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Early Spring Bottom Fish Bite: Whitefish, Sheephead, and Bass Along the Southern California Coast

Early Spring Bottom Fish Bite: Whitefish, Sheephead, and Bass Along the Southern California Coast

Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Pacific Coast California fishing report.

We’ve got a classic early‑spring pattern setting up along the coast. Offshore swell has laid down a bit and the morning marine layer is light, giving way to a clear, mild afternoon with a light onshore breeze. Air temps are running in the low 50s at first light, warming into the 60s near midday. Water temps hover in the high 50s to low 60s along most of the Southern California bight.

According to tide-forecast’s San Diego tables, we’re in a moderate swing today with a predawn low rolling into a mid‑morning high and a falling afternoon tide. That morning flood is your best window for a chew, especially on the structure spots and kelp edges. Sunrise is right around 6:15 local, sunset just after 6:00, so you’ve got solid low‑light bookends.

Recent counts from SoCalFishReports and SportfishingReport show the coastal bite has been dominated by bottom fish and a few bass. Dana Wharf and Long Beach boats have been stacking up mixed bags: limits‑style numbers of **whitefish** and **sculpin**, along with steady **sheephead**, a sprinkling of **sand bass**, **calico bass**, and the odd **halibut**. Yesterday’s dock totals out of Dana Point and San Diego landings showed several trips with 60–90+ whitefish, double‑digit sculpin, and up to 30‑plus sheephead on the better runs, with calicos mostly released.

That tells you where the action is: shallow to mid‑depth hard bottom, small stones, and wrecky stuff from 90–180 feet, plus kelp edges and boiler rocks for bass.

Best baits and lures right now:

- For **whitefish and sculpin**: small cut‑squid strips on double drop‑loop rigs with 4–8 oz of lead are still king. Tip those hooks with a little scent if the current’s light.
- For **sheephead**: fresh shrimp, mussel, or squid strips on a sliding egg or dropper loop around rocky structure. Use a longer leader and don’t be shy on fluorocarbon; 25–30 lb is fine.
- For **sand bass and calicos**: 3–5 inch swimbaits in sardine or anchovy patterns on 1/2–1 oz leadheads, or a brown/orange leadhead with squid. Slow‑roll them along rock edges on that incoming tide.
- If you’re yo‑yoing deeper stones, heavy jigs like a Salas‑style iron in scrambled egg, blue/white, or mint will still pull a mixed bag of rockfish and the occasional ling when you get outside a bit.

Fish activity has been best in that gray‑light through mid‑morning window and again on the late afternoon push. Midday bite slows but never fully dies if you stay on the meter and fish tight to structure.

Couple of local hot spots to consider:

- **Point Loma to Imperial Beach hard‑bottom zones**: Work the 90–150‑foot stones and ridges. This stretch has been kicking out big scores of whitefish, sculpin, and sheephead for the San Diego landings.
- **Dana Point to San Mateo kelp line**: Slide just inside the kelp for calicos on plastics, then back off to 100–140 feet to soak squid for sculpin and mixed bottom fish. Boats out of Dana Wharf have been getting consistent counts here.
- If you’re farther north, the **Long Beach/Palos Verdes hard bottom and edges of the Horseshoe Kelp** are still a solid bet for perch, sheephead, and whitefish on standard party‑boat rigs.

Keep your tackle simple: 20–30 lb bait sticks with dropper loops for bottom fish, and one 15–20 lb setup for throwing plastics or smaller irons in tight to the kelp.

That’s your coastal Pacific California rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence
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