
I have known my friend Mike Rheuby for many years having fished against him in black bass tournaments back in the day. More recently I have fished with him quite a bit and I always enjoy the time on the water. It’s funny because it seems even though we are chasing the “little green fish”, much of our conversation is centered around our shared interest in rockfishing. Mike would say to me, “Once you start rockfishing, you’re gonna be hooked.” Well, he was right on target with that prediction.
Recently Mike invited me to join him and his 14 year old son Ryan for a day of shallow water rockfishing with Fish on Charters aboard the Samantha Irene located in Bodega Bay. I have fished with Captain Jeff Caramella on a number of occasions so it did not take much to convince me.
We met up with Captain Jeff and the rest of our party at the harbor. A quick stop for gas at the fuel dock and we were soon on our way. This was my first rockfish trip of the year and I was excited to get fishing. As a bonus, Captain Jeff told me that we would be pulling crab pots as well.
Once we cleared the breakwater outside the harbor, Captain Jeff made a path north along the beautiful Sonoma Coast. The weather was good and the ocean was flat, allowing us to make our destination in short order. Captain Jeff started the drift out in shallow water. Mike and Ryan chose to fish a mixture of swimbaits and bars, hoping to catch a lingcod or big rockfish. Like true bass fishermen, the two kept changing up baits until they found what the fish wanted. Once they made the switch to smaller bars, they started to connect with rockfish on a consistent basis.
I opted to fish a freshwater bass action spinning rod with a small 3.5” AA Shad Tail Swimbait on a ¼ oz jighead for schooling black and blue rockfish. The fish were suspended in the water column from the surface down to 20 feet.