
Every year I look forward to the opening of rockfish season on the central coast. Several times during the season and throughout the summer, I can head out with the family to enjoy the coast and get in a little kayak fishing.
It seems most guys head to Carmel for their kayak fishing adventures, but I tend to prefer the Pacific Grove side of the Monterey Peninsula purely for the fact there are less anglers, and there’s easier access to the shoreline. The downside? Smaller fish. Lots of quantity, but often less quality.
Long before my wife and kids wake up in the morning, I’m making my push off in the kelp-lined rocky and sandy shoreline, eager to enjoy a few hours of rod-bending fun on rockfish, cabezon and lingcod on light tackle. But on the morning of June 7th, I was close to being empty handed after almost two hours of a scratch bite with only a few small blue and black rockfish that I had released.
After three straight years of fishing Pacific Grove, I’ve found a few different elements to be true for bottomfish. In terms of baits, smaller offerings produce more action. Examples include the five inch JRP swimbaits on three-quarter ounce heads, and bright colored Pucci two ounce spoons.
In terms of structure, isolated pieces of rock in the middle of sandy areas tend to hold more numbers and a variety of fish, rather than fishing close into the rocky shoreline itself. Still, armed with that knowledge, I struggled that morning.
It was wasn’t until I accidentally found a rock that I hadn’t marked on GPS in previous trips that I started getting some good action. With only an hour left before I had to paddle back in, I worked the same rock over and over, getting strikes on a chartreuse and green Pucci spoon several times on each drift.
On my