lot of the action was
within 2 miles of the beach and the boats were 
pretty concentrated in there.  The key was finding
Frigate birds working and getting in a pass on them 
with the lures.  If you hooked up, drop back
some live baits and wait for the action.  Most 
boats were able to meet the 2 Dorado per angler
limit without a problem early in the morning, then 
went in search of other species.  (Angelina)
WAHOO:  I saw a few Wahoo flags this week but when 
I talked to the anglers I found that most
of them had been flown by boats that had found some 
nice sized Sierra inshore.  I am sure there
were some Wahoo caught but don�t know the where�s 
or what�s this week.  (Long Ago And Far
Away)
INSHORE:  Up until Wednesday there was some fair 
fishing for Sierra and a few small
Roosterfish inshore, and there was good action on 
the smaller Tunas, the Skipjack and Bonita. 
Most of the Pangas were concentrating on the Dorado 
bite and after Wednesday�s weather
change, the water inshore became too murky for 
anything but the Dorado search.  (Heart String)
NOTES: If anyone reading these reports has 
questions about fishing in Cabo or just Saltwater
fishing in general, feel free to check the �Ask 
The Captain� section at www.flyhooker.com , my
homepage.  I have just gotten the bugs worked out 
and will be answering questions each morning. 
To all those anglers who have fished with us and 
have tagged and released a Marlin using the
�Billfish Foundation� tags we provide, I am sorry 
to say that the Foundation has changed their
policy concerning the issuance of free release 
certificates.  Here is a quote from them:  �Yes, 
it is
a new policy.  We generate through the Release 
Certificate Program 10,000 to 12,000 certificates
a year, all for free.  It just got too expensive 
not to do something.  The new policy is $25
introductory membership offer where all 
certificates are then free, along with the rest of 
the
premiums, or, $20 a certificate.  There was really 
no way to give the heads-up to captains and
fleets, there are just too many.�  So, if you want 
the certificate you are going to have to pay for 
it,
but hey, it�s not a lot of money and it goes to a 
very good program!  This weeks report was
written to the music of one of my favorite 
songwriter/guitarists, Earl Klugh on the 1991 
�Blue
Note� Capitol release, �The Best Of Earl Klugh�.
 
 
 |  |  
           
            | Nov 25, 2002; 12:19PM - Fly Hooker Daily Fishing Reports |  
            | Category:  Mexico Cabo San Lucas |  
            | Author Name:  George Landrum |   
            | 
                
