For West Coast anglers seeking true adventure, the waters on each side of Mexico's Baja California peninsula have long been the go-to destination. These waters are just a hop, skip and jump below the border, yet the fishing opportunities are still wild, primitive, unpredictable and, in some minds, magical. Trips here are the stuff that angling dreams are made of and often result in memories that endure for generations.
Both coasts of Baja have much to offer, but the breathtaking eastern side facing the Sea of Cortez and its chain of islas (Spanish for islands) offers a distinctly rich ecosystem drastically different than the wave-swept Pacific side. It is here amid the often-calm crystalline waters and jagged shores of the coast and the socalled Midriff Islands that cabrilla sardinera lurk, ambush prey and grow strong.
Better known among American anglers as leopard grouper or simply cabrilla (pronounced ka-bree-ya), this species represents the junkyard dog of the Baja coast. Cabrilla love to chase and eat artificial lures. These structure-loving fish can be found predominantly around rocks, reefs and submerged pinnacles. A cabrilla resembles its cousin, the gag grouper of the southeast Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico, but with a deeper brown and more mottled pattern along the flanks. Size-wise, most fish average about 4 to 8 pounds, but you can get into schools of 10 to 15-pounders that serve as the bread and butter of cabrilla fishing. A trophy fish will go 20-plus pounds, and the International Game Fish Association all-tackle world record is currently 28 pounds, 10 ounces. A 20-pound cabrilla hooked around Baja's snag-infested shore structure can be one of the most challenging fish to land.
CORTEZ GOLD
This story is from the May 2023 edition of Salt Water Sportsman.
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This story is from the May 2023 edition of Salt Water Sportsman.
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