No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveFishing improves on both coasts

Fishing improves on both coasts

Both Dianne Sánchez of Río Colorado Lodge and Capt. Eddie Brown from Tortuguero report the tarpon activity on the Caribbean side has heated up. Anglers are hooking eight or more tarpon a day outside the river mouths. Snook fishing slowed a little this week, but anglers are making up for the slow snook bite by stretching string fighting tarpon.

Steve Vech and David Troester fishing out of Río Colorado hooked eight tarpon, along with eight jacks and a barracuda, and managed one snook for the dinner table.

On the Pacific coast, reliable reporter Jesús Vallegas says the fishing in northern Guanacaste has improved dramatically. Offshore the winds are still hampering boaters, but closer to the beach anglers are having a heyday catching dorado (mahimahi) in the 20- to 30-pound range and yellowfin tuna of 15 to 20 pounds.

The action in the Quepos area is also improved with more sails showing up and better inshore action. I received confirmation of this from both Leanne Batten of Quepos Sailfishing Charters and Richard Krug of Americana Sportfishing.

Batten reports that anglers continue to be delighted with the marlin bite out of Quepos. David Kennedy and his wife spent two days offshore and released a marlin both days and four sailfish total, and caught two nice dorado. Wesley Wilson had a nice striped marlin on that spit the hook, but he released three sails and a nice dorado.

Krug reports that Richard Boesel and son Jonathan of Charlotte, North Carolina, had a great three days on the Blue Water III with Capt. Dale Weir, releasing nine sailfish in two days offshore and six roosters on an inshore day.

Down south, Greg Mumford at Zancudo Lodge reports the sailfish bite is improved, with boats raising eight or more sails a day about 10 miles off the beach. Dorado, which have been elusive recently, also are starting to show in the 20- to 30-pound range. Inshore, the roosterfish have finally turned on. Most have been running about 15 pounds, but a few in the 30- to 40-pound range are taking sardines and goggle-eyes. Snapper fishing has been fair, with some Pacific yellowtail up to 9 pounds biting regularly.

Skippers, operators and anglers are invited to e-mail fishing reports by Wednesday of each week to todd@crocodilebay.com or info@costaricaoutdoors.com, or call in reports to Dan Wise at 8816-2882. To post reports and photos on The Tico Times’ online fishing forum, go to wordpress-257819-2837440.cloudwaysapps.com/fishingforum.

Trending Now

Costa Rica Tourism Chamber Calls for Central Bank Rate Cuts

The National Chamber of Tourism pressed the Central Bank of Costa Rica to lower its policy rate as the industry struggles with competitiveness. Canatur...

Costa Rica Police Find Underground Illegal Gold Mining Storage Site

Costa Rican police uncovered a hidden underground storage facility packed with equipment used for illegal gold mining during weekend operations in Cerro Conchuditas, in...

Amazon Founder Jeff Bezos Lands in Costa Rica With Wife

Jeff Bezos touched down in Costa Rica the other day. The Amazon founder arrived with his wife Lauren Sánchez aboard a private jet at...

Jeff Bezos’s Super Yacht Koru Sails Through Costa Rica Waters

One of the world’s most recognizable private yachts has made an appearance off Costa Rica’s Pacific coast. Koru, the giant sailing yacht tied to...

Rybakina Rallies into Miami Open Semifinals and Sets Up Blockbuster Clash

Elena Rybakina produced the headline result at the Miami Open, fighting back from a set down to beat Jessica Pegula 2-6, 6-3, 6-4 and...

Costa Rica Marks Palm Sunday with Crowds at Cartago Basilica

Palm Sunday brought large crowds to Cartago on Sunday as Catholics gathered at the Basílica de Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles for Masses, blessings...
Avatar
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica