
One of the great things about living in the San Francisco Bay and Delta Region is the many saltwater options you have. You can go fishing for salmon outside the Golden Gate, fish live bait for halibut and striped bass inside the bay, target rockfish and lingcod, or go for big rockfish and lingcod at the Farallon Islands.
The 24 members of the California Striped Bass Association, West Delta Chapter, and their friends made a very successful charter to the Farallon Islands aboard Berkeley’s California Dawn, skippered by Captain James Smith, on August 8.
The highlight of the trip in 2015 was a wide-open striped bass bite we experienced in San Francisco Bay off the Rockpile. Many anglers released their fish back into the bay.
This year, fishing at the legendary island chain 30 miles west of San Francisco has been superb when seas allow charter boats to get there.
After the 2-1/2 hour ride on little bouncy but otherwise calm seas, we arrived at the Farallon Islands. The water near the islands was calmer than it was closer to the Golden Gate.
“I recommend that you target the rockfish first with shrimp flies. Then after you are getting close to your limit, that’s the time to put the trap rig on,” said Smith.
Most of the anglers, including myself, followed Smith’s advice. I soon began hooking up one rockfish after another, along with other anglers. This was the first trip to the Island in many years that I was able to take advantage of fishing the 180 to 240 feet depths after the Rockcod Conservation Zone, an effort by the Pacific Fishery Management Council to rebuild rockfish populations, went into place over 15 years ago.
The rockfish action was great throughout the trip, but the top lingcod fishing was in the last two hours of the day when anglers put one fish after another into the boat.
Everybody went home from the trip with their 10 fish rockfish limits and two fish ling.