How to Catch Tuna:
- By being in the RIGHT area that is # 1.
- Tuna feathers, rapalas, and cedar plugs are usually the best lures.
- Baiting fish on the surface feeding, finding floating kelp patties, or after jig strikes using live bait.
- If you are in the right area you should be able to catch fish. If you have good fish finder and temperature gauge this will help you zero in on these good locations.
- When ever possible, take someone with experience with you, they will see the signs of life that you may pass by. Look for fast moving schools of porpoise 50 or more, and drag jigs through these schools with live bait.
- Always remember the "golden rule" fishing is really just hunting on the water. Until you go to the right area ~ don’t expect to catch anything!
You can go all day and not find any fish. Hopefully you will find what you're after. Really good anglers are smart to have the right gear prepared in advance; when things happen, it's really quick and you need planning to make things go smoothly during the excitement!
Getting the Lines Out
- Starboard first (7th wake back)
- Then port (6th wake back)
- Then inside lines starboard (5th wake)
- Then port (4th wake)
- If the lines are to far out you will lose the school of fish on bait!
Hook Ups
- Driver (1) continues for 3-5 more seconds (looking for double) then slows down but maintains control of the direction and keeps lines straight.
- Angler (2) in turn takes jig fish and brings to boat as fast as possible but do not pull fish from water, keep line tight!
- Angler (3) then gets second bait into the water and either angler (1 or 3) gaffs fish for angler 2! (give 2-5 minutes maximum time then move on quickly!)
- Start up after fish on, driver continues in same direction looking for fish that were just caught (he knows the speed and direction just traveled )
(Driver also marks location in GPS as well as writes down temperature and other info.)
- Angler #2 puts the lines back out same distance, same formation but also takes notes as to what jig(s) were hit and what distance lines they were on.
(He writes it down so as not to second guess himself later)
- Angler #3 takes care of clean up, gets fish put away and decks hosed off and organized for the next jig strike.
- Bleed fish A.S.A.P. to minimize blood line (5-15 minutes max) then break out the cerveza, high five your buddy's and get ready for the next hook up!
KEEP
LOOKING FOR THAT BIG FLOATING KELP PATTY!
Albacore Migrate from the
West Pacific (Japan and Midway) to the East Pacific (U.S. West Coast) along
the Japanese current. Then into and up the California Current. The furthest
south they occur off our West Coast is just below Punta Bunda, Baja. They
then travel north as far as British Columbia Canada. This migration is
followed until Albacore reach maturity above seventy-five pounds and are
ready to spawn. When they reach that size to go into another circular current
south of Midway Island and spend the rest of their days in that
current. That's the reason
we never see any Albacore with roe. The fish in our migration are all immature
fish. Mature Albacore will reach a size of one hundred and fifty pounds
or more.
Albacore are one of the Tunas
whose body temperature is warmer by several degree's than the water they
swim in. They must always be on the move because they haven't any swim
bladder. If they stop moving they'll sink. The way they get a little rest
is to swim up sharply from three-hundred feet or deeper to about one-hundred
feet. Then they'll take a long downward glide back down to the depth they
started from. We suspect this behavior may also have something to do with
regulating their body temperature. The same way Yellow-fin
and Big-eye tuna do. They
will come to the surface to feed, but not for a long period of time. They
have large eye's for feeding
at depths of over a thousand
feet. Their eye's don't have eye lids and are very sensitive to light.
The first Albacore off our
California Coast~~~~ Usually show up at such places as the Cortez Bank,
San Juan Seamount, in southern California around the forth of July. Then
on the North side of Point Conception. They appear on places like the Davidson
Seamount, the 455 Spot, 601 Spot, Guide Seamount, Pioneer and Gum Drop
Seamounts right around the middle of July. However in the past eight years
Albacore has been very scarce below Pt. Conception.
Typically Albacore south
of Point Conception, are usually two year olds. Averaging eighteen pounds.
