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Posted on May 21, 2012 in Pacific Currents, California, moonfish, opah
Southern California Anglers Land Rare Opah Just Off the Beach
by Jim Hendricks
opah1
Courtesy JD's Big Game Tackle Fishing Report
Opah are rare indeed, but to catch one like this 140-pounder close to shore is extraordinary. These anglers were trolling for thresher shark close to the beach when this opah bit.

Opah -- also known as moonfish -- ranks as one of the rarest, yet most spectacular, game fish off Southern California. Not only do they grow to weights in excess of 100 pounds, but also possess an odd, almost circular body, huge eyes, long rosy pectorals and captivating color patterns. And they are said to be great eating.

Typically, the few opah we see each season are caught on passenger sport-fishing boats while fishing 20 to 50 miles offshore, usually amid an albacore bite in July or August. While little is known about opah feeding habits, it would appear that they forage well below the surface, as anglers usually hook them on metal jigs dropped 100 to 200 down. Or at least that's what we thought until this last week when angler Chas Leeper hooked and landed a 140-pound opah in relatively shallow water off Newport Beach on May 16, according to JD's Big Game Tackle Fishing Report.

According to the web report, Leeper and his cousin Skeeter Leeper and friend Ryan Swanson (captain) were fishing aboard the private fishing boat, Guardian, trolling for thresher sharks just before dark in about 100 feet of water about two miles from shore when the opah struck a purple Williamson Bait-O-Matic with a mackerel pinned under the skirt. Many of the opah caught offshore are hooked during twilight hours, and so the time of the bite makes sense, but hooking the fish in relatively shallow water is still baffling. The fish fought for 30 minutes. The team weighed in the fish at the Balboa Angling Club the next morning.

JD's Big Game Tackle Fishing Report said that another big opah was caught in the same area close to shore last August, leading some to believe that opah are more wide ranging and adaptable than previously thought. The area off Newport Beach has been alive the past few days with schools of anchovies, Pacific mackerel, Pacific barracuda, thresher sharks and white sea bass. It is definitely a feeding zone, and it is close to the Newport Submarine Canyon, a well-traveled route for migratory species.

I think opah, like barracuda and white seabass, are just following the food, and this is the time to fish the area and possibly add one of the rarest of game fish in the entire world to your angling bucket list. 

Comments (5) Post A Comment

Caught one last week 7/13/12 after spending 24 hours on the ocean looking for tuna for not on a 25 ft. sailfish, we stopped out of hunger at the 9 mile bank for bottom fish. dropped the biggest wieght we had on the boat which was only 4 oz. lead head, hooked half a fillet sardine on 20lb line, dropped 360 feet to bottom and bingo hook up. hour and ten min. later landed 121 lb. opah. certified scale, fishermans landing san diego bay, they wouldnt let us hoist it up for pictures because? Have pictures laying on my engine cover and the scale, just thought I would share my mini adventure on the sea with you.

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I have never seen or heard of Opah. Is it the same as an ocean Sunfish? Which I have seen here on the Atlantic coast.
Is the Opah specificlly a Pacific fish or is it found elsewhare?

C Morosko

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While fishing out of MDR. THIS winter we would stop for anything that would bite a squid we would see literally dozens of opa at every stop. and never a bite. They would surface all around the boat. I never knew they could swim so fast. They were like darts. A couple of flick of the dorsal and bottom fins and the were like big UFO's gone. We were out about 4-5 miles.

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Too Cool !!! I wish we had those here off the coast of Louisiana at HOLLY BEACH !!!

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Seems a strange thing for a responsible sportfisher to kill such a "rare" fish? Every heard of catch and release? wow

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