
Salmon are sexy, stripers have intimidating power and halibut offer table fare that is second to none. Yet, for northern California saltwater anglers in search of consistent fast action, nothing beats targeting bottom fish.
Indeed, the only potential stumbling block that stands between you and a heavy sack of lingcod and rockfish is the weather. If the winds and swells allow navigation out to the reefs, you’ll almost always experience fish after fish excitement.
Way back when I first started fishing from charter boats, I either targeted salmon outside the Golden Gate or stripers and halibut inside the bay.
Sure, once in a while I got into wide open action, but often I was fishing for one or two hits per trip. Granted, at times those hits resulted in fish that weighed into double digits, but sometimes you just want to go out and hammer a bunch of fish. That’s why I booked my first rockfish trip.
As luck would have it, the weather for my maiden bottom fish trip was superb and the surface at the Farallon Islands was reminiscent of a placid lake.
Always wanting to learn from the experts, I asked the Huck Finn’s deckhand if I should lower my bait down with one-foot pulls as if mooching for salmon at the start of our first drift. “No, let me see your rod,” he said. After pinning a live anchovy to the rig’s hook, he dropped it into the water and started to slowly free spool it down. About ten seconds passed before a couple of sharp wraps showed on the rod tip. He engaged the reel, waited a beat, and drove the hook home. Handing me the pulsing rod, he exclaimed, “That’s all there is to it!”
When all was said and done, that trip was one of the most exciting fishing adventures I’d ever experienced. Scads of rockfish up to 3 pounds were holding just below the surface, and every time you dropped a bait in the water, you’d hook a fish. I’d become a rockfish junkie.