
Steve Griffin of Marina won the grand master trophy in the fourteenth annual Sand Crab Classic Perch Tournament in Santa Cruz on March 10 by catching a three-pound, 5.5-ounce barred perch measuring 16 5/8 inches long.
The fish is the largest perch of any kind caught in the popular grassroots event, a fundraiser for the Monterey Bay Salmon and Trout Project. I love covering this popular grassroots event, one of the most fun events in the world of California fishing.
More than 300 people participated in the event that drew surf fishing enthusiasts from Stockton, Modesto, San Jose, the San Francisco Bay Area and Monterey Bay cities including Monterey, Marina, Watsonville and Santa Cruz. The seas were flat calm with no wind and no swell; many anglers reported slow fishing because of it.
“The fish was the largest perch I’ve ever caught,” Griffin said. “I hooked it while fishing pileworms off Monterey. Fishing was kind of slow; that fish was one of four perch I landed all morning.”
The fundraiser takes place in the perch capital of the world, Monterey Bay where the most diverse array of surfperch species is found. For example, during the first Sand Crab Classic in Santa Cruz in January of 2005, I counted seven varieties of perch – shiner, barred, rubberlipped, black, striped, rainbow and walleye – caught off the Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf alone.
Phil Cabato won first place in the senior seaperch division with a two-pound, four-ounce red tail perch measuring 14 5/8 inches caught off San Gregorio.