Posts by Stephan

    Is there anything that you can do with the information?


    When I dove last I could hear plenty of croaking. It was really the first time that I was confident that what I was hearing was wsb croaking. Now that I know what it sounds like I know that I have heard it before and close by.


    So I am curious, can you do anything with it other than know that they are in the area? Can you determine depth by where you hear them or does it permeate the entire water column? Does hearing it indicate that they are undisturbed or not?


    Thanks.

    Totally awesome. Thanks for a great write up. I was holding my breath when you were down on the rock and getting pulled down by the fish.


    The fish looks like it has been hit before and healed, maybe 2x right next to one another. Is that the way it looked to you as well, or are those just random marks?

    I really don't understand all the technical stuff but its pretty clear packing is not for me. Hell I don't even like the sound of it. Don Paul, can you tell me what were seeing in the image? What is the arrow pointing out?

    I have for sale one pair of used but in good condition Riffe foot pockets. I believe that they accept the same blades as the Omer foot pockets. I am selling them on behalf of a friend. From looking around $50 sounds like a very fair price will ship at your cost. Will post images if anyone want to see them.


    If no interest here I will post elsewhere.


    Thanks,
    Stephan

    For a bit of garbage hauling....


    Darren Bob and myself picked up a trash bag each plus some trap gear and Bob hauled in a sizable piece of steel cable. Trash bags were donated to us by a local convenience store that was too happy to assist us.


    I was pleased to see that the beach was cleaner than I have seen in the past. Very little large trash. Those bags are mostly filled with plastic straws and bottle caps.

    Welcome. I like all fish reports. Yes even perch provided they are targeted and eaten. I think they can be a lot of fun and tasty.

    Welcome.


    I too look forward to your reports. My brother visited down their for a fisheries conference and did some diving. He said it was amazing.

    Welcome to the forum Steve,I see your hunting in my old neighborhood. Western high,Anaheim,class of 65':)


    Geographically close but a little bit a part on the time space continuum. Servite High, Class of '86.


    Thanks. Really. I am glad that you didn't miss that reference. I almost scratched it and originally wrote it as Dread Pirate Roberts' Forest of Rodents of Unusual Size, but its not the write name and seemed unwieldy.

    Note: This was a selfish write up. It may well be a of waste of ten minutes of your life. If this style of write up is out of charachter for this board, please feel free to delete.



    It was a great dream, like the bullshit you read in Penthouse forums, but the kisses were getting oddly sloppy and the ear nibbles a little too rough.


    Lola?


    And so I awoke from my siesta to find Lola’s paws on my chest chewing on my ear like a piece of cheap raw hide from Petco. It was Father’s day and I had apparently dozed off after reading all the cards the dogs wrote to me to say, “Gee; you’re such a great Dad”.


    I rolled off the couch and announced to my wife that I’d be heading out for an afternoon dive. With a sigh of relief, she stopped her chores, tossed me the dogs’ leashes and told me she’d gladly load my gear in the truck and pack a Twix in my bag if I’d only just take Poncho and Lola for a quick walk. That sounded fair enough to me, so I complied with her wish and an hour later I rolled to a stop where friends had referred me. My normal dive partner couldn’t break away. He had real kids who wrote him real cards, so this was another solo dive. As I walked to the bluffs I was pleased that there were no anti-fishing activists to harass me this day. Unfortunately, they too were raising children and were likely at home with their spawn.


    I almost always cram my dives in at first light, because that’s what life deals me, so it was a unique experience for me to be slipping through the calm surf at a convenient time to coincide with a late afternoon high tide. The sun was still fairly high in a thinly overcast sky and the water was clear, so the visibility was much better than any I had seen in recent months. Fish, particularly fat calico bass, seemed to be suspended everywhere high in the kelp forest; all with pot bellies, that looked painfully stretched to bursting point. Rather than darting away, they lumbered along side escorting me among the blue perch and senoritas through the clear green water of the kelp forest. It was good to be alive.


    I was using a new snorkel that seemed an inch too short and the Bonine I usually swallow was still sitting on the kitchen counter next to a glass of water so by the time I reached my hunting zone I was feeling just a little queasy. As I floated over a piece of reef I stuck a finger down the neck of my suit and let it flood with refreshingly cold water. That ought to keep the motion sickness at bay for at least another fifteen minutes, I thought to myself as I watched a long silvery fish with a distinct yellow bronze accent glide out of the dense kelp and onto the reef below.