                    
                    | 
 �FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 18 NOVEMBER 2002
     Our local friends Don and Cathy Cole booked 
the �Fly Hooker� today to go fishing with their
pastor Mike and his wife and Kathy�s brother Bob 
and his wife.  Some fish for dinner and perhaps
a chance to fight a Marlin were all they were 
looking for but instead they had a boat ride.  It 
was
enjoyable, and they did say that watching the 
Porpoise was very nice but since there was only one
Tuna strike (didn�t hook up) they had a lot of 
time to just rest and eat.  Don and Bob are going
again on Sunday so we hope the action improves by 
then.  This is the first trip on our boat where
Don got skunked, I sure hope it doesn�t happen 
again!!
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 19 NOVEMBER 2002
    Raul and Dave Hernandez and their friend Harvey 
are fishing with us today through the 23rd
and I thought about just combining all the days 
into one report but nah, never mind, I would
probably forget something then.  They are from 
Texas, the Dallas area and are usually found out
fishing for Catfish and Striped Bass.  They wanted 
to catch big fish and decided that Cabo was the
place to go.  Sometime during the 5 days of fishing 
they would like to be able to each fight a
Marlin, that is the ultimate goal.  Of course, any 
fish at all is great and the larger the better!  
Well,
Juan and Manuel decided to go up the Pacific coast 
again.  They were lines in outside the light
house and had a triple strike on Dorado, getting 
one to the boat.  They continued up the coast
almost 25 miles and had no action at all.  
Returning, they hooked into three more Dorado in 
the
same area where they hooked up this morning and 
this time they managed to get two of the fish
into the boat.  Some very nice fillets were taken 
over to the smokehouse and you know they are
going to enjoy eating them when they get home!  
Tomorrow the plan is to go south and see if
there are any Marlin out there.  I�m keeping my 
fingers crossed for these guys, they are so nice
they deserve to get lots of fish!  Until tomorrow, 
Tight Lines!
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 20 NOVEMBER 2002
    Juan and Manuel took off with Dave, Raul and 
Harvey this morning and headed south from the
lighthouse.  They worked their way out 18 miles 
without spotting any Striped Marlin.  They did
pick up one Dorado on the way out and one on the 
way back, both fairly close to the lighthouse
area.  Enough Dorado they said, lets go for Marlin 
tomorrow!  Fingers crossed.
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 21 NOVEMBER, 2002
     Today was Juan�s day off and Abulito worked 
as deckhand.  Manuel decided to try the 95 spot
without success and then they worked up towards the 
1150, again with no luck.  A friend
contacted him on the radio and said that they had 
some luck deep dropping live bait off of the
ledge at the lighthouse so they gave that a shot 
for an hour and a half with no luck.  Dave, Raul
and Harvey are getting antsy, they only have two 
more days to get their billfish.  Our fingers and
toes are crossed!
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 22 NOVEMBER 2002
    High tide was early this morning and Juan and 
Manuel decided that they should try the deep
drop of the lighthouse first thing, working the 
tide change.  Finally some action!  Dave caught a
Sailfish of about 80 pounds and a Dorado as well 
while both Raul and Harvey had Marlin grab
their baits but were unable to get them hooked up 
very well.  They did get some jumps out of
their Marlin but the hooks were thrown.  They also 
got strikes from Wahoo but were not able to
get them hooked up either.  Tomorrow they are going 
to leave a little bit earlier because the bite
happened early today.  They had gone through the 12 
baits they had bought by 11 am so
tomorrow they are going to buy a few more!  
Fingers, toes and eyes crossed for their Marlin!
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 23 NOVEMBER 2002
    Today was the last day of fishing for Raul, 
Dave and Harvey and they went out to repeat the
action they had yesterday.  It was not the same, 
but both Raul and Harry got to fight and release a
Sailfish while working the bottom with live bait.  
Dave was the designated photographer since he
had gotten his fish yesterday, and he did a fine 
job of it as was shown by the results played back
when they returned.  They also hooked up to four 
big Skipjack Tuna and Dave got to fight a
Stingray estimated at 25-30 pounds that took a 
liking to his live bait.  The guys had a great time
and were happy that they managed to get a billfish 
each.  Thanks go out to Raul and Dave and
Harry for being a great bunch to be with!  Looking 
forward to either 2003 or 2004!
�FLY HOOKER� FISH REPORT FOR 24 NOVEMBER 2002
    Don Cole and his brother-in-law Bob were our 
anglers today and they invited me to go along
with them.  When we left this morning we were 
hoping to not have a repeat of Mondays outing
when they got skunked!  Thankfully we found fish, 
but it was a morning bite for sure.  Don said
that he would rather catch fish for the table than 
catch trophy fish so Juan directed the boat up the
Pacific coast and we fished less than two miles 
offshore between Margaritas and Migrainos.  Bob
was first up in the chair and the first strike was 
on the bridge rod, a nice Dorado of about 20
pounds.  It took only a few minutes to coach Bob on 
the proper technique and the fish was gaffed
and in the box shortly thereafter.  The next fish 
was about 15 minutes later at 8am and it was a
slightly smaller Dorado, one about 15 pounds.  Don 
made short work of that fish and we
continued to work the area, along with about 10 
other boats, but without any further luck.  At
around 9:30 Juan had us working under a Frigate 
bird and was getting frustrated when we could
not get a bite.  He gunned the engines and it may 
have been the increase in speed, but a big Bull
Dorado jumped on a lure and Bob was off to the 
races again.  This fish took a lot of line and 
after
the lines were cleared we dropped a bait way back 
there and managed to hook up another
Dorado, this one a big female that Don got to 
fight.  Both of these fish, estimated at between 30
and 35 pounds, ended up in the fish box!  We did 
have another Dorado strike at around 11 am, a
big Bull that struck the short line, but it failed 
to hook up well.  We returned to the dock with
Don�s cooler filled with zip-locked fillets and 
with both Don and Bob with smiles on their faces!
Until Next Week, Tight Lines form George, Mary, 
Juan and Manuel, the �Fly Hooker� Crew!
gmlandrum@hotmail.com
www.flyhooker.com
 
 
 |  |  
           
            | Nov 25, 2002; 12:16PM - Cabo Bite Report |  
            | Category:  Mexico Cabo San Lucas |  
            | Author Name:  George Landrum |   
            | 
                
