Destination:

Isles of Adventure - Kayak Fishing California's Channel Islands

By Paul Lebowitz

The first kayak hit the water off the stern of the Islander as dawn still pinked the sky. It was early November, and the mothership was out for the year’s final shot at San Clemente Island. The isle hunched low and indistinct in the early morning mist, some two miles distant across one of its large, lush kelp beds.

Not ten minutes later that first man off the big boat was battling a fine forkie, one of the hard-charging yellowtail to lure this load of twenty kayak anglers out to this remote and rugged chunk of rock, one of the eight Channel Islands.

That quick ‘tail is emblematic of the exceptional kayak fishing available at the ‘C.I,’ Southern California’s own archipelago. Oases from the ordinary, the islands seem to hover just out of reach of the mainland, promising an exotic escape.

The northernmost five comprise Channel Islands National Park. The park takes in the largest and smallest of the isles, twenty-two mile long Santa Cruz and tiny Santa Barbara, just one square mile in size, plus Santa Rosa, San Miguel, and Anacapa, a trio of narrowly-separated islands counted as one.

Continuing southward, the best known Channel Island is next, Santa Catalina. The second largest in the chain, it is home to the archipelago’s only real town, the lyrically named Avalon. Far-flung San Nicolas and southernmost San Clemente are the province of the US Navy, their surrounding waters subject to periodic security closures.

A coastal kayak angler might look at a map and deem every one of the Channel Islands prime territory. It is sometimes so, but prevailing ocean conditions usually limit kayakers to the largest islands, Catalina, Santa Cruz, San Clemente, and to a lesser degree Santa Rosa. They benefit most from the shielding bulwark of Point Conception.   

Before we delve into how to get here – kayak fishing the Channel Islands requires hopping on a boat one way or another – let’s examine why paddling and fishing this wonderland is worth the effort.

Succinctly put, these are wild and magnificent places. Even familiar Catalina, just twenty six short miles from the mainland, feels a world apart from the mundane urban jungle. The islands seem lost in time, untamed, even primeval where their chiseled northern and western faces endure the full fury of the ocean. Kelp grows thick, waves crash against jagged shorelines or lap at pristine pocket beaches. The sea seethes with life. In such an environment, even the most fish-addled fanatic on his speck of a craft can’t fail to feel humbled by nature’s grandeur.

The isolated waters harbor abundant gamefish populations. Halibut hide on the little crescent beaches, where the water often takes on an incredible milky-blue hue. Yellowtail and white seabass patrol thick kelps, and then there are the calico bass. The checkers are notable for both their abundance and size. Although the bigger game can be hit or miss, the world-class calicos rarely disappoint. This is the place to catch and release a personal best.

Ok, its obvious traveling to the Channel Islands requires climbing aboard a powerboat. So why not leave the kayak at home, stay on board and fish while high and dry? Good question. The most common answer is it’s the only way to reach the nooks and crannies overlooked by most motorized boaters, deep within the thickest kelps and perilous feet from jagged rocks. Any kayak angler worth his salt will have an additional motivation – freedom, independence, and the intense satisfaction of finding, battling, and landing fish all on one’s own.

Pack your kayak fishing gear, its time to tour the best of the Islands. We’ll start at accessible Catalina, camp a spell at Channel Islands National Park, and then finish up with the ultimate option, the go almost anywhere Channel Islands mothership.

Dreamy Catalina
Not much more than a hop, skip and jump from metropolitan Southern California, Santa Catalina Island is the ideal place for that first taste of Channel Islands kayak fishing. For the best experience, bypass Avalon and its lively scene for the backcountry quiet of Two Harbors.

Known as the Isthmus, this narrow neck of land offers access to two distinct fishing areas. Out front, broad and often placid Isthmus Cove offers quality calico fishing on Harbor Reef and Ship and Bird Rocks. Yellowtail sometimes breeze between the two structures. The west side offers up shallow Cat Harbor and the entire exposed backside of Catalina’s stony spine. The water is rougher and there are next to no places to beach a kayak, but the fishing and paddling are top-notch for the experienced.  