    Holy Shit! They are here. I do have a chance! This could be the day! The fish, maybe 18 lbs., slowly cruised under me in 10 feet of water. I thought about the surface shot debate and did it really applied when the spear tip is only five feet from its target? The fish was hunting and so was I, so after he faded from view I dropped off the reef and into the dark forest canopy that surrounded the rock like the Dread Pirate Roberts’ Fire Swamp. As I neared the bottom I was greeted by a chorus of croaking. My heart rate quickened and I returned to the surface for my one up. Then again, I dropped to 10 feet and started to slowly kick through the kelp. More croaking and then, Boom, Boom!
    phuck!


    A white sea bass shot out from underneath me. Not a monster by any means, but certainly legal size and I was just looking to take my first. Again, I found a thin spot in the kelp canopy and started my breath up.


    When my heart rate settled I took one last lung full of air, pulled the snorkel from my mouth, pinched my nose and thought to myself, why does my nose always itch so high on the bridge where I can’t reach it? I scratched at the lens with my finger. That pisses me off! I make a pike and lift one fin and sink slowly to the bottom only fifteen feet below. Damn it’s dark down here; kind of spooky too. The croaking- it feels like it’s coming from within and now just as my eyes begin to adjust I see this big fat head and the eye of Sauron peering at me from no more than four maybe five feet away, just on the other side of a kelp stalk. I am aware of another sea bass to my right. He is sooo close. How did he get here without me seeing him, and why is my gun pointed at the bottom?


    With my right hand on the trigger at my waist, I use my left hand to raise the barrel level with the fish careful not to poke him in the process. At the same moment that I pull the trigger a hundred thoughts run through my head. Damn he’s big. This is actually gonna happen. I hope he doesn’t run deep; I only have 50’ feet of float line. Can he hear my heart pounding? My friends did me right.


    BLAM!


    I can’t remember seeing the tip of my spear but apparently I’m a pretty good hip shot from five feet away. The fishes head stopped as his tail pin-wheeled around the shooting line.


    There is a “seam” that runs the length of the fishes belly and its facing the surface and I think to myself, `this is the only fish I know of that has that ridge like a cheap plastic Happy Meal toy molded in some far off Chinese factory`. All twitter pated I burst through the kelp canopy and immediately looked down to watch the fish weakly kick around the kelp stalk as another white sea bass glided over him briefly eclipsing the dying fish’s silver sides. Boy they are stupid today.


    I return to the surface just long enough to pull my knife from its sheath at my left calf and dive down to knife the fish in the head. My heart is racing so fast that I only have time to burry the knife in the fishes head. I leave it there. When I return to the fish after a brief surface interval, the knife is gone. No bueno, I thought to myself. How will I cut this sucker out from the kelp? I grab the near lifeless fish by the gills and the shaft too and try to pull him to the surface. SNAP! What- the- fuck? I’ve lost lift and my right foot is kicking far too easily.


    I make the surface with fish in hand and assess the situation.


    Shit!
    I’ve snapped a fin, and lost my knife. My legs are wrapped in float line and every time I pull up on the fish it pulls the gun towards the bottom. Add to that that I am in the thickest piece of kelp around and the tide is beginning to drop. Not so good.


    Calm down, I think. There is another guy that only has one leg and one fin. I’ve got one and a half. Another friend pulled a fish twice this size from the same location like a champ. And last of all, nothing is worth my life. I can leave it all here in the weeds if I feel so threatened.


    Not so bad, I thought as I tore out the fish’s gills. I don’t need no stinking knife. With that my heart rate dropped, my shooting line came free from the kelp below, and the current pushed down the kelp showing me the path of least resistance. Thirty minutes later I reached the beach and a short drive later I was back at home with my hard won prize in the cooler and Poncho licking the salt off my face.

    Thanks for the welcomes.


    Don Paul, We've met before at one of the MLPA meetings, in Long Beach, I think. No worries about the fish pic. We've all seen a dead wsb by now so I'll just do a write up. I took the time to write it up a little elaborately for my own selfish pleasure and discarded it as childish rubbish but may as well post it in the CA section and let you all judge for your self.


    Mike, thanks for inviting me to this site and for the gunny sack which I still use.

    I agree with the idea of not giving away spots. Most spots I dive were the result of educated guesses and the rest from a network of friends who trusted me to keep them quiet.


    One way in which these boards are valuable to me is to determine the the conditions of an already known dive location (visibility / divability). I live an hours drive from my nearest locations so this helps me better assess whether I should mow the lawn or dive. It can also save me considerable gas $. I also am willing to share the same info without giving up a specific location or fish / catch specifics.


    How does that mesh?