                    
                    | 
 CAPT. GEORGE LANDRUM
�FLY HOOKER� SPORTFISHING
gmlandrum@hotmail.com
CABO SAN LUCAS FISH REPORT     NOVEMBER 18-24, 2002
WEATHER:   This week the weather cooled a bit, 
seems as if we are approaching an autumn
kind of situation.  Our nighttime lows have been in 
the low 60�s while our daytime highs have
reached the mid 90�s with a bit of humidity at 
times.  The skies have been partly cloudy for the
most part and we have had no rain this past week.  
The weathermen say that we can expect some
thundershowers this coming week, but I�ll believe 
it when I hear/see it!  (Theme For A Rainy
Day)
   
WATER:  Surface conditions have been very good on 
both the Sea of Cortez and the pacific side
this week.  Weak winds from the northwest have 
ensured good conditions all week long and the
most difficult situations we have had to deal with 
have been the tide changes concurrent with the
full moon.  Water temps have been the same as last 
week with the exception that the cool band of
water coming down from the northern Sea of Cortez 
has gotten closer.  Everything else has
stayed about the same.  There have been distinct 
temperature breaks to the west of both the San
Jaime and the Golden Gate banks, and the breaks 
have been pretty severe, but the distances have
been too far for most of the fleet boats here in 
Cabo.  We are looking at 50-70 miles out and a
temp change of 5 degrees in a mile distance.  (Take 
You There)
BAIT:  Most of the bait we found this week has been 
small Mackerel, the 8-10 inch size.  There
have been some Caballito and both species have been 
the usual $2 per bait.  With a bit of
bargaining you can get 12 for $20.  There are still 
some Sardines at the usual $20-25 per small
scoop.   (Jamaican Winds)
FISHING:
BILLFISH:  This week has been a bit strange for 
Billfish.  We have been seeing a lot of Sailfish
caught early in the morning along with a few 
Striped Marlin being hooked up.  Normally the
abundance of Sailfish corresponds with a very 
strong Dorado bite, but this week it seems that the
Sails have stood ground on their own.  Most of 
these fish have been found close to shore in the
same areas that the Dorado frequent, and most of 
them have been caught on live bait.  That
average size has been 70 pounds, no minnow for sure 
but just a little shy of the 120 pound Striped
Marlin people are looking for.  These fish (the 
Striped Marlin) have been caught in the same areas
but are also being found on the 95 spot and in 
areas further to the south.  There  have been a few
late season Blue Marlin hooked up, but not many of 
them have been landed.  Best baits for the
Sailfish have been the small live Mackerel, best 
for the Striped Marlin have been the same baits
plus any Caballito.  The Blue marlin have been 
fooled by artificial lures this week, and mostly by
ones in darker colors.  (Mobimientos Del Alma)
YELLOWFIN TUNA:   This full moon seems to be a bit 
different.  Usually we see an up-swing in
the Yellowfin Tuna during the full moon but this 
week there actually seemed to be a drop.  The
fish that were found were footballs and they all 
were associated with either Porpoise or floating
debris.  Most of the favorite spots were in the 
current lines at either 12 miles or 25 miles to the
south.  These fish were still fun to catch and 
there were plenty of them around if you were in the
right spot at the right time.  6� cedar plugs were 
a hands down favorite, followed by 6� feathers in
Guacamaya or Petrolero.  (She Never Said Why)
DORADO:  Thank goodness for most of the boats that 
there were Dorado around this week.  If
not for these great fish, many of the boats would 
not be flying any flags at all.  The Dorado were
running from 15 to 25 pounds on the average and 
most of them were found by trolling artificial
then switching to live bait once the schools were 
located.  Our fish this week seemed to show a
preference for the Pacific side of the Cape, and 
most of them were only a short distance from the
shore.  (Kissin� On The Beach)
WAHOO:  There were a few nice fish caught this week 
and I suspect it had a lot to do with the
full moon.  They averaged 35 pounds and some of 
them were caught on live bait while deep
dropping live Mackerel for the Striped Marlin.  I 
heard stories aplenty from anglers about the
number of baits they brought up that had either 
been cut in half or stolen altogether. (Trailer 
hook
hidden in the tail!?)  (Every Moment With You)
INSHORE:    The inshore fishing this week was 
almost a mirror of last weeks escapades.  Most of
the small boat fleet was focused on slow trolling 
live Caballito or Mackerel in the hope of finding 
a Dorado or a Striped Marlin.  There were reports 
of small Yellowtail and Roosterfish, but I did
find out that the bite for those small gear tackle 
busters, the �Skipjack�, was wide open. 
(Midnight In San Juan)
NOTES:   Those of you with whom we have tagged and 
released fish using the �Billfish
Foundation� tags during the past 3 months, you 
need to be aware that things have changed just a
bit.  When last we ordered the tags (two months 
ago) there was supposed to be the option of
having a release certificate mailed to you stating 
the date, location, angler, boat, species,
estimated size and fighting time.  This certificate 
was supposed to be at no charge to you as the
angler.  Well, the �Billfish Foundation� is a 
non-profit organization dependent solely on 
donations
from anglers in order to keep its self afloat.  
It�s purpose has been to educate anglers about
species sustainability, and the collection of more 
accurate fish data to better understand the
reproduction and growth cycles of the Billfish.  
According to the foundation,  there has been a
lack of financial support, they claim it is due to 
the economic situation in the U.S., and due to the
climbing expenses they have been forced to begin 
charging for the release certificates.  As a
non-member there is a charge of $20 per certificate 
but if you decide to become a 1 year member
at the special introduction rate of $25, all 
certificates are free.  If you are confused, just 
go to their
website and check them out.  They said there were 
too many charter boats and organizations to
be able to notify everyone in advance.  Guess that 
is why I had to find out by my clients e-mailing
me to ask why they were getting a charge for 
certificates.  Sigh, I guess it�s not just a 
Mexican
thing after all!  This weeks report was written to 
the sounds of Earl Klugh and his guitar on the
1991 Warner Brothers CD release �Midnight in San 
Juan�
 