Getting here is easy; high-speed ferries depart every day from a half dozen conveniently located landings. Bringing a personal kayak is somewhat more difficult. Only the Catalina – Marina del Rey Flyer offers regular kayak transport at $44 each way. If the Flyer isn’t convenient, the Two Harbors Dive Shop offers a workable alternative. Ocean Kayak Prowler 15s outfitted for fishing start at $53 per day or $70 for twenty four hours.  

Two Harbors accommodations range from the bed and breakfast pampering of the Banning House Lodge, the functional off-season Catalina Cabins, or the spectacularly situated campground perched high above the cove. Another more remote option waits a four mile paddle down the weather side. Little Harbor forfeits the showers, burgers, and ‘buffalo milk’ cocktails of Two Harbors for the closest thing you’ll find to splendid isolation on popular Catalina. 

Between bouncing plastics down the steep underwater steeple of Ship Rock, dropping hoop nets for Catalina’s jumbo lobster, and paddling the milky seabass water beneath the weather side’s towering cliffs, this most accessible Channel Island has something suited to every kayak angler.

Channel Islands National Park
For the kayak angler who wants to put stakes down on one of the more remote and unsettled isles, only the campgrounds of the Channel Islands National Park will serve. This is an entirely do it yourself place. Potable water, pit toilets and picnic tables are the extent of the services at the developed campgrounds. There’s only one per island, and all require at least a bit of a hike.

The best suited for the kayak angler is at Scorpion Ranch near the east end of Santa Cruz. The pleasant campground is nestled in a valley an easy half mile stroll from the broad cove of the same name. Nearby sea caves make for interesting paddling; unfortunately, fishing here requires transiting the Scorpion Marine Reserve, unaccountably established in the vicinity of the park’s most popular campground.

The reserve ends roughly a half mile east of the cove. Boiler rocks extend all the way to San Pedro Point at the tip of Santa Cruz. The paddle around the point to the beach of Smugglers Cove and on to Yellow Banks, where a one-day mothership trip aboard the Aloha Spirit yielded a nice catch of yellowtail in September 2006, is a serious dawn to dusk undertaking. The current can rip here; Wilderness Systems staffer Mark Pierpont and I spent hours clawing our way back to the point during our last visit, in October 2007.

The western boundary of the Scorpion Reserve is nearly three long, exposed miles from the launch site. Waves smash against the sheer cliff faces, rebounding back helter-skelter. Strong paddlers can enjoy tremendous scenery and exciting boiler rock fishing once they reach Potato Harbor.    

Another National Park option is the Water Canyon campground on Santa Rosa, a one and a half mile walk from the landing site at Bechers Bay. Marine reserves bracket this place east and west. Anacapa is another alternative for the intrepid. The seven site campground is 154 steep steps and half a mile uphill. There's no beach here; kayak launching and landing is via a pier hoist. The entire northern side of Anacapa is a marine reserve.

To reach Channel Islands National Park, hop aboard an Island Packers boat. Fares start at $54 for an overnight visit to Anacapa; most kayaks are another $18.

The limited camping areas and the difficulties of navigating around the many marine reserves make basing a kayak fishing trip here tough. Despite the issues, it can be a richly rewarding. By far, it’s the best way to thoroughly explore one of these unspoiled islands from land and sea. Not enough? For the ultimate in do it yourself adventure, experienced kayakers should investigate the summertime backcountry beach camping on Santa Rosa. 

The Mothership Option
Ah, sweet luxury. Boats such as the Islander provide the pinnacle of island kayak fishing options. With the range to fish a new spot every day and the benefit of decades of fishing know-how, not only is a mothership trip comfortable, it is also efficient. 

The first to pioneer the mothership concept from the fishing point of view, the Islander is outfitted with a custom swim step and ladder for easy on-off access. When not in use, kayaks rest on a rack built above the bait tanks. Yes, the Islander packs a full load of live sardines on each of her trips, freeing kayak anglers from bait-catching duty.

