Pete ThomasOutdoors |
Recent Columns:
The common fishing refrain does not compute for Michael Bennett.
Zac Sunderland sits alone on his 36-foot sailboat, three days out of Majuro in the Marshall Islands, pointed toward Darwin, Australia, but with nary a breeze to fill his sails.
This is fast materializing into an ordinary summer to put El Niño summers to shame.
Matthew Espy halts near ocean's edge, plants both feet in the sand, crosses his arms, furrows his brow, and refuses to proceed one step closer.
High fuel costs and a weak economy are keeping more anglers off party boats and more vessels at the dock or with loads too light to cover the cost of fuel.
Paige White, 9, a budding kayak angler who'd grown weary of catching lowly triggerfish and puffers during a recent trip to Baja California's East Cape, met her father at water's edge the next morning and demanded "to catch something I can bring to the fish-cleaning table."
ZIHUATANEJO, Mexico -- Bruce Grimes gingerly clenches his stitched right hand, asserting as best he can that he was accompanied by angels the morning a large bull shark chomped "softly" on his arm as he paddled his surfboard.
White seabass are perhaps the most highly prized saltwater game fish to frequent Southland waters.
Capt. Tom Lee of the vessel Freedom says conditions at San Clemente Island "went from winter to summer mode" over the weekend "and it's just wonderful, wonderful to see."
LEE VINING, Calif. -- Beyond this tiniest of Eastern Sierra communities is a parcel of barren wilderness soon to be nourished by high-mountain snowmelt and teeming with colorful life.

