
Anglers have experienced excellent fishing this season for the prized California halibut in San Francisco Bay, but few know the hard work by fishing groups that it took over 25 years ago to produce the quality fishery we're now enjoying.
Halibut anglers continue to land around a fish per rod on live bait drifting adventures in San Francisco Bay. Some days produce even better scores on legal-sized halibut. In addition to the keeper fish, anglers are also releasing big numbers of fish under the 22-inch legal size limit.
We're fishing all over the bay - the fish are scattered, said James Smith, Captain of the California Dawn in Berkeley. We're catching fish at the Berkeley Flats, Angel Island, Paradise Cay and in the south bay. In addition to the fish we're keeping, we're also releasing a lot of fish under the legal size of 22 inches, anywhere from 40 to 150 on the typical trip.
The most recent trip by the California Dawn yielded 16 halibut to 35 pounds and 13 striped bass to 12 pounds for 23 anglers. The latest half-day trip by the Bass Tub, berthed at Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco, produced 10 halibut for 10 anglers, according to Captain Erik Anfinson.
Captain Steve Mitchell of Hook'd Up Sport Fishing out of Berkeley reported a great birthday celebration for 11 year-old Maddie Ocheltree of Yuba City aboard his boat on June 10, when Maddie landed a limit of halibut weighing 30, 16, and 10 pounds. The total count for the day was 9 halibut and two striped bass for 6 anglers.
But the fishing wasn't always as good as it is now. Back in the late 1980s and early 1990s, halibut fishing inside the bay was in rapid decline, the result of heavy commercial fishing pressure and the dumping of dredge spoils by the Army Corps of Engineers into San Francisco Bay.
Commercial fishermen using otter trawls were taking most of the halibut outside of the Golden Gate before they could even make it into the bay to spawn. Attempts by