
by Mark Fong
For many years I spent the entirety of my time on the water chasing after little green fish from the deck of a bass boat. I used to scoff at the idea of spending my valuable time fishing for anything but bass. It is ironic that a couple of my bass fishing friends used to tell me how much they enjoyed fishing off the coast for rockfish and lingcod. "It's a blast," they would say. "You can fish swimbaits or jig iron, but these fish pull way harder, it's like bass fishing on steroids."
Well you know what, they were 100% correct. Rockfishing is so much fun and it has become one of my favorite types of fishing. Thankfully, here in Northern California we are blessed with many excellent rockfishing opportunities.
I appreciate the fact that I can make a reservation on a charter boat and it is basically turn key fishing. No boat to tow to the ramp and no post trip clean up. Charter boats run out of harbors up and down the coast. Closer to the Bay Area, boats leave from San Francisco, Emeryville and Berkeley.
After more than a month of trying, including two trips lost to unfavorable ocean conditions and another canceled due to an error in booking, I finally found an opening on my calendar that allowed me to join Captain Jonathon Smith aboard the Happy Hooker for a day of much needed rockfishing.
Indian Summer is typically a great time to be on the ocean, but this has been an uncharacteristically windy year on the coast. As we left the Berkeley Marina, the wind was already blowing inside the bay and by the time we reached Point Bonita it had picked up speed. In fact we were greeted by a steady stream of private boaters who had decided it was a bit too rough and were headed back inside the bay.
When Captain Jonathon headed north up the coast I thought for sure that we were going to fish the Marin Coast Line. But I was wrong as he ever so subtly made course westward in effect running the swell trough.