Albacore north of the point, are three years and four year olds or older.
They average twenty-five pounds and up. One year old fish, averaging eight
pounds do however occur in both areas Albacore will be off our coast in
some years as late as January, depending on Sea Surface temperatures.
Don't be put off by cooler
water temperatures. Remember Albacore migrate at an average depth of between
two hundred to three hundred feet or deeper. How cool do you think the
water temperatures are down there? A good rule of thumb is July through
October fish surface waters from fifty-eight and a half degree and up.
After October fish in waters of fifty-five degree's and up. Later season
fish tolerate cooler surface temperatures. Of course warmer is always better.
When the surface gets cooler than fifty-five or warmer than sixty-eight,
they leave.
Albacore generally surface
on or around a temperature break, or up-dwelling. That's were cool deep
water surfaces and hits warmer surface water. Causing a plankton bloom
that attracts bait fish. These breaks can sometime be visually seen. They
look like a long slick, kind of how it looks when a ship passes through
an area. Remember Albacore like clear blue water, so blue that it's almost
purple. However we always catch a few of what we call "green water hogs"
in off color water. These are usually pretty large fish.
Another good place to check
is around floating kelp patties. They usually hold bait fish that attracts
predator fish. Feeding Porpoise and Whales are another place that deserves
checking. If you have a good depth sounder you can read Albacore, if you
don't, you ought to be able to read bait fish and squid, so check that
area out. Long areas of floating kelp and debris usually means you are
at the edge of the California Current. Try the outside edge. Look for diving
birds, or even just birds in the area, in general signs of life. You don't
want to spend your day fishing a dead area. Also keep in mind that about
three days before, and about three days after a full moon the bite will
usually be a late afternoon bite.
If you find fish don't be
afraid to put the information out on the radio. Most of the time more boats
working the area properly, can mean more Tuna for everyone including you.
When we had hundreds of commercial jig boats out there, Albacore schools
were pretty easy to find. There are very few jig to boats anymore. So it's
up us private boaters to keep each other informed. Albacore can move a
long way in a few hours.
In July till the middle of
September fish can be found by trolling feathered jigs at between six and
a half to nine knots. Troll lines in a V pattern, the bottom of the V should
be at the center of the boat and the shortest line. The first thing Albacore
are attracted to is the bottom of your boat and the wake. They think the
bottom of the boat is bait ball, and the wake is something feeding on that
bait ball. So don't fish lines seventy-eleven miles back. A good starting
rule is around the second wave behind the boat. Always keep lines and jigs
clean of kelp, jelly fish and sea grass's. Another words check them often.
For boats that carry live
bait any time you get a jig strike or see fish, try to chum them to the
boat. Always chum so that the boat will drift over the chum not away from
it. You can chum dead bait but be careful that you don't put so much bait
in the water that they will follow the sinking bait down.
Use light colored jigs on
bright days and dark jigs when conditions are darker. Good patterns are.
Zucchini, Mexican flag, red and white, blue and white, green and white,
green and yellow, purple, purple and black, and root beer. If I only had
my choice of four. They would be, zucchini, Mexican flag, red and white,
and purple and black. My favorite brand of feathered jig is Zukers, because
the eyes move.
Rig some of your lines with
daisy chains. That's three or four smaller feathers threaded up your line
about a foot apart, and held there with a micro press, with a larger different
color larger jig about eighteen inches behind them. The larger jig is the
only one with a hook in it. You can use jig's of the same size, if you
don't have small one's.
Spreader bars really produce.
You can troll nine to twelve hoochies. With a trailing feather with a hook
in it, at the rear center of the rig. It looks like a whole school of bait,
with a predator behind them. They are very hard to keep untangled, however.
If you are weighing your boat lines, try a length of chain instead of a
lead. The chain will make bubbles, which will attract fish. Trolling teasers
such as Birds causes surface commotion that will bring fish up. Keep teasers
ahead of the jigs.