 
 |  |  
           
            | Nov 18, 2002; 10:16AM - Cabo Bite Report |  
            | Category:  Mexico Cabo San Lucas |  
            | Author Name:  George Landrum |   
            | 
                
                    
                    | 
 CAPT. GEORGE LANDRUM
�FLY HOOKER� SPORTFISHING
gmlandrum@hotmail.com
www.flyhooker.com
CABO SAN LUCAS FISH REPORT     NOVEMBER 11-17, 2002
WEATHER:   Once again we have had wonderful weather 
here in Cabo.  Our nighttime lows
have reached the mid 60�s except on Thursday night 
when it only got to about 75 degrees with a
lot of humidity.  We actually had to turn on the 
a.c. to be comfortable.  Daytime highs have
reached the 90 degree mark on occasion but except 
for Thursday, they have been very
comfortable.  No rain and only scattered clouds all 
week long.  Early in the week steady breeze
from the northwest but later on it shifted a bit 
and on Wednesday came from the south then just
died!   (City Street Life)
WATER:  The surface conditions on both the Sea of 
Cortez and the Pacific are calm now, with
slight 1-4 foot seas.  There were 3-5 foot swells 
with wind chop early in the week.  Water temps
have pretty much remained in the 80-83 degree range 
within 30 miles or more of the Cape and the
temperature break is a long way out, 60 miles to 
the southwest or 30  miles to the northwest.   
Both these areas are showing a 5 degree change 
within a distance of two miles or less.  This area
of warm water that is wrapped around the Cape right 
not seems to be moving slowly to the
southwest and away.  (Self Preservation)
BAIT:  Both Caballito and some Mackerel have been 
available this week at the usual $2 per bait. 
There have been Sardinas as well, and as normal 
when they are not really thick, the price has been
a bit high, in the area of $20-$25 per small scoop.  
(Full Moon Risin�)
 
