![]() |
TR: Dana Point
Went out on Saturday with my high school bud, John "Don't worry about
that Red Flag" M. He of the Penns jambalaya fame. Took his 19' boat out of Dana Point, CA after a night of severe drinkage (we now call John "Polyester Fibre Face") and cheap pizza and a morning of even cheaper breakfast burritos. The 50 knot gust in our face was refreshing after the overpowering smell of pelican crap in the harbour. The pounding of the 15' swells on the little boat made for great calisthenics as you tried to pump your legs in syncopation. No sitting down without a recurvature of the spine every 18 seconds. Anchored off the kelp bed beneath the Ritz Carolton. Hmm, now we're in the middle of the kelp bed. Pull up the anchor (and 600lbs of kelp) and move out. Reset the anchor. Drift back into the kelp. Think we need a bigger anchor. As we start moving back out again, we see a bunch of pelicans and sea birds diving into the water. We head out. BAIT BALL!!!! I rig up the fly rod as John swings the boat to the seaward side. Its friggen pandemonium!!! Birds diving and splashing, sea lions flipping through the air and 60 plus dolphins moving to their own tune. This spectacle is about 300 yards across and the water seething black with one of the largest schools of mackerel I've ever seen. I half heartedly cast a fly, but the fly can't get down below the level of the bait ball as it shifts and goes under us. One second, we're on the edge, the next we're in the middle of the living maelstrom. A dolphin splashes me as he goes under the boat, essentially dolphin talk for "get the hell out of my kitchen." I stare in awe. The ball splits into two and we take the easier route by following the one heading for the kelp. This one peters out quickly and we turn to see the other half moving farther and farther off shore, into the current and gale. Our boat's to small and slow to keep up with it. We decide to head in for lunch. As we come back out of the harbour, we're both a little less green. The wind has calmed and we're able to anchor up and fish the edge of the kelp. A couple of little mackerel get themselves snagged on the squid we're offering, but no other takes. Successful? No, not in catching terms. However, in terms of understanding how small we really are when surrounded by a fully engaged predator/prey chain, very successful. Frank Reid |
TR: Dana Point
On Apr 27, 6:09*am, Frank Reid © 2008 wrote:
SNIP ". . . . , in terms of understanding how small we really are when surrounded by a fully engaged predator/prey chain, very successful. Frank Reid For sure. Well described Frank. Those moments of unapologetic wildness totally make a good day, even worth bad weather, fatigue, a bit of hurt etc.. For me they are a link as a former primary predator, to the coyotes, owls, Eagles, etc.. Right now, around here its the mating cycle. We see eagles so high in the lower clouds, jockeying for position, hooking up and tumbling hundreds of feet. Pilated (?), big NW woodpeckers yak it up and get all ruffled getting it on. The Canadas get all freaky and a few seem to get killed this time of year sticking their necks out for nooky if I were to guess. Sometimes the passionate Sea Lions bark all nite here. But seeing some of the other creatures hunt is what really does it for me. Brings to mind some old forester showing us how to read a cougar kill on a forestry 101 "tour" put together by Bob W. a few years ago. Dave |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:10 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2006 FishingBanter