News

Best Catch Yet by Bill Roecker

August 22nd, 2010|News|

Art Taylor brought his Searcher home from a five-day trip with 22 anglers that produced the best yellowtail catch of the season so far: limits of mossbacks that one angler weighed out at an average of 36 pounds. At least a dozen fish were 40 pounds or more, and a huge halibut graced the bag of forkies.

“It was Cedros Island at its best,” said Art. “Each angler had a personal best. It was world-class fishing. They were fish of a lifetime!”

George Guardiano of San Diego fished up a 42-pound halibut out of the congregation of toad yellows. He said he got it with a green mackerel baited on a 4/0 Gamakatsu hook tied to 40-pound P-Line. He used a TLD 30 reel and a Calstar 6460 H rod and brought the big flattie up to gaff in about ten minutes.

“He swallowed it, and I didn’t know he was there until I set the hook,” said George.

Rob Geiger of Simi Valley got a 43-pound yellowtail for first place. He said he took it with a mackerel flylined on a 7/0 Mustad hook and 40-pound Izorline. He used 65-pound Power Pro backing on an Avet JX reel and a Calstar 700 H rod.

Jim Hartwick of Harbor City won second place for a 42.6-pound yellowtail, and he also tied for third with a 41.6-pounder. Mart Pierpoint got one that weighed 41.6 pounds to get the other half of the tie.

The yellowtail catch may have been the best for Captain Taylor since 1988, when Bill Roecker went to Cedros with him, where they found 40-pounders thick as flies in a barnyard. That story is in Roecker’s forthcoming long range book, due from the printer right after Thanksgiving.

Searcher Sportfishing
Captains Art Taylor and Aaron Remy
(619) 226-2403 – Fisherman’s Landing

Searcher Tries Benitos, by Bill Roecker

August 14th, 2010|News|

Searcher Tries Benitos

Searcher returned from a four-day trip to the San Benitos Islands with skipper Aaron Remy and 21 anglers aboard.

Dave Bell of San Diego won first place for a 28-pound yellowtail and posed with it on the dock at Fisherman’s Landing. He said he got it with a blue and white Salas 6X Jr. jig on 40-pound P-Line XXX, and Avet LX reel and a GRUSA six-foot rod.

Searcher Sportfishing
Captains Art Taylor and Aaron Remy
(619) 226-2403 – Fisherman’s Landing

Big ‘Dines, Dinky Hooks by Bill Roecker

August 3rd, 2010|News|

Big ‘Dines, Dinky Hooks

Art Taylor brought his Searcher home August 3 after a five-day Izorline trip. Pro-staffer Wendy Tochihara was aboard, and she looked to have as many tuna on the boat as any man. Her best one was a 35.8-pound beauty. She said the albacore seemed to prefer big sardines and small hooks. She got hers with hooks in the 1/0 size.

There was a tie for first place. Larry Hicks of Corona and Chris Alcaraz of West Covina both had 39.2-pound albies, so they split first and second place rewards.

Hicks won the Izorline trophy for the best fish on that product. He got his with a sardine on a 3/0 Mustad hook tied to 30-pound Izorline on a Penn 4/0 reel and a Sabre six and a half-foot rod.

Mike Day of Phoenix won third place for a 38-pound longfin, and Howard Pukini of La Mirada had the trip’s best yellowfin tuna, a 37-pounder.

Searcher Sportfishing
Captains Art Taylor and Aaron Remy
(619) 226-2403 – Fisherman’s Landing

Cedros Island Remains Hot by Bill Roecker

July 30th, 2010|News|

Cedros Island Remains Hot

The yellowtail at Cedros Island are still chewing bait, jigs and just about anything else that falls into the water. Art Taylor took his Searcher anglers there on a five-day trip, and they loaded up on ‘tails before heading up the beach to try some rockfishing. A couple of nice white seabass bit in the wee hours at the island, and one of them made it into the jackpot.

