New Pier in East Bay

Ken Jones

Administrator
Staff member
#4
The article makes it sound like (A) the pier is intended for observation, not for fishing and (B) it doesn't sound like it has parking for cars. Hope I am wrong and looking forward to the information.
 

Skyhook

Active Member
#5
The article makes it sound like (A) the pier is intended for observation, not for fishing and (B) it doesn't sound like it has parking for cars. Hope I am wrong.
If the legend in the map is correct, it looks like parking is going to be about 2/3 of a mile from the pier. That's a long walk, especially if you're carrying a lot of gear. And you're right Ken, the word "fishing" isn't mentioned in any of the articles I've read about the pier.
 

Red Fish

Senior Member
#6
What I want to know is if anyone has fished Pier e2 that is at the end of the bike path? It looks like it can accessed from Yerba Buena Island but I’m not sure.
 
#7
I said I'd try and go today...and I did! Pierfishing.com has given a lot to me (I only started about a year and half ago) so I hope this report is valuable to others.

@Skyhook is right...the parking is 2/3 mile from the pier. There is some sort access road with "closer" parking but a little trickier to get to. I think it's an unofficial entrance? It's not on the actual map but I saw a fisherman drive out from there...

The park itself is open from 5am-10pm. I had the same concerns @Ken Jones had about the pier not being fishable. But, there was a promising sign: the PDF of the park map mentioned "Fishing from the pier at night" was prohibited -- so I assumed day fishing was OK :)

I got to the pier and there were three anglers there near the first 100ft of the pier. I decided to head all the way to the end to see what was up. Because of the way the pier is constructed, the end actually is just a full concrete face and doesn't have concrete bridge pilings...so I went about 50 feet from the front on the side facing the bridge. At the end, I also saw another somewhat reassuring (although disappointing) sign: "No fish cleaning on the pier". That meant that catching was at least OK...right?

The pier is actually situated very close to the bridge, with the bridge towering over. It's a bit further spaced out than Dumbarton (or what I remember of it...haven't got there this year yet). The super close view of bridge is pretty neat, but with a strong and long cast, your tackle can actually get caught in the railings of the bridge! I nearly snagged myself up there once...must be scarier for the bikers and pedestrians along the actual Bay Bridge bike trail.

Fishing wise, I rigged up a 3-way with some frozen anchovies as well as a shrimp sabiki just to see what was biting. The sabiki didn't get any hits on the side facing the bridge, but I got an anchovy on the side facing away from the bridge jigging up and down. Woohoo, first "fish" of the pier for me. Further jigging of the sabiki proved unproductive, however...

Eventually, my 3-way rig got a nice bite, but nothing hooked. I rebaited to a hi-lo and a few minutes later, the drag started screaming. A definite ray. But this one was HUGE. It literally dove out of the water when it first got hooked and I thought it could've even been dolphin at first. The fight lasted about 15 minutes of back and forth...I had never seen, much less caught, such a huge ray before. The thing must've weighed at least 120lb...it was a crazy fight. It honestly looked bigger than the 54" wingspan bat ray in the bat ray article on this site! The mouth was ajar as it was brought up to the surface and looked like I was peering into a great white from the pier...

Netting it was a huge challenge, as no fisherpeople were near me. Usually I can get a ray by myself at Emeryville or Ferry Point...but this one wasn't happening. I had to try and enlist the help of two women who weren't fishing (the only chance I had), but the ray had done a couple more dances and wrapped around the hoop net I'd brought to the pier. It was nearly impossible to get it in the net as it was just simply too big (the wingspan dwarfed it, and the ropes of the net made for an impossible crevice) and the drift of the water and the height of the pier made it even more difficult. After one more great effort to get it in the net, my 20lb mono on the 30lb hi-low snapped, and the ray was on its way. My adrenaline was pumping from the fight, and I wish I'd taken a picture...guess my hands were too occupied!

A few minutes later, same outcome -- another ray, but smaller. Still, netting it was difficult due to the big height dropoff at the pier. Eventually it was netted and returned back to they.

Later on--ANOTHER huge ray. By now, night had fallen, and this was was smaller than the other one, but still would've been a PB for me. The fight on this one was signficantly tougher---I was now using my other rod, which was set up with 20lb mono on a medium action rod. I've never spent so long fighting and it probably took about 20 minutes just to bring the damn thing up to the surface. Luckily, there was a couple fishermen who had joined the pier and I asked for help netting the fish. However...same outcome. I was able to bring it up to the surface (arms and back thoroughly tired), but it snapped with one great heave to try and get it over the hoop net that was in the water. And AGAIN, no pictures! Sigh.

