- Striped Mullet - Pier Fishing in California
Striped Mullet caught on the peninsula in San Francisco Bay in 2016 — Photo by Ika Size: To 53 1 inches in length and 15 pounds in weight Range: Circumglobal in tropical to warm temperate seas Found in the eastern Pacific from Chile and the Galapagos Islands to the Gulf of California, and Baja California,, to Humboldt Bay, northern California
- Mullet Strip Baits - Offshore Academy - How To Make Strip Baits
Using fresh mullet is a great alternative to make small strip baits to tip your jigs with, or troll them with a lure for a great presentation
- Striped Mullet? - Pier Fishing in California
The mullet start "showing" late spring, increasing into summer, and leveling off into the fall Before people learned to snag them and the bayfront park development in the 80s, you'd see huge specimens put on a show, breaking the surface in tandem
- Mullet in Mission bay? | Bloodydecks - BDoutdoors
Mullet and very difficult to catch with a hook and bait Sold my Parker You can find me on the Red Rooster Tiny hook with a small piece of earthworm threaded on Fish 5 or 6 inches deep under a bobber That worked great in Florida many, many years ago Not illegal to snag mullet unless there was a recent reg Change
- Cortez Bonefish - Pier Fishing in California
Alternate Names: Bonefish, ladyfish, mullet, silver ghost, silver shuttle, sanducha and macabi There are hundreds of local names for the fish worldwide My favorites: banana or bananafish (many countries), sorte de mullet (New Caladonia; and it does sort of look like a mullet), salmon peel (Barbados) and Zorro (Spain and Peru)
- Dana Point Harbor Fishing Pier
Mullet are harder to catch and most commonly caught by snagging Don’t do it, try baiting small, size 14 hooks with vegetation or dough balls Do it the sporting way—although it isn’t easy Lastly there is the mainly riprap shoreline at the entrance to the pier
- Mullet fishing - Pier Fishing in California
Mullet are delicious when taken from clean waters (oceanfront piers and cleaner harbors), but otherwise you really want to stay away from those congregating around river mouths or back bays They feed on detritus, and often pick up toxins and pathogens from human waste As for catching them, there is an older thread dedicated to this topic
- Blind Mullet?. . . Yuck | Pier Fishing in California
The blind mullet off the Newport Pier — February 25, 2003 People who complain about water quality today don't know how good they have it compared to the early days of Newport A comparison of our two piers is illustrative The Balboa Pier was a tourist pier Thus, the Balboa Pier had railings
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