Mike Lee of San Francisco won first place for a 27-pound yellowtail. He said he bagged it at two AM on the dropper loop, about the same time the white seabass came through. He baited a sardine on a 6/0 Eagle Claw hook on 60-pound Izorline. He used a TLD 30 reel and a Seeker 655 Black Steel rod.

Raul Alarcon of Garden Grove won second place for the larger fish of his pair of whites, a 24-pounder. The other one went 22.6 pounds. Both came on the dropper loop. Tom Kang of Huntington Beach won third place for a 23-pound yellowtail.

Searcher Sportfishing
Captains Art Taylor and Aaron Remy
(619) 226-2403 – Fisherman’s Landing

Shimano/Let’s Talk Hook-up On the Water Seminar finds Albacore by Pete Gray

July 8th, 2010|News|

Our second Shimano/Let’s Talk Hook-up on the water seminar returned to the Fishermans Landing docked Thursday morning with a nice load of albacore and some very happy anglers.  Captain Art Taylor was behind the wheel of the Searcher and took our group of 29- 115 miles from Point Loma to the fishing grounds.  The seas were flat and the fishing was steady.  Captain Art pulled the throttles of the Searcher back about 5:30am and within minutes we saw our first school of "puddling" albacore and proceeded to start the day with a few "bait fish". The morning progressed much the same way, stopping on puddling fish and jig strikes.  Though the fishing was better in the morning hours, we had steady jig strikes and bait fish throuthout the day and early evening.  The bite seemed to shut off about 7pm. The total count for the day was 64 albacore from 15 to 31 pounds.  Most of the fish were over 20 pounds and several anglers on the trip caught their first tuna, including young Joey Johnston pictured with his grandpa Gary Dittmar and Searcher deckhand Dustin Madruga.

Many thanks to our chief Shimano/Let’s Talk Hook-up on the water seminar instructor Patrick Gee pictured giving instruction to some of the group. Thanks to Dana Landing in Mission Bay for coordinating the trips, Celia and Art Taylor from the Searcher for hosting the trips and Shimano for providing the finest tackle on earth for everyone to use free on the trips.
 

If you would like to join us for our last Shimano/Let’s Talk Hook-up on the water seminar, it is a great one- 3 day trip on the Searcher in prime time- August 7-10.  There are a few spots left, so contact Searcher Sportfishing at 619-2262403 or check www.searchersportfishing.com

Izorline Trip Finds Forkies by Bill Roecker

July 5th, 2010|News|

Izorline Trip Finds Forkies

Art Taylor’s Searcher returned to Fisherman’s Landing July 5 after a good visit to Cedros Island. Art drove the boat, and his second skipper Aaron Remy showed the boys how with a 42-pound mossback he got with a mint green/blue Candy Bar. He said he used a Newell reel with a cracked handle and an Ulua rod, “typical boat gear.”

A pair of Izorline reps also highlined the catch. Norm Fujimoto of Izorline and Fullerton was chartermaster, and took a 36.6-pound yellowtail.

The trip produced near-limits, he told Bill Roecker, “…most on the yoyo jig, but the big one came on the flyline. They were on the lee side.”

Izor rep Ernie Seko of La Palma was on a busman’s holiday, and won first place for a 38.6-pound yellow. He said it bit a sardine on a 2/0 Mustad hook tied to 30-pound Izor fluorocarbon leader, 30-pound Izorline mainline and 65-pound Izor Spectra on an Avet JX reel and a Calstar 800 ML rod. He said the fish scrapped with him for 20 minutes.

Alvin Flores of San Diego won second place for a 34.6-pounder, and Jerry Walton of Las Vegas won third place for his 33.8-pound yellowtail.

Searcher Sportfishing
Captains Art Taylor and Aaron Remy
(619) 226-2403 – Fisherman’s Landing

Bluefin Run Turns Into A WIld Ride by Rich Holland

July 1st, 2010|News|


WON STAFF ON THE SPOT: SEARCHER: Bluefin Run Turns Into A Wild Ride

 
BY RICH HOLLAND/WON Staff WriterPublished: Jul 01, 2010

 

SOUTH CAL WON ON THE SPOT


SAN DIEGO — The annual WON 3-day trip on the Searcher started off with owner/operator Art Taylor telling us we didn’t have enough time to reach the yellowtail bite down at Cedros, but a temp break that gave up a plunker bite for more than 80 bluefin on the way home was well within range at 167 miles.

