
Bodega Bay/Tomales Bay
Rockfish and Lingcod Action Sizzles, White Seabass and Stripers Boated in Bay
BODEGA BAY – The New Sea Angler continues to find topnotch shallow water rockfish and lingcod fishing off the Sonoma County Coast, while anglers are catching a mixture of halibut, striped bass, and white seabass in Tomales Bay.
On his most recent trip, the 16 anglers aboard the New Sea Angler bagged 160 rockfish and 15 lingcod up to 16 pounds.
“After running research trips the last three days, we went back out again today,” Powers reported. “The 16 anglers caught full limits of great quality rockfish, all bottom grabbers with no school fish. They also boated 15 lingcod to 16 pounds. Conditions were good, with no wind and light seas conditions.”
On his previous trip, the 18 anglers aboard the New Angler bagged 180 rockfish and 36 lingcod up to 18 pounds.
The anglers have been catching quality canary, brown, copper, and vermilion rockfish. Anglers are hooking the fish while using shrimp flies baited with squid strips, bars, jigs, swimbaits, and other offerings.
Meanwhile, anglers fishing inside Tomales Bay have been catching a mixture of halibut, white seabass, and stripers, although the fishing has been challenging at times.
“So what do you do when you're on vacation but the weather turns to gale force winds? I guess you troll the back by Marshall for bass,” Willy Vogler of Lawson’s Landing reported. “I guess that because the only boat we launched today did that and caught bass – white seabass and striped bass. Flatfish are hard this year, and likely will continue to be hard for a few years if the past salmon closure is any kind of indicator.”
“Gage and I were looking at the halibut results, year over year, from Sportfishingreport.com, and they showed a drop of 50% or better in the catch per fisherman since 2023. Go catch what's biting, is the result of that, and the twins show it. Two stripers near Pelican and two white seabass near Marshall were the catches of the day. You go, Alexanders, Johnny Sandbar (a Gerard Fitzgerald nickname if there ever was one) and Martha. The catching may suck, but certain people figure out how to catch nonetheless. Nice. Fricking. Fish,” he quipped.
On another day, Vogler reported, “Gage took his girlfriend, Amanda, out fishing this evening. Gage caught, well, nothing. But he gaffed a nice halibut on Amanda's line. This fish was caught on a jig on the bar after 7:00 PM. Not an early bite but a good fish.”
On another day, Swampy sent over this report: “Evening Willy. Spent the day on the bay with good results. Easy anchovy bait near the yellow marker. 6 halibut to 12 pounds for three anglers north of Hog with the tide change being key. Glad to get some meat this trip. See you next time.”
Vogler’s response? “The halibut fishing may be down, but not out. There were several other halibut caught today with ‘north of Hog’ also being in common. Also, most of the fish were caught in the afternoon. My guess is that some fish came in. Hopefully there's more following them. Nice work on the fish, Swampy and crew,” wrote Vogler.
The recreational groundfish regulations in the San Francisco Management Area (from Point Arena to Pigeon Point) are available here:
https://nrm.dfg.ca.gov/FileHandler.ashx?DocumentID=185056&inline
- Dan Bacher