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We got to the beach early. It was a Saturday and a busy beach day, so we all met up at 6:30am, which gave us enough time to survey the typography of the beach, see the crab beds and with the bottom of the tide creating a large wet flat, give us enough room to spread out and practice our casting. We were all set; we had a game plan. Now we waited for the fish to show. I knew they would be there around 8am, so I told the boys to be patient. I showed them the seams they would ride to get to the crab beds. I pointed out nervous water. They started to see a few corbina here and there, and they were all getting excited about what I described as beginning to happen in real time. At around 8am my buddy Colin who was helping me out hooks up to a beautiful fish and lands it showing the boys that this difficult task was possible. In the meantime they are all bumping into fish but they are unbuttoning, thats ok, they are in the game, their flies are in the right places and we are seeing lots of fish. Own hooks up and breaks one off. They corbina are aggressively moving toward the beach in groups, tailing and swirling right in front of the boys. It is the magic window which can last up to a half an hour. I’m just hoping one of these kids connects, when all of a sudden Leo Jr. yells, “Im on!” I began coaching him through he fight, not to have any slack in the line, he fought the fish like a true champ. He had it on for a while, it gave him a real good battle. After what seemed like ten minutes, we slid the fish onto the sand. First thing I check is if the fish was fair-hooked and it was. A fair-hooked fish is one that eats the fly, not hooked in the side or tail. We measured it, took a few pics and got her back in the water to fight another day. What a great morning. The stoke was high. Mission accomplished! True gratitude on my behalf to witness something so special. All the boys are now hooked on Corbina sight casting, mainly because they realize the challenge was high and the reward great. –Al Q
Thank You ! Love the updates ! Hoping to really catch one !!!!
Cherie D.
Thanks for sharing this story Al!
I live in Knoxville, TN and work at a fly shop near the Smoky Mountains National Park. I lived in SoCal for nearly 50 years. Fortunately, before leaving there I got a taste of Corbina fishing. I haven’t caught one, yet, but while learning to do this (Thank you for the Corbina Diaries!) I’ve met some really good people on the beach at La Conchita and with the Santa Barbara Fly Fishers and Santa Clarita Fly Fishers. It’s a great community and one of the things I miss about SoCal. It’s a destination trip for me now and I plan to keep visiting and eventually fair catch a bean! Thanks for all your efforts.
Ron Wollard,
Knoxville, TN
rdw57ord@gmail.com
Thanks Ron. It’s been a passion and fun journey sharing my knowledge with all willing to learn…
-A