There’s more decadence: three plus square meals a day (kayak anglers burn a lot of fuel!), hot freshwater showers, and stateroom accommodations. Really, a kayak angler doesn’t need much more, except maybe bait and beverage service via Zodiac. The hard-working Islander crew headed by John Coniff and Shane Slaughter provide that too. 

The Islander runs a series of spring day and a half trips out of San Diego. Most visit San Clemente; the Navy’s operational schedule only rarely diverts the boat to Catalina. Charters are another possibility, such as the fall three-day that hit the yellowtail jackpot last year. With more time, options expand dramatically and inclement weather can be out waited or sometimes outrun.

Then there are the dive boats. With prior arrangement, operators such as Truth Aquatics out of Santa Barbara will find room on the rack for your fishing kayak. In most respects, the experience is similar to that provided by the Islander although kayak anglers will have to provide their own bait. Keep in mind the skippers will be focused on dive spots, not prime hook and line fishing zones.

By press time there should be a new mothership on the scene. The Supergun, a 46-foot Bertram, will run six-pack charters from Channel Islands Harbor overnight to fishing spots throughout the islands. Kayak fishing guide Jeff Krieger said the boat will carry kayakers to the hot bites and take full advantage of the live squid fishery.

So there you have it. Whether you choose a ferry or a mothership, getting a kayak out to any of the Channel Islands takes effort and expense. Ah, but the memories are priceless: the thrill of catching monster calicos by the light of the full moon; how the heart leaps at that first drag-ripping jolt of a San Clemente yellowtail; the rush of pleasure as you bite into a sweet island lobster. These islands are rich in kayak fishing adventure.

KAYAK FISHING GUIDE Jason Morton is handed his gear during a one-shot mothership trip to Yellow Banks aboard the Aloha Spirit. Other than dive boats, there are no regularly scheduled open party motherships plying the northern Channel Islands. Soon a new charter will come on line, the Supergun six-pack out of Channel Islands Harbor.

LOADING UP Island Packer’s Channel Islands ferry. Island Packers boats regularly transport visitors and their kayaks to the National Park’s landings.

AN ISLANDER kayak angler and the yellowtail on his line near a critical moment.

A DREAM FULFILLED, Michael Totaro’s first kayak yellowtail. Totaro yo-yo’d it up on the final day of last November’s Okuma Islander mothership, prompting him to say it was the most memorable fishing experience of his life.

Okuma's Islanders Tackle Big Fish
Multi-day kayak fishing motherships are just starting to catch on. They should continue to gain momentum; these odysseys present an incredible variety of fun. Let’s take last year’s November Okuma three-day Islander mothership for example. The trip sponsored by the maker of the innovative Baidarka kayak rods (they float!) was filled with big-fish or bust northern and central Californians. Nothing other than yellowtail would do. The journey got off to a blistering start. 

Not ten minutes into the first morning at San Clemente, Sean White went shopping. “I spotted a big mark on my fishfinder and dropped a jig. And boom, I was on!” Not long after father-son team of Steve and Walker Hum were flush with yellowtail success when the younger of two muscled his own yellowtail – his first and largest fish ever - out of the kelp on light twenty-pound string and signaled his thumbs-up approval.

The morning of day two was a weather scratch when the wind in the lee at San Nicolas was blowing a solid thirty knots. By noon the boat was rolling up to the sunny and warm front side of San Clemente. The calico fishing was so easy some anglers stopped casting, perfectly content with watching suspended calicos light up when tossed a sardine. Others donned wetsuits, some with SCUBA tanks, and dived in the sparkling water. The ‘tails were a no-show, but flurries of four to eight pound bonito kept rods bent. Later they’d stage an encore as the stars of an insanely delicious Hawaiian poke.  

