
I grew up in the Bay Area and learned the productivity of fishing the rich waters of San Francisco Bay at an early age. Indeed, some of my earliest fishing memories dating back to the early 70s concern accompanying my dad and uncle Bob on outings along the Alameda, Oakland and San Leandro shorelines.
When they were after stripers they would typically work the area around the Bay Farm Island Bridge with plugs after the sun had set. At other times, Dad would use anchovies and pile worms to tempt flounders, jack smelt and other fish that frequent the south bay flats.
By the time I reached my teens we were living in San Lorenzo about a mile and a half from the shoreline trail that runs from the San Leandro Marina to the San Mateo Bridge. As a result, I became a dedicated bay angler, employing a mountain bike and surf rod to ply south bay waters for sharks, rays, stripers, perch and anything else that came within casting range of the shoreline.
These days I live in the Sierra and enjoy the fishing opportunities that the streams and reservoirs in the foothills and mountains provide. Yet, my day dreams are still filled with images of big stripers grabbing Rat-L-Traps and defiant leopard sharks smoking 25 pound mono off the spool of an oversize surf reel.
While the bay is home to a myriad of different fish, the dynamic duo as far as bank anglers are concerned are striped bass and leopard sharks. Stripers generally begin showing up in bay waters during the month of March, but this year due to the heavy rains we experienced, stripers might not begin arriving in numbers until late April. Once stripers begin arriving in the bay,