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#1 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Santee
Posts: 904
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: San Diego, CA
Posts: 103
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#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 108
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Probably a rookie question here...but you say you see them breaching. What does that entail (pun intended)? A buddy is going to go with me and he has a gopro, so if there is a chance to get the taxman on film, we are all about it. Hope that footage goes well with all the fish we catch.
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#4 | |
Float Tuber
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 243
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Quote:
![]() http://www.grindtv.com/surf/blog/197...20his%20board/ |
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#5 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Rancho Santa Margarita
Posts: 770
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The launch at Dogpatch at the south end of the parking area is usually the best bet, especially when the surf is up a bit. The problem with Pendleton Beach is the shorebreak -- you'd really want to make sure the surf is flat before heading out there.
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#6 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: IE
Posts: 171
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I went surffishing there on friday. I didn't catch anything as I was limited to a very small stretch of the beach. I had my dogs with me so I had to stay near the power plant. I fished in front of the power plant for an hour and was kicked off the beach. I guess the power plant workers and the attendant at the entrance of the beach have conflicting rules of fishing? Anyhow, I saw a few yakers that day launching from the surf... Off the rocks a couple of hundred yards north of the power plant. Seemed easy as pie, but maybe it was just a good deal. I'm not a local so I wouldn't know the typical conditions. Good luck!
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#7 |
PROBATION
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 657
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You guys are crazy to paddle out & yak fish San'O with all them great white sharks swimming all around!
If you think there are only small white sharks there you are kidding yourself. Nucking futs. ![]() |
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#8 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 192
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Quote:
There are all kinds of GWS all up and down the California coast. Biguns, smalluns, all kinduns... One of my favorite sayings is that if you think there isn't a GWS in the area, better think again. At any moment on the water chances are there is at least one decent sized one actively patrolling the area. That's where they are, where they live, and when you go in the water you simply are with them. No way around that. Just because you can't see them doesn't mean they are not there. I've been in the water since I was about 5 years old. Grew up surfing. I've been out in the water almost as much as I have been on land. Never been attacked. Never heard of any of my friends who've done the same ever being attacked. We've all seem them plenty of times up close and personal yet we are all still here. That is my point, there are much greater risks to getting out and being on the water than a shark attack. If you want to see one up close, I suggest spending time in the aforementioned area and just observing. Sooner or later you'll see one. I don't know all the science of GWS but the ones I see breaching are usually smaller and what appears to be feeding (macks?). They come from the deep and speed up fast to the surface, grasping their prey and launching into the air in one quick motion. Sometimes it seems like they are practicing or just having fun. I must admit I don't stick around long to watch much when I see this, I just catch a wave in or move away from the area, depends on how freaked out I am (and how many others are out surfing the same area). Most of my sightings came during the warmer months, and the area around Church's (The first surfing spot north of the Pendleton area). It seams about 2 times a year the sightings really go up, just stay tuned to the news, they will dramatize the heck out of it. We should be seeing lots more soon. |
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