Baker City herald. (Baker City, Or.) 1990-current, October 23, 2021, Page 8, Image 8

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    OUTDOORS & REC
B2 — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2021
OVGARD
Continued from Page B1
I’d put him on some
small cabezon the night
before in the sea lettuce
beds of my favorite inter-
tidal zone, but the appeal of
the world’s largest sculpin
is lost with hand-sized fi sh,
and we both knew that.
Due to a lack of tradi-
tional boat ramp or harbor,
relative isolation, small
population size, marine
protected areas to the
north and south and dis-
tance from Highway 101,
the Pacifi c City fi shery is
one of the healthiest bottom
fi sheries not only in Oregon
but in the world.
As a result, you can fi sh
shallower than you would
anywhere else from Astoria
to Brookings and still catch
fi sh, but if you fi sh deeper,
each angler will catch a
party boat’s worth of large
fi sh. Another advantage of
the deeper, colder water
is a reduced parasite load
and fi rmer meat in the fi sh
you’ll catch, so they taste
better, too.
I quickly traded my
medium spinning-jigging
setup for the even lighter
rods on the boat, and it paid
dividends.
We plowed through
large black, blue, canary,
copper, deacon, quillback
and yellowtail rockfi sh
fi shing three- to fi ve-inch
swimbaits on remark-
ably light half- and one-
ounce jigheads. It felt like
cheating, fi shing with such
light gear, but you could
feel every take, the fi ght
was superior.
I managed my larg-
est-ever yellowtail and
copper rockfi sh — both
topping fi ve pounds. Dom
caught some huge black
rockfi sh. We added a few
lingcod, Dom got his larger
cabezon, and I even caught
a new species when we
drifted over a deeper reef: a
yelloweye rockfi sh.
Like many deepwater
fi sh, rockfi sh have what is
called a swim bladder. The
Tom Claycomb/Contributed Photo
Prepping the poppers. Cut a strip of bacon in half. Lay on a slice of marinated dove breast, slice of jala-
peno and onion and roll it up and pin together with toothpicks.
CLAYCOMB
Continued from Page B1
So, if you have a pile
of doves in the freezer
tell your wife that you’ve
got dinner tonight. Whip
out these bad boys and
she’ll likely beat you with
a stick to go out and get
her some more. And that’s
a good problem to have.
A wife who wants you to
go hunting. Gee, I ought
to go into marriage coun-
seling! (If you don’t have
any doves, don’t panic. I
made these poppers out of
Eurasian doves and pigeons
which I’d just shot with
my Umarex .25-caliber
Gauntlet airgun.)
Luke Ovgard/Contributed Photo
3 Webinars
to Choose from. . .
Dom Porcelli with a cabezon.
large fl eshy sac infl ates
or defl ates accordingly to
help a fi sh’s body deal with
varying pressures at depth.
When a fi sh is brought up
rapidly, the sac infl ates
and prevents the fi sh from
swimming down.
Oregon angling regula-
tions require the use of a
descending device for fi sh
with barotrauma, which the
protected yelloweye had.
While Captain Josh dug his
out and prepared it, Dom
snapped a few quick pic-
tures of me and the vibrant
orange fi sh with those
striking namesake yellow
eyes.
When we called it a
day, we surfed the waves
in. Captain Josh planted
us squarely on top of a big
wave, killed and raised his
outboards in a fl uid motion,
and let the momentum
of the surf plant us on
the beach. Though I had
nothing to do with it, I felt
proud by association.
We unloaded our gear
and chased other quarry
while the captain cleaned
our catch. Dom was living
in a motel and planned to
return to Florida in two
days’ time, so he graciously
added his catch to my own,
giving me a solid portion
of clean white fi llets to take
home.
Dom fi nished his trip
to Oregon with more than
15 new species, including
those he found on the dory.
Sign up for every single
CaughtOvgard column
at www.patreon.com/
CaughtOvgard. Read more
for free at caughtovgard.
com; Follow on Instagram
and Fishbrain @lukeov-
gard;Contact luke.ovgard@
gmail.com. Thank you for
your continued support of
local journalism.
Topics vary for each webinar:
Credits approved by Oregon Dept
of Agriculture, Washington State
Dept. of Agriculture & Oregon
Landscape Contractors Board
Nov. 2, 2021
For all
Pesticide
Applicators
4 ODA, 4 WSDA, 4 CEH from LCB
Nov. 4, 2021
5 ODA, 5 WSDA, 5 CEH from LCB
Nov. 10, 2021
4 ODA, 4 WSDA, 4 CEH from LCB
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