Big Baits pt 4
Big baits, Big fish!! This is especially true in the ocean. One of my favorite fish in So. California is the Calico bass, looks just like a freshwater bass, and eats all the same lures. I have caught them on crankbaits, plastic lures, worms, lizards, creature baits, and most all other soft plastic bass baits jigs, topwater lures, and the list goes on and on.
I grew up fishing for largemouth in Oklahoma, and Georgia, and then when I moved to Calif in the early 60's, I continued my love affair with them. I fished the pro bass circuit for 5 years in the early 80's, and ran a profitable bass guiding business for about 15 years. In the early 80's I got my USCG Captains License, and started doing more and more saltwater charters, that's when I discovered calicos would eat all the standard bass baits I had in my freshwater tackle boxes. Boy, I was in heaven! Unlike freshwater, you could easily catch 50 to 100 calicos in a day's fishing, most of which were released.
Even before catch and release was popular in the ocean, I insisted my clients release all bass over 5 lbs and most of my regulars had a 3 lb ceiling. There were lots of large calicos then, but it seemed such a shame to kill a large slow growing trophy, just to eat it. These were special fish that could be caught several times and give a special thrill to many people before someone harvested them. This was especially true in Santa Monica Bay, where the fishing pressure was intense. There were up to twenty party boats at times, ( 55 to 75 ft boats that carried 30 to 50 passengers ) and many small 16 to 30 ft private boats that plied the bays waters. In those days you could easily catch many calicos over 5 lbs in a days fishing. At some of the offshore islands with their vast kelp forests, the numbers of large bass was amazing, but I noticed the numbers of big bass was steadily going down in the bay.
More on BIG BASS tomorrow!!
I grew up fishing for largemouth in Oklahoma, and Georgia, and then when I moved to Calif in the early 60's, I continued my love affair with them. I fished the pro bass circuit for 5 years in the early 80's, and ran a profitable bass guiding business for about 15 years. In the early 80's I got my USCG Captains License, and started doing more and more saltwater charters, that's when I discovered calicos would eat all the standard bass baits I had in my freshwater tackle boxes. Boy, I was in heaven! Unlike freshwater, you could easily catch 50 to 100 calicos in a day's fishing, most of which were released.
Even before catch and release was popular in the ocean, I insisted my clients release all bass over 5 lbs and most of my regulars had a 3 lb ceiling. There were lots of large calicos then, but it seemed such a shame to kill a large slow growing trophy, just to eat it. These were special fish that could be caught several times and give a special thrill to many people before someone harvested them. This was especially true in Santa Monica Bay, where the fishing pressure was intense. There were up to twenty party boats at times, ( 55 to 75 ft boats that carried 30 to 50 passengers ) and many small 16 to 30 ft private boats that plied the bays waters. In those days you could easily catch many calicos over 5 lbs in a days fishing. At some of the offshore islands with their vast kelp forests, the numbers of large bass was amazing, but I noticed the numbers of big bass was steadily going down in the bay.
More on BIG BASS tomorrow!!
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