
With a parade of violent Pacific storms battering California you would have had to have been a moron to think that the weather beyond the Golden Gate was going to be pleasant.
The fact of the matter was that when Captain Chris Smith of Captain Hook Sportfishing steered the 34’ Defiant out of the Berkeley Marina on Saturday, March 12 we didn’t know if the conditions would allow us to go out beyond the bridge. The previous day, much larger charter boats had attempted to go out, but upon reaching the Golden Gate, they had been forced to turn back.
You are likely wondering what had prompted five Fish Sniffer supporters along with myself, two deckhands and Captain Chris to roll out of bed in the predawn darkness, don all manner of foul weather gear and head out into the teeth of a winter storm aboard a relatively small boat? Crab!
After a long delay in the opening of the Dungeness crab season we all wanted crabs. Our plan was to head out, hopefully hitting a window calm enough for finding and pulling crab gear and then we’d head back into the bay and spend the rest of the day trolling for halibut and stripers.
We got the first taste of what we’d be up against when we ran into a substantial ground swell while we were still inside the bay where swells are seldom encountered unless the weather outside is pretty bad.
Cruising beneath the Golden Gate Bridge the water was rough but nothing we couldn’t handle. The test would be whether or not we could make it around Point Bonita. The conditions off the point can be rough even on a calm day and it was far from calm.
The storms had created a massive push out of the southwest that was causing monster waves to slam into the Marin County coastline. This is the area that is usually sheltered and fishable in all but the strongest north winds, but with the push out of the southwest it was now the danger zone.