FISHING:
BILLFISH:  As the full moon approaches the Marlin 
have started to bite better.  It has not been
uncommon for boats to get multiple shots at the 
Striped Marlin.  They have been found from 2 to
30 miles out on both the Pacific and the Cortez 
side, often in small groups.  The bite had been a
mix of both bait and lures with live Mackerel out-
performing the Caballito and Bleeding mackerel
colors on lures working best.  There are still Blue 
Marlin around but not in great numbers. 
(Funky Reggae Rock)
YELLOWFIN TUNA:  Dolphin pods have been the key for 
both football fish and some of the
larger schoolies, as well as a few #200  fish.  
There has been no concentration close to the Cape
as the fish have moved considerably every day.  A 
few of the private yachts coming down the
coast have reported concentrations of fish in the 
area of the Finger Banks, over 50 miles north. 
Here, six inch feathers, cedar plugs and Marauders 
have worked well on the football and
schoolies, while the larger fish have been mostly 
on live bait.  (Charo Luz)
DORADO:   This weeks bright spot for sure, it seems 
as if the fishing for these acrobats just
keeps getting better.  Many of the fish are in the 
20-30 pound class, perfect for filleting, but there
have been larger fish caught as well. As is normal 
for Dorado, finding the first fish is the key to
getting the school.  Most of the fish have first 
been spotted under working Frigate birds on the
Pacific side, fairly near the beach.  Bright 
colored lures from 6-8 inches have attracted the 
first
fish and live bait has gotten the larger ones.  
Most boats focusing on Dorado have been able to get
the 2 fish per person limit for their clients, then 
releasing the rest.  (Survive)
WAHOO:  We had a pretty good Wahoo bite this week 
and it did not occur very far out.  A lot of
fish were caught off of Gray Rock and Cabo Falso.  
Almost any point held a fish or two and most
of them were in the 40 pound class.  A few boats 
were covered up as small packs attacked the
lures, and many of the fish left the area with 
souvenirs as their razor teeth cut through the mono
leaders on most of the lures.  Rapala Magnum CD�s 
and Braid Marauders in both black/purple
and orange/black worked very well.  (Everybody�s 
Bizness)
INSHORE:  All the normal pelagics were targeted by 
the Panga fleet this week as they all could
be found fairly near.  With Wahoo biting well and 
it being almost a sure thing for Dorado, few of
them were focusing on the traditional nearshore 
fish.  There were small Roosterfish accounted
for, mostly on the Cortez side of the Cape, and 
there was good fishing for Snapper when the tide
was right, as well as good fishing for grouper.  I 
heard of no large fish caught this week but did
see one grouper in the 80 pound class and several 
Snappers in the 10 pound class in fish holds. 
(Charity)
NOTES: If anyone reading these reports has 
questions about fishing in Cabo or just Saltwater
fishing in general, feel free to check the �Ask 
The Captain� section at www.flyhooker.com , my
homepage.  I have just gotten the bugs worked out 
and will be answering questions each morning. 
Ah, we finally have outdoor live music back in 
town!  This week on Tuesday and Thursday at the
Tanga-Tanga bar, the reggae group �Riddim Forz� 
was playing between 3 and 6pm.  Last year
the city shut down outdoor music due to the 
complaints of residents in the �Pedregal�, the
exclusive housing area above town.  Those 
complaints were all voiced due to the nighttime bar
bands and Brad, the owner of the Tanga-Tanga 
figures that if the music is over by 6pm there
won�t be any reason for them to complain.  Sheft-
Hat Khnemu has revamped the band since
putting out the CD this report was written to, and 
he now has a more driven sound, one that has
everyone here smiling and dancing to!  Brad says 
that as long as there are no complaints the band
will be playing those days every week.  Written to 
the rockin reggae of �Riddim Forz� on their
self produced, self titled, undated CD, available 
here in Cabo!  Irie mon!
 
 
 |  |  |