
I’ve caught a lot of sturgeon. Not as many as real pros like Jay Lopes, Dave Hammond, Hayden Mullins and Joe Gamez, but I’ve landed my share and more. If you’re a West Coast angler I think you should experience the thrill of landing at least one big bad diamond back. When you commit to hunting sturgeon, you are going after big game. The stakes are high and you’ll likely experience the highest of highs, the lowest of lows, frustration, boredom and heart racing thrills.
I caught my best, but not biggest, sturgeon while fishing with Captain Barry Canevaro a number of years ago. It was February 12, the sky was overcast and the surface of Montezuma slough was glassy flat. My hook was armed with a pair of ghost shrimp and a big fat pile worm. The bite was a classic sturgeon pump with my Lamiglas rod going into full pull down mode as the big fish slurped up the baited hook.
I snatch the rod, reared back, the rod doubled over and the fish didn’t budge. A beat later when the sturgeon decided something was amiss it shot off on a powerful crescent shaped run toward deepwater, blitzed upward and exploded completely out of the water on the first of several sailfish like gyrating jumps. I can still see the big 8-ounce pyramid sinker dancing around the sturgeon’s head as it wildly tried to shake the hook. It was the incredible fight and the repeated jumps that made that sturgeon so memorable.
When I finally brought the big fish to the boat and Barry scooped it aboard it measured an inch under the top end of the slot. Not only was the fish a great fighter, but it also got to take a ride home for dinner. What an incredible thrill! This winter we’ve had a good deal of warmish rain and the rivers are running high and muddy. All in all, the late winter and spring are shaping up nicely for sturgeon fishing and anglers in pursuit of diamond backs should do well.