Another tip for trolling
is if you get a jig strike, and you don't have the live bait to chum. Try
to keep going for at least a long ten count. You will have a good chance
of hooking some more fish. When you wind the other rigs in after you stop
wind them fast, sometimes that will result in another hook up.
It never hurts also to toss
a hand full of bait, even chunked bait off the stern. Then while the people
are fighting their fish, keep a light chum going in the direction of your
drift. Another thing that works upon a jig strike is to cast back what's
called, a drop-back rig. Free-spool it till the boat stops. Then retrieve
it slowly, if a fish hits it throw reel in free spool let it swallow it
then set the hook. A drop back rig is the same as a trolled bait rig, only
with a two foot leader, The sinker should be chrome plated. A metal jig
will also work, but you will have to retrieve it fast.
One more trick if you can
read Albacore deep on your meter, circle over them. Pull all your lines
on the side of the boat that are towards the inside of the circle. Chum
the outside of the circle with frozen bait, long enough to let the first
chummed baits sink to the depth they at. You want to chum enough to create
a long spiral of bait down to the fish. Most time they will follow the
spiral up and hit your jigs. That's an old northern jig boat trick.
Around the last of September
these fish will switch over from feeding on Squid, to feeding on bait fish,
and will not readily take a feathered jig. You can tell when the switch
comes you'll start seeing a large amount jumpers and surface feeding Albacore.
Try trolling a Rapala CD-18 in the blue-white, green-white and Mackerel
patterns. Cedar Plugs by Strike, in blue-white, green-yellow, or red-white
patterns work well also. Set lines in a V trolling pattern, as you did
with the feathers.
Another technique that will
work is trolling a bait fish four to six feet behind a two to four ounce
torpedo sinker. Hook the bait fish up through the bottom lip and out the
top lip or head. Troll very slowly, and fish in free spool. When the fish
hits, let it swallow it before setting the hook ( the bait can be a dead
bait). You want to be sure fish are in the area before you do this. You
will not cover much ground, trolling baits. You have to troll a little
slower than Salmon trolling speed. Baits can be dead baits.
When Albacore are feeding
on bait fish, they tend to school in tighter schools. If you see an area
of jumping, or surface breezing fish. Try not to run over the top of them.
Position the boat up drift from them and slide to within casting distance.
Cast some metal Jigs at them. Like big Kastmasters, Crocodiles, Hopkins,
UFO's . Let it sink for at least one hundred feet.
Then wind as fast as you
can. If you are going to troll fish them. Troll around the outside edge,
not through the middle. If you run
through the middle of them
you'll put them down.
If you don't find fish on
a trip, don't give up try again maybe you zigged when you should have zagged.
Check the Sea Surface Temperature charts, look for a different area. It's
an awful big ocean and Albacore can move a good distance in one day. Remember
they have no swim bladders so they must always keep moving, or they will
sink.
Out-Riggers, I cannot stress
strongly enough the value of these to the private boater. They will increase
your lines spread and will increase your score by at least thirty percent.
Make sure they are mounted properly. A private boat with out-riggers should
be able to troll from seven to nine lines without tangles, along with a
couple of short boat lines. One more thing DO NOT use last years' lines
and leaders. Changing line will be the cheapest part of the success of
your next blue water trip. Don't cheat on hooks or line Quality. And remember
the old Albacore fishing law, keep your hooked fish in front of you, "NO
ANGLES NO TANGLES"
There are other species of
Tuna on our fishing grounds too. Blue-Fin Tuna, and they can get to over
the two hundred pound mark. They like skipping jigs. Big-Eye Tuna that
can get to over four hundred pounds in our area. You will not usually see
Big-Eye unless it's right at dawn or and hour or so from sunset. They usually
like a larger jig, but we take a few every year on Albacore jigs. A deep
fished sliding dropper rig, with a live mackerel, large sardine or good
sized squid will work.