There was plenty of time to relax and get rigged up with the Williamson Gyro lures and Eagle Claw hooks given away to all 20 passengers, and second skipper Aaron Remy pointed to the 2/0 Eagle Claw as the right pick to pair up with the sardines in the slammer. It was also strongly suggested that 25-pound test be connected to 30-pound fluorocarbon for the 25 to 30-pound bluefin, and it just so happened that 25-pound Suffix mono and 30-pound Seaguar fluorocarbon was made available to anyone who wanted it.

• ONE OF THE HOT HANDS on the Searcher trip belonged to Richard Yoshioka of La Palma, who hooked up five times for 3 bluefin. • CAPT. ART TAYLOR put the gaff in Larry Grey’s bluefin caught on the WON Searcher 3-day trip. • THE FINISHING TOUCH on one of Richard Yoshioka’s fish was applied by Searcher crew members Kenny Merrell and Aaron Remy.
• ONE OF THE HOT HANDS on the Searcher trip belonged to Richard Yoshioka of La Palma, who hooked up five times for 3 bluefin.

• CAPT. ART TAYLOR put the gaff in Larry Grey’s bluefin caught on the WON Searcher 3-day trip.

• THE FINISHING TOUCH on one of Richard Yoshioka’s fish was applied by Searcher crew members Kenny Merrell and Aaron Remy.


The Lakers still trailed the Celtics when Taylor broke into the XM radio broadcast that Thursday night to announce a change of plans. Boats fishing the 110-mile mark off Punta Colonet reported massive spots of bluefin up and producing some action.

“We’re going to slow down and start there in the morning,” said Taylor, a decision that determined the fate of the trip.

The weather — a moderate mix of swells with a light wind — was supposed to hold through the morning at least and when the day dawned the swell had increased but the wind only crinkled the tops of the rollers.

What came up foaming was thousands of bluefin, but the first couple schools were reluctant to say the least. Taylor finally gave up on one particularly abundant gathering of shortfins that led us on like a bird protecting its nest by pretending to be wounded for close to an hour.

It took a while to find another batch — first of all Taylor had to make a big enough move to make certain it wasn’t the same darn fish — but a couple bluefin finally latched on to sardines soaked by Richard Yoshioka and Bret Cook.

The pattern pretty much was set from that point on. There was no use in bothering with a jig cast from the bow into the frothing, jumping fish. Capt. Remy put multiple casts right into the thick of the bluefin with a Gyro. One of this reporter’s casts brought back not a bluefin, but the “problem” — a tiny black and silver fish no longer than an inch and not much more than the proverbial two eyes and a wiggle. A switch to a small black and silver lure produced only more frustration, with one cast literally bouncing off the backs of several bluefin without a bite.

Taylor said he was metering massive balls of the small bait in the clean, blue 61-degree water. Both black-footed and Laysan albatross patrolled the building wind swell, which now wore small caps of white. Kelp paddies held both birds and bait, but the water was too cold for yellowtail.

If the wind would just hold off, though, there was a chance we would get good conditions for the afternoon, which was when the fish reportedly bit best the day before.

• ONE OF THE FIRST bluefin caught on the 3-day WON trip aboard the Searcher was caught by Bret Cook of San Pedro and gaffed by Kenny Merrell.• DOUBLING UP on one stop was the grandfather/grandson team of Larry and Alex Grey of Santa Rosa.
• ONE OF THE FIRST bluefin caught on the 3-day WON trip aboard the Searcher was caught by Bret Cook of San Pedro and gaffed by Kenny Merrell.

• DOUBLING UP on one stop was the grandfather/grandson team of Larry and Alex Grey of Santa Rosa.