The last day made the trip. Refusing to concede defeat, the group hunkered down in deep water on the weather side of SCI, furiously yo-yoing jigs. First one, then two, then a solid dozen hooked up with hard-charging ‘tails. As the sun set and the last ‘yaks were lifted onto the racks for the journey home, Michael Totaro summed up his kayak mothership experience: “I have fished Cancun, Acapulco, and Mazatlan where I have landed sailfish, barracuda and the like and all of those trips pale in comparison.”

ABOVE - Steve and Walker Hum with the teenager’s first yellowtail and largest ever fish. The younger Hum wrestled the fish away from the kelp on light 20-pound string. BELOW - Yet another Islander yellowtail, this one by Don Anglin. Despite recommendations to head inside to the kelp to fish San Clemente’s world-class calicos, Anglin, like the rest of his group from northern California, refused to give up on the ‘tails and was well rewarded.

ABOVE - Here’s one of SCI’s pumped-up calicos. This eight-pounder was caught late in the day during last spring’s WON Islander charter by Wilderness Systems staffer Mark Pierpont. BELOW - Many of the Channel Islands are known for sea caves and arches. Here Mark Pierpont of Wilderness Systems checks out a towering window near Santa Cruz’s Cavern Point. Although fascinating, kayakers should exercise extreme caution around sea caves.

Lobster Hooping Island-Side
It’s a given lobsters grow big and bountiful where there’s little fishing pressure. While there’s no shortage of commercial lobstering at many of the Channel Islands, there are places a savvy hoop netter can really cash in once the season reopens.

I’m not going to put a limit of delicious ‘bugs’ right on your plate – the hunt for productive spots is a vital part of the chase – but I feel perfectly justified in pointing hungry hoopers toward Catalina. There are a number of great spots within easy paddling reach of the typical kayak fishing campgrounds. There are also a couple of invertebrate reserves in the area, so be sure to stop by the Dive Shop or Harbor Patrol office to get dialed in.

On recent visits, commercial pots were common at San Clemente and Santa Cruz. The latter has a well deserved reputation as the land of the shorts. During one November 2007 trip, neither a half-dozen hoopers nor a team of experienced divers managed a single legal. The number of shorts dumped out of the nets was stupendous, easily surpassing one hundred. San Nicolas is rumored as rife with big island bugs; maybe so, the weather out there has never been calm enough for safe nighttime kayak hooping during any of my visits.

Finally, island hoopers should strongly consider using at least one or two of Promar’s conical Eclipse nets. Although heavy, the design improves catch retention, meaning the slower pulls that come with fishing deeper water are no longer a losing proposition.

DON ANGLIN with one of more than one hundred shorts measured and released from the hoops during a November 2007 San Clemente trip. With good reason this island is known as the land of the shorts.

SEAN WHITE with the yellowtail he singled out on his sonar just ten minutes into the three-day Okuma mothership. Incidents such as these are emblematic of the Islands’ exceptional kayak fishing.

HURTS SO GOOD. Putting everything into a hard-earned sleigh ride.

THE NATIONAL PARK'S Scorpion Ranch campground near the eastern end of Santa Cruz Island. All of the park’s overnight sites require at least a bit of a hike. The trail to this one is the shortest, just half a level mile.

Channel Island Contacts
Catalina-Marina del Rey Flyer: 310-305-7250 or www.catalinaferries.com
Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary (reserve maps): channelislands.noaa.gov/marineres/main.html
Channel Islands National Park: 805-658-5730 or www.nps.gov/chis
Island Packers: 805-642-1393 or  www.islandpackers.com
Islander Charters: 619-224-4388 or islander-charters.com
Supergun Charters, Capt Ron Federico: 818-391-4917
Truth Aquatics: 805-963-3564 or www.truthaquatics.com
Two Harbors accommodations: 310-510-0303 or www.visitcatalinaisland.com/twoHarbors
Two Harbors Dive Shop: 310-510-4272

 

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Originally published in Western Outdoors, May 2008

Copyright © 2008 Paul Lebowitz. All rights reserved.

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