Santiago
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Corbina fishing
Great book on So Cal corbina sight-fishing. One of the guys I have fished Baja with and a close friend's brother was a founding member of the Corbina
Patrol 15 years ago.
Corbina are found from Santa Barbara to Magdalena
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TMW
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I've never tried fly fishing but several years ago we would surf fish around Laguna Manuela north of Guerrero Negro and catch lots of Corbina, yellow
fin croakers, halibut and a few spot fin croakers. All great eating. I miss those days. Nothing taste better than fresh fish right out of the ocean.
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David K
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Corbina is also found in the upper gulf, around San Felipe. They like bait such as mussel or clam, close to shore, sandy bottom. Fish during an
incoming tide and lagoon entrances are great locations. We lived on the beach in Del Mar (San Diego County) and this was our #1 food-fish choice. When
we began exploring Baja, my dad theorized that the sandy beaches south of San Felipe looked like prime corbina country, and he was right!
An interesting note: Another San Felipe variety has almost the exact same name, corvina. Unlike the corbina, it is not a bottom-feeder and is caught
casting with lures.
Here is my mom with a double hookup of corbina at Bahía Santa María (before there was a campo there) in 1967. Yellowfin croaker was also caught here
as well as a few other varieties:
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David K
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Great book by a Baja legend, Tom Miller:
Corvina vs. Corbina
[Edited on 8-30-2021 by David K]
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David K
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From Ray Cannon's book on fishing:
Shari, of Bahía Asunción, informed me that they call yellowfin croakers, 'Boca Dulce' (sweet mouth).
[Edited on 8-30-2021 by David K]
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Skipjack Joe
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Quote: Originally posted by TMW | I've never tried fly fishing but several years ago we would surf fish around Laguna Manuela north of Guerrero Negro and catch lots of Corbina, yellow
fin croakers, halibut and a few spot fin croakers. All great eating. I miss those days. Nothing taste better than fresh fish right out of the ocean.
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The mouth of Manuela isn’t as good as it once was. We used to also get bonefish there, but not on a fly.
I’m very much interested in the book though.
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msteve1014
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Quote: Originally posted by Skipjack Joe | Quote: Originally posted by TMW | I've never tried fly fishing but several years ago we would surf fish around Laguna Manuela north of Guerrero Negro and catch lots of Corbina, yellow
fin croakers, halibut and a few spot fin croakers. All great eating. I miss those days. Nothing taste better than fresh fish right out of the ocean.
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The mouth of Manuela isn’t as good as it once was. We used to also get bonefish there, but not on a fly.
I’m very much interested in the book though. |
I have also caught bonefish there. They do not fight the same as they do in the Atlantic.
Lots of good "foodfish" though. 1996-2010.
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David K
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Quote: Originally posted by TMW | I've never tried fly fishing but several years ago we would surf fish around Laguna Manuela north of Guerrero Negro and catch lots of Corbina, yellow
fin croakers, halibut and a few spot fin croakers. All great eating. I miss those days. Nothing taste better than fresh fish right out of the ocean.
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Tom Miller turned us onto Laguna Manuela and the sand beach to the north. My folks and I returned to that beach many times in the early 1980s. So many
varieties of good-eating fish: Croaker, Halibut, Calico Bass...
Remember 'Whistler' (Glenn), R.I.P.?
He told me that the long, long beach just north of Laguna Manuela (Morro Santo Domingo) had so many kinds of fish he and his amigos named it 'Variety
Beach!
To honor Glenn, I put the name on my map:
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David K
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One of the best corbina images showing the bottom pointing mouth:
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Skipjack Joe
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How did you hook him outside the mouth?
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David K
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That is inside to out. The mouth/lips extend away from the head. It looks weird, huh?
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