Meanwhile, the only chance to get a bite came from putting a sardine into the water as soon Taylor gave the okay. At that point there was just enough “slide” action to give the bait a head start away from the boat. A bite would either come quickly as the school passed the boat, or a bit later on the long soak as a fish or two was enticed to linger by the chum tossed out by Kenny Merrell.

Those who stuck to it best included Yoshioka, David Yoakley and Steve Nichols. All three would end up with 3 bluefin for the trip. Remy put down his jig stick and was able to hook 4 fish, 3 that made it on to the boat after he handed the rod off to a passenger.
One of those was young Alex Grey of Santa Rosa, who was brought on an introductory offshore trip by his grandfather Larry. Right when Alex was on his fish, Larry tossed a bait off the bow on 60-pound fluorocarbon and nailed his own bluefin. Joe Hartman followed up with a fish of his own.

A big disappointment came when Steve Nichols’ 15-year-old son Joel broke off a fish right at color. Joel had hooked the fish on his own on 40-pound only to have one of the bigger bluefin chew through the line. A few other fish broke off and unbuttoned.
Remy shared the tip that he was breast-hooking the sardines and when I got a bait out quickly that was pinned in the same manner, a fast-swimming bait soon became an devoured sardine. I had gone to 25-pound Suffix with a 25-pound Seaguar leader — doing a quick change from the 40-pound originally on the Talica 12 — but that was still plenty to bring in the 25-pound bluefin, the 17th and last of the day.

It was only 2 p.m. but the wind and swell was on a continual rise and the Pacific changed in the Bering Sea. We rode it out that night on the sea anchor with markedly fewer folks taking part in the meal set out by cooks Charles Howell and Steve Lamb.

The handmade sauces, dressings and baked goods would be the only comfort the next and final day of fishing. I’m not sure, but it could have been around the time Lamb put out blueberry muffins that Yoakley got the only bluefin of the last day. Just after the barbecue chicken pizza Taylor pushed to the eastern edge of the life and a quad jig strike turned out to large pelagic bonito.

As time ran out Taylor pushed to the northern edge of the zone and finally called it a day as the water turned green. Fortunately a radio report that the weather up the line was much better turned out to be true and conditions were practically comfortable as we enjoyed grilled steak kabobs for dinner. It also meant everyone was in the galley and the trip’s raffle was held, with John Loertscher of Orange (the trip was a retirement gift) and Joel Nichols taking home Costa 580 sunglasses. Also raffled off were four $50 Turner’s gift certificates, Williamson lure bags and individual trolling lures and Seaguar fluorocarbon. Capt. Taylor provided certificates good for $50 off processing at the new Fisherman’s Landing facility.

Those would have to be used at a later day, as Art Taylor and crew, which also included Kyle Manroe besides Aaron Remy, Kenny Merrell, Charles Howell and Steve Lamb, not only took care of all the fish caught, but also picked up the tab for all the beverages consumed and offered a 10 percent discount on any future trip to all aboard. The Searcher is in great shape after a long stint in the yard (just ask Howell) and the crew has been with the boat for years now and is very experienced and professional. The many eco-trips they run means they can also offer a wealth of information on sea life encountered.
Also on the WON trip were Terry Flynn of Anaheim, Steve Katz of Three Rivers, Mike Leonard of Menifee, Jim Wylie of Riverside, Gary Urch of San Diego, Brian Trout of San Diego, Tom Holland of Lake Forest, and Steve Holland of Bishop.

For more information on the Searcher, go to www.searchersportfishing.com or call 619-226-2403.


• WINNING A PAIR of Costa Sunglasses were John Loertscher of Orange and Joel Nichol of Norco.

• RAFFLE WINNERS Mike Leonard of Menifee and Jim Wylie of Riverside display the Williamson lure packs and Seaguar fluorocarbon that was part of the swag.

• HOT BAKED GOODS in the galley are a welcome break from the cold windy hours on the deck spent chasing offshore game fish.

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