
It had taken more than two hours to motor from Berkeley to the Farallon Islands. I snoozed for much of the ride, so I was feeling alert and ready for action when I stepped to the port corner and got my long Seeker Stealth jigging rod ready for action.
The angler next to me dropped down with shrimp flies and a quick glance at the angle of his line told me the direction of the drift. Thumbing the Penn Fathom high speed lever drag reel, I fired a chrome and blue 12-ounce Ahi Assault diamond jig 150 feet up current and free spooled it down to the bottom.
I grew up jigging for lingcod and rockfish and it’s one of my favorite ways to fish. As a general rule, big live baits will catch you more lings than jigs but when the jig bite is on the action can be fast and furious. The jig stick felt good in my hands.
With the jig laying on the bottom, I retrieved slack while dropping the rod tip. When the line came tight to the jig, I lifted sharply to propel it off the bottom and then let it fall, controlling the amount of slack with the reel. You want the jig to fall on a semi-slack line, but too much slack undermines your control.
When I lifted the rod to bring the jig off the bottom a second time, I felt solid weight and immediately cranked hard on the reel. I was hooked up and it felt like a good fish.
Perhaps a minute into the trip, I had the first lingcod of the day heading for the surface. Moments later Stan, the Goldeneye 2000’s deckhand, was at my side and with much precision sunk the gaff into the head of my 9-pound ling when it came into view near the surface.