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Winter Bite: Rockfish, Crab, and Bigger Swells Along the California Coast
Published 4 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Pacific coast fishing report from right here in California.
We’re rolling into a classic winter pattern: cool mornings, light winds early, and those big winter swells rumbling through. National Weather Service marine forecasts for the central and southern coast are calling for moderate seas, 6–8 foot swell with lighter winds early and a bump in the afternoon, so the morning window is your friend.
Tide-wise, we’ve got good movement today. Tide-Forecast and NOAA show a predawn high followed by a dropping tide through mid‑morning, then a solid midday high and an evening low along much of the coast. Around Half Moon Bay and Fitzgerald Marine Reserve, tides.net lists sunrise right after 7 a.m. and sunset just before 5 p.m., with a nice lunchtime high pushing bait up onto the structure and a negative evening low for those grubbing the surf.
Up north around the Bay Area and Half Moon Bay, rockfish and crab are carrying the show. Fish Emeryville just logged limits of Dungeness crab and rockfish for their 55 anglers yesterday, classic winter combo limits. Out of Pillar Point and Ocean Beach, NOAA tide predictions and local King Tide chatter are reminding folks to watch for those bigger sets, but that same surge is stacking bait tight to reefs and pinnacles.
Down in SoCal, the bottom bite is flat‑out on. So Cal Fish Reports and 976‑TUNA are stacked with counts from yesterday: boats out of Long Beach, Ventura, and the Channel Islands posting heavy sacks of rockfish, sheephead, whitefish, and a sprinkling of lingcod and bonito. The Eldorado’s most recent overnight out of Long Beach came home with over 250 rockfish, near 200 whitefish, plus sculpin and sheephead in the mix. That’s winter grocery shopping right there.
Fish activity is best on the tide swings. The morning drop has been kicking out lingcod and reds on the outer stones, with the midday push turning on the whitefish and sheephead on shallower hard bottom. Surf anglers are picking at barred surfperch and the odd halibut around San Diego and Orange County beaches, especially on that flooding midday tide.
On tackle, keep it simple and local.
For rockfish and lings offshore:
- 4–8 oz leadheads or shrimp‑fly rigs tipped with squid strips or anchovy.
- Big lings are chewing on darker rubber: brown, root beer, and motor‑oil swimbaits on 4–6 oz heads.
For whitefish, sheephead, and sculpin:
- Double dropper loop with 1/0–2/0 hooks and squid, mussel, or shrimp.
- Sheephead love fresh shellfish; if you can get mussel or crab legs, that’s candy.
In the surf:
- Carolina‑rigged Gulp! sandworms or camo grubs for perch.
- Whole or half anchovy and 3–4" swimbaits in smelt/sardine patterns if you’re hunting a ghost halibut on the edges of holes and troughs.
A couple of hot spots to circle in your mental chartbook:
- **Channel Islands / Ventura Line:** Boats out of Ventura Harbor Sportfishing and Channel Islands Sportfishing have been stacking limits of rockfish, whitefish, and sheephead. Hard bottom in 180–260 feet is the ticket; fish tight to the stones and don’t be shy with the lead.
- **Long Beach / Catalina Zone:** Long Beach Sportfishing’s boats are still putting anglers on quality mixed bags around Catalina and local hard bottom. Rockfish, sheephead, perch, and whitefish are all in play; bring 10–16 oz sinkers and be ready to fish anywhere from 120 to 300 feet.
If you’re heading out on a six‑pack or your own skiff, watch the afternoon wind line and that building swell; mornings are calmer, and that first high/ebb combination has been money.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing ge
We’re rolling into a classic winter pattern: cool mornings, light winds early, and those big winter swells rumbling through. National Weather Service marine forecasts for the central and southern coast are calling for moderate seas, 6–8 foot swell with lighter winds early and a bump in the afternoon, so the morning window is your friend.
Tide-wise, we’ve got good movement today. Tide-Forecast and NOAA show a predawn high followed by a dropping tide through mid‑morning, then a solid midday high and an evening low along much of the coast. Around Half Moon Bay and Fitzgerald Marine Reserve, tides.net lists sunrise right after 7 a.m. and sunset just before 5 p.m., with a nice lunchtime high pushing bait up onto the structure and a negative evening low for those grubbing the surf.
Up north around the Bay Area and Half Moon Bay, rockfish and crab are carrying the show. Fish Emeryville just logged limits of Dungeness crab and rockfish for their 55 anglers yesterday, classic winter combo limits. Out of Pillar Point and Ocean Beach, NOAA tide predictions and local King Tide chatter are reminding folks to watch for those bigger sets, but that same surge is stacking bait tight to reefs and pinnacles.
Down in SoCal, the bottom bite is flat‑out on. So Cal Fish Reports and 976‑TUNA are stacked with counts from yesterday: boats out of Long Beach, Ventura, and the Channel Islands posting heavy sacks of rockfish, sheephead, whitefish, and a sprinkling of lingcod and bonito. The Eldorado’s most recent overnight out of Long Beach came home with over 250 rockfish, near 200 whitefish, plus sculpin and sheephead in the mix. That’s winter grocery shopping right there.
Fish activity is best on the tide swings. The morning drop has been kicking out lingcod and reds on the outer stones, with the midday push turning on the whitefish and sheephead on shallower hard bottom. Surf anglers are picking at barred surfperch and the odd halibut around San Diego and Orange County beaches, especially on that flooding midday tide.
On tackle, keep it simple and local.
For rockfish and lings offshore:
- 4–8 oz leadheads or shrimp‑fly rigs tipped with squid strips or anchovy.
- Big lings are chewing on darker rubber: brown, root beer, and motor‑oil swimbaits on 4–6 oz heads.
For whitefish, sheephead, and sculpin:
- Double dropper loop with 1/0–2/0 hooks and squid, mussel, or shrimp.
- Sheephead love fresh shellfish; if you can get mussel or crab legs, that’s candy.
In the surf:
- Carolina‑rigged Gulp! sandworms or camo grubs for perch.
- Whole or half anchovy and 3–4" swimbaits in smelt/sardine patterns if you’re hunting a ghost halibut on the edges of holes and troughs.
A couple of hot spots to circle in your mental chartbook:
- **Channel Islands / Ventura Line:** Boats out of Ventura Harbor Sportfishing and Channel Islands Sportfishing have been stacking limits of rockfish, whitefish, and sheephead. Hard bottom in 180–260 feet is the ticket; fish tight to the stones and don’t be shy with the lead.
- **Long Beach / Catalina Zone:** Long Beach Sportfishing’s boats are still putting anglers on quality mixed bags around Catalina and local hard bottom. Rockfish, sheephead, perch, and whitefish are all in play; bring 10–16 oz sinkers and be ready to fish anywhere from 120 to 300 feet.
If you’re heading out on a six‑pack or your own skiff, watch the afternoon wind line and that building swell; mornings are calmer, and that first high/ebb combination has been money.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing ge