More Fish than Visitors 
 
 
Endless Season Update 09/03/2008 
REPORT #1130 "Below the Border" Saltwater Fly-Fishing reports since 1996 
East Cape 
  
Slow retrieve tricked this Lookdown 
You don’t have to go far to find the small tuna…just a few miles off of La Ribera. There have also been some larger ones found  
 
deeper in the water column and ‘schoolie’ dorado are scattered all the way from there to the lighthouse.  
Farther out off of Punta Pescadero there have been some schools of larger tuna under the porpoise schools.  
Billfish action has been limited to a few blues and stripers, but with plenty of sailfish throughout Palmas Bay. Don’t be surprised  
 
if a bull dorado to show up in the teasers.  
There are schools of sardina on many of the beaches attracting small jacks and roosters along with the pesky needles.  
Beach action was hampered by hordes of needlefish along with off-color water caused by leftover swells from Tropical Storm,  
 
Karina. 
 
Tip:  When the conditions include off-color water, try slowing down the retrieve speed. 
 
Water temperature	76-87 
Air temperature	74-94 
Humidity	87% 
Wind:	NE 5 to 7 knots 
Conditions:	Partly Cloudy 
Visibility	7 miles 
Sunrise	7:02 a.m. MDT 
Sunset	7:34 p.m. MDT  
 
Magdalena Bay, Baja Mexico 
 
More fish than visitors this week. Outside the dorado, small YFT and wahoo were there for the taking according to the few  
 
locals who ventured out. The sprinkling of billfish continues to increase week by week as the season begins to build. Still a  
 
good grouper bite, but unfortunately most that are caught go in the back of the fish truck. 
 
Estero action was pretty much the same story…good fishing for corvina, grouper and a few snapper with little or no pressure. 
 
Bob Hoyt 
  
Water temperature	60 - 76 
Air temperature 	79 -98 
Humidity 	87 %  
Wind:	WNW 13 to 17 knots 
Conditions:	Mostly Clear 
Visibility	7 miles 
Sunrise	7:09 a.m. MDT 
Sunset	7:43 p.m. MDT 
 
Zihuatanejo, Mainland Mexico 
 
After a very below normal rainfall for August, we had a bit of rain this last week, which caused a lot of debris to come out of  
 
the rivers. Late Monday night we got a huge thunderstorm with 2 1/4" of rain in one hour.  
This wiped out the inshore waters with stained water.  
However, the blue water was only moved out to the 10 mile mark. The sailfish action is decent. Martin on the Nautilus had  
 
days of 2, 4, 1, and 3 sailfish starting on Sunday.  He also reported lots of black skipjack tuna just off the dirty inshore water.  
No dorado or tuna have been reported, but with the debris in the water, the dorado cannot be too far behind. 
 
Ed Kunze  
 
Water temperature	80 - 84 
Air temperature 	77-93 
Humidity 	88%  
Wind:	E @9 knots 
Conditions:	Cloudy Rain 
Visibility	6 miles 
Sunrise	7:32 a.m. CDT 
Sunset	7:58 p.m. CDT 
 
Cabo San Lucas 
 
BILLFISH:  The Striped Marlin bite continued this week with most of the action taking place within 5 miles of the beach  
 
on the Pacific side between the lighthouse and the inside of the Golden Gate Bank.  Live bait tossed at tailing fish worked on  
 
about 40% of the fish seen and a few others were caught on trolled lures.  There were plenty of Sailfish to be found as well,  
 
we had one client who was covered up with all five lines going off at once on Tuesday, resulting in the release of three fish and  
 
the loss of two.  The Sailfish were also just off the beach, there seemed to be a good concentration of bait in the area.  There  
 
were reports of a few nice Blue Marlin this week but they were not biting hot and heavy.  I heard of several fish in the 250  
 
pound class being released from the area of the 95 Spot and the 1150 and I am sure there were a few from the Gorda Banks as  
 
well. 
YELLOWFIN TUNA   The Tuna stayed around after the passing of the storm and most boats were able to do well if they  
 
stayed on the fish.  On a few days it was scratch as scratch can to get bites, but on Saturday when the rain came on hard the  
 
fish came to the surface and bit hard for two hours.  Most of the fish were in the 25-40 pound class with a few fish reaching 60  
 
pounds.  Earlier in the week the bite occurred closer to shore among the porpoise and those fish were both smaller, with quite  
 
a few footballs, and larger, with a few fish in the 80-pound class.  Lures, especially small feather in dark colors worked on the  
 
football fish, and live bait worked on the larger fish. 
DORADO   Last week I was hoping that the storm would was debris into the water and improve the Dorado catch, but  
 
the debris did not happen.  The Dorado catch, howev3er, turned on by itself and this week Dorado were fish of the week.   
 
Almost any boat that wanted to was able to get limits for their clients (federal limit of two per angler per day) and most of the  
 
fish were in the 10-20 pound class.  There were some nicer fish caught as well as we had client who caught several nice bull  
 
Dorado in the 50-pound class.  As with the billfish, most of the Dorado action took place on the Pacific side within 5 miles of  
 
the beach, but there were several days during the week when the action was hot and heavy just off the beach on the Cortez  
 
side up around the Palmilla area and other rocky points. 
INSHORE:   The inshore fishing on the Cortez side was very poor this week due to the discolored water, but slowly  
 
improved toward the end of the week.  On the Pacific side most of the Pangas were fishing for Dorado and Tuna since it was a  
 
fishery very close to shore. 
George & Mary Landrum 
 
Water temperature	67 - 75 
Air temperature 	77 - 93 
Humidity 	96%  
Wind:	W 11 to 15 knots 
Conditions:	Mostly Cloudy 
Visibility	5  miles 
Sunrise	7:03 a.m. MST 
Sunset	7:35 p.m. MST
 
 
 
 
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