Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Darrell & Dads Family Guide Service
With the weather looking so great I decided the end of last week to head out to Westport and go after some bottom fish off the jetty, and perhaps do a video to boot. After some shifts in plans I finally ended up hooking up with Nate Treat and doing something he wasn’t used to – fishing the jetty from a boat.I was pumped to say the least.
I arrived Sunday evening and pulled into an almost deserted Grayland State Park and dutifully paid my $22 to legally park and sleep over night. Last time I did this my kids were belt high…
Morning, 6:30am, I met up with Nate at his Tokeland spot for catching sandshrimp. Within 20 minutes we had a bucket of shrimp and it was off to Westport.
By the time we got everything loaded and motored out to the jetty it was around 9am, a bit later than I would have hoped. But, since we were fishing from sea and not shore, I figured that would give us an advantage. What I didn’t figure on is – it isn’t so easy maintaining a safe distance from the jetty rocks and still being able to get the bait down into the rocks/kelp. The plan had been to catch some kelp greenling and then use those to get the big bad lings.
I will admit to being more than a tad anxious and it took a while to figure out the best strategy to fish from the boat. I know it threw Nate off his established method of shore fishing. But I’ll tell you what, watching the breakers hitting the rocks and having the swells move us in that general direction kept me really shy of getting in too close. We fished the bay side, as I didn’t want to deal with ocean breakers pushing me into the rocks (so I settled on the wind pushing us closer, a deal with the devil).
We worked the shoreline and really didn’t have much success. I finally suggested we abandon the quest for greenling and instead go off a bit further and pound the bottom in the 40-60 ft range. This made me feel less anxious and able to enjoy the fishing, and we started catching some very nice black sea bass. Best success came right off the bottom, using the sand shrimp pulse a curly tail. I had tried a curly tail jig earlier and was disappointed that the obviously suspended bass seemed to have no interested (which certainly wasn’t my experience fishing Neah Bay in the past). In any case, just as we started getting into fish the tide started running again (12:30pm) and now we found ourselves being rapidly propelled into the ocean – wow, things were moving us right along. Bottom line, the wind and tide made us call it a day around 1pm.
So, we had an OK, not great day. I can say I have a much better idea about how to fish the jetty from a boat and the next time I decide to go out there I’ll be better prepared with a game plan that will work for boat fishing. We ended up with a half dozen nice black sea bass, no lings, and a better sense of how to fish this productive jetty from a boat.
Available Fishing Guide:
Website: Darrell & Dads Family Guide Service