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Rockfish begin move to deeper reefs with season’s change, lingcod move in | Fish Rap - Santa Cruz Sentinel

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We are officially into autumn now. The fall fishing season can be incredibly productive, and can feature days of the most pleasant ocean conditions for the year. Fall can also host nasty weather with big swells and wind chop, making fishing inadvisable, if not impossible.

This week was somewhere between those two extremes. We had some wind, and some steep chop on the ocean, but also enjoyed a couple days of relative calm. Fishing was possible every morning, and productive as well.

Now is the time of year that the big rockfish will begin to move out to deeper reefs. Working the spots from 80-120 feet of water will likely get the best results for those chasing cod. Halibut will be moving deeper also though plenty of small- to medium-sized flatties were hooked this week from flat sandy areas both in Santa Cruz and Monterey. Conversely, big lingcod are now moving in, towards their shallow winter spawning grounds.

Stagnaro’s Sportfishing is working the deeper reefs just above Santa Cruz on their half day trips, and traveling further north on the full day sojourns. Skipper Ken Stagnaro gave this week’s rundown, saying, “Legacy is doing well in the morning and up the coast. Rock fishing remains solid. Friday: Eight people caught three lingcod and limits of rock fish. Saturday: Full day’s trip saw 17 anglers catch 165 rock fish.”

Launching from Moss Landing the Kahuna usually goes as far south as weather and time will permit. The fishing is always so much better at Big Sur. On Monday, they had 14 anglers aboard. The boat got limits of rockfish, and owner Carol Jones commented on the quality and variety of fish that day, “44 vermilion rockfish, 12 canary rockfish, 25 copper rockfish, eight lingcod, one Ocean Whitefish, 59 (assorted) rockfish.”

In Monterey, the Check Mate and Caroline from Chris’ Fishing Trips provided cookie-cutter reports again. Full limits of rockfish and one to four lingcod per trip.

Surfcasting is heating up for the perch-chasers, as well as the night-time striped bass guys. We haven’t seen many striped bass caught in the daytime lately, but Glenn Sales from Marina managed to catch a few while fishing the dark of night on the beaches near Monterey. Sales keys in on the high tides, and is finding success using JoeBaggs Swarters as well as topwater poppers. A few anglers who fish the pocket beaches of Santa Cruz report good, if not great fishing for barred surf perch. Numbers of perch caught (and released) are high, and occasionally a jumbo bites the hook. That was the case for Perry Dobashi from San Jose, who used large sandcrabs on Sunday to entice a lunker barred surf perch while working a big mushroom rip current just yards from the dry sand.

Allen Bushnell also operates Santa Cruz Kayak Fishing and Surfcasting Guide Service. Please send any reports, pictures or questions to scruzfishing@yahoo.com.

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Rockfish begin move to deeper reefs with season’s change, lingcod move in | Fish Rap - Santa Cruz Sentinel
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