California Pacific Coast Fishing Report: Winter Patterns, Hot Spots, and Bait Tips
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Up and down the coast this morning we’ve got a classic winter pattern: cool, mostly clear, and light winds with a long-period swell. Offshore San Diego and LA have been seeing calm seas and “hardly a breath of wind, flat calm ocean” as the crews at 976-TUNA described yesterday. Air temps are running in the 50s at first light, warming into the 60s by mid‑day, so bring the layers.
Sunrise is right around 7:20 on the Central Coast and a few minutes earlier down in San Diego, with sunset about 5:10–5:15, giving you a tight but productive window for those low‑light bites.
Tides are middling today, not those monster winter swings. The San Francisco tide tables from Tides4Fishing and NOAA’s January chart show a pre‑dawn high followed by a late‑morning low and a modest evening bump, with overall coefficients on the low side. Down south, the tide‑forecast data for San Diego shows a similar pattern: a night or early‑morning high, dropping out mid‑morning, then building again in the afternoon. Plan to fish that last hour of outgoing into the first push of incoming—especially around structure and current seams.
Recent action has been solid for winter. NorCalFishReports notes the Caroline out of Monterey running 11 anglers into 200 king mackerel, 400 sanddabs, and a couple of petrale sole yesterday—classic winter bottom and near‑surface mix. Emeryville crab boats have been stacking Dungeness, and National Fisherman highlights that the commercial Dungeness fishery has opened in parts of Northern California, so the crab are definitely in and filling pots.
Down south, 976‑TUNA is reporting heavy mixed‑bag scores. Marina del Rey boats had over 500 fish yesterday, with big numbers of sculpin, whitefish, mackerel, rockfish, plus a shot of calico and sand bass. Pierpoint Landing counts showed triple‑digit sand bass and even a surprising 100‑plus bluefin tuna plus yellowtail and barracuda still hanging around the local banks—unseasonably good pelagic life for this time of year.
Fish activity’s been best on those tide changes. Inshore, rockfish, whitefish, and sculpin are chewing on standard dropper loops with squid or shrimp strips. The LA‑Long Beach and Redondo boats are calling out squid and cut shrimp on dropper loops as the ticket for filling sacks with whitefish, sheephead, and bass. Up north, Monterey sanddabs are eating small cut baits or bits of squid on hi‑lo rigs, and the mackerel are piling on small metal jigs and sabiki rigs.
For lures, keep it simple and natural.
- For local kelp and hard bottom: 1–2 ounce leadheads with 4–5 inch swimbaits in sardine, anchovy, or brown bait patterns.
- Around bait balls or bird life: small chrome or blue/white irons and Colt Sniper‑style jigs for mackerel and any bonus yellows.
- Nearshore halibut drifts: slow‑rolled swimbaits or trap‑rigged anchovies on fish‑finder rigs.
Best bait right now:
- Squid strips, whole squid for the bigger models.
- Cut anchovy or mackerel for rockfish and sand bass.
- Fresh crab or clams in NorCal where legal if you’re playing with surf perch or poking around rocky pockets.
A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar:
- Monterey Bay: The area off the Monterey “Caroline line,” that 150–240 foot zone outside the harbor, has been hot for king mackerel and big scores of sanddabs. Look for the fleet, bounce hi‑lo rigs with small hooks and squid, and have a light jig ready for the macks.
- LA / Long Beach local banks: The hard bottom outside the breakwalls and near horseshoe‑type structure is producing sand bass, sculpin, and the occasional winter yellow. Fish a dropper loop with squid tight to bottom, and if you mark suspended fish, send down a smaller jig or sliding egg‑sinker rig.
If you’re shore‑bound, Ocean Beach and similar outer‑coast beaches around SF are worth a look around the lower water this afternoon, working sand crab imitations or Gulp sandworms for surf perch along the inside edges of the bars.
That’s the word from the water. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report.
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