BajaNomad

Billfish and Gamefish

Osprey - 1-22-2016 at 11:49 AM

Buying, Selling Billfish and Gamefish

I have the current PESCA law book (15th Edition – 2000) and it shows the 1st Edition was published in 1972. That said, I don’t know the exact date the law as respects the capture and sale of billfish or gamefish was signed into law but it is illegal to sell billfish and gamefish captured in Mexican waters.

A year or so ago I mentioned something about it in a personal Email to a neighbor – he sent my private words to Spa Buena Vista resort and the owners gave me hell for saying anything that would discourage fishermen from coming down here to East Cape to the 6 fishing resorts in the area. The rules of the game for sportfishing mags and Ecolumns, Ezines, etc. are clear: fishing is ALWAYS WIDE OPEN FOR EVERYTHING AT _____________________ so come on down.

Enter the El Niño of 2015-16, the strongest in history. This strange and powerful weather system has affected millions of people all over the globe in uncountable ways. Here’s part of what it did down here with unexpected consequences in a lot of quarters.

In Palmas Bay:
Some food fish almost never seen here came for the new bait, the warmer water.

Some other seasonal food fish left the area and have not returned.

Some fish usually found in 30 feet of water now live in 200 feet of water.

Some days commercial bottom fishermen can’t find any worthwhile fish to catch at all.

Dorado could not find favorable conditions so they migrated thousands of miles to find food in the Pacific and were not an important part of the sportfishing catch these two seasons.

Marlin (Striped, Blue, Black and White) came (close to shore – I can watch them being caught from my window) and stayed in unprecedented numbers and are still here.

There were countless other short term anomalies and many more to come.

Our local fishermen reacted to each change – they had to feed their families so any half calm day here will find all the boats rushing through the waves to get to the seamount where the marlin are ganged up so they can catch as many as possible, run back ashore, clean them, then head for the fish buyers and some local restaurants to sell then for about 100 pesos a kilo or more.

A couple weeks ago PESCA found out about the wanton disregard for the law and they began to check fish sellers and restaurants for violations.


I have it on good authority that in La Paz just as the heat went on, it went back off. Even the public fish markets advertise and sell marlin and dorado in the open --- seems local authority is looking the other way and when approached about that, the answer was that since the El Niño warm waters killed the lobster season altogether, the fishermen and the restaurateurs need a break during these unusual and very tough times.

I’m just the reporter, the messenger, and I’ve lived here a long time – these fishermen, the fish buyers, are my friends and neighbors so it’s not for me to judge them or their actions. It is what it is.

Maybe time for me to make up to the resort owners; tell them Jorge said at ¬¬¬¬¬Palmas Bay the marlin bite is wide open, so you would-be anglers with money to spend, “Come on down” but be quick about it because El Niño moves in mysterious ways and everything could change on a dime.



chippy - 1-22-2016 at 04:47 PM

and the beat goes on.

monoloco - 1-22-2016 at 05:20 PM

Over here on the Pacific side, the fishing co-op has been commercially fishing for dorado and marlin for years. Their preferred method for marlin is to put out large buoys with live or dead baited hooks, then go bottom fish near by, when a marlin takes the bait they are unable to swim down because of the buoy, making it easy for the pangeros to cruise up and harpoon the fish. I don't often see marlin on restaurant menus here, so I'm not sure where their market for them is, but when they are in season, one can find dorado at pretty much every restaurant, fish market, and taco stand. Apparently there is little enforcement of regulations when it comes to commercial fishing, but the last time I went fishing, I had a guy from PROFEPA threaten to give me a multa if I threw a fish carcass back into the ocean after filleting it.

[Edited on 1-23-2016 by monoloco]

Cappy - 1-22-2016 at 05:38 PM

IGFA, Billfish foundation, take Marlin off the menu. The truth is they do what they do

windgrrl - 1-25-2016 at 10:23 AM

...or a change of venture? Lots of whales in Palmas Bay this year. Two pods this morning and one just breached 32 times consecutively. Lots of turtles, sharks and varieties of jelly fish. Very few dolphins or flying mobulas compared to past 15 years. May be some species just need a break to catch up?

Osprey - 1-25-2016 at 12:06 PM

Mono, thanks for that.

Cappy, Windgirl, I'm old, not into texting.

Cappy, What does that mean "IGFA, Billfish foundation, take marlin off the menu"?

Windgirl, Change of venue? For whom, what, to where? You saw a whale jump consecutively? Wow. Is there some other way?

Help me out here. Just a few more keystrokes this time. For clarity.