After that, I decided to move closer to the shore as I was tired of the ray. The water was much shallower there, probably about 2-3 feet. But I noticed a striper swimming by...and later on fish were jumping all over the place! I assume it was one of those striper "boils"...so I rigged up a sinking slider rig w/ anchovy and started using another rod for lures. I threw a kastmaster, curly tail grub, swimbait, and bucktail lure but had absolutely no luck. Frustrating! The anchovy rig eventually did get two more bat rays...sigh. Does anyone have any other tips to make the most of these "boils"? Or could it have been something different than striper?

At 940pm I decided to leave, and made the long walk back to the parking lot. Just like in Ferry Point Pier, the entrance gate to the parking had closed, but the exit was open--I was the last car left in the lot, leaving close to 10pm.

As far as facilities go, there are bathrooms near both the pier and in the parking lot. No fish cleaning stations at the pier, nor rod holders. Some benches on the pier, many places to sit. Lighted at night at the end and in the beginning. Didn't see any other big fish landed during my time there, save for one striper that seemed to have been thrown back and caught closer to the shore. Another angler said he caught some REALLY short halibut that were released.

In all, an exciting day, even if it ended with no trophy catches. (I have some photos of the pier and park as well, although the message board is saying the files are too large.) I'm glad to have a new pier option in the East Bay.
 

Red Fish

Senior Member
#11
Very comprehensive report, thanks. Reminds me of the walk to Port View Park/7th Street/Oakland Army Base Pier From the parking lot; about 2/3 of a mile. I am imagining they have cameras on the parking lot For safety.

I fished the area years ago, under the bridge from the Cal Trans turn around on the bridge. The pier looks much more comfortable than fishing from the rocks under the bridge in the past. The other access you mentioned is probably if you drive through the Cal Trans yard on Burma Street.

The depths are what I am curious about. Port View is about 20’ I believe (without looking at a NOAA map. If you witnessed an actual boil, most any lure would work if you throw right in it. Perhaps add a crank bait to your collection. The boils where you see anchovies gathering at the surface as a big wall of bait and moving parallel to the rocks inside the bay with stripers visibly diving threw them is what I call a boil on full blast.

Perhaps live bait to cut down on the rays and a shorter cast. Thanks for the 411.
 
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Red Fish

Senior Member
#12
Given the distance from parking and the hours it's open I don't think it would be the right place.
Not too many piers open 24 hours any more in the East Bay Area Ken. And if they are, they don’t have lights. I must say that we handled our public events extremely well with no real problems with crowd control. But we had much support from people like Nufo, James, Richard, and Brian (like an offensive line in football). Perhaps kids’ daytime events are the way to go if we ever started up again. Seems like that is where we had our most support. Of course, there could be unofficial get-togethers (member coordinated) where interested parties just show up and fish together (like the buddy board which should perhaps be brought back).
 
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#16
Thanks for the sage advice @Red Fish. You are right, I should really get a crankbait. I did upgrade my lure selection after the first trip. As far as depth goes, the inshore area can be quite shallow...you can see the sand off the rocks at a low tide and the depths of the inshore area of the pier feel like 5-7 feet at a low tide if I had to guess. Port View definitely feels a lot deeper. I haven't fished as much at the deep end of the pier. By the way, I think we've actually fished near each other on a pier at one point based on your reports. I'm not sure if you remember a night a couple months ago in one of the North Bay piers where you hooked a striper near your chum bucket; I was the last angler there. I'll introduce myself properly next time.

I've now been back to the Observation Pier three times since my first visit:

The second visit was quite slow until the evening. I had been fishing a sabiki with shrimp to get baitfish as well as using frozen anchovies in the interim. No such luck. I switched up my approach and landed three stripers with a lot of other bites. It was a big confidence booster for me as typically I prefer bait to lures. A lot of fun on this evening. None were keepers, all released. Others caught striper that night as well.

The third time, I fished the outgoing tide during the day. There were a ton of small anchovies in the water -- I'd never seen so many before. A cast net would do one well...unfortunately they weren't hitting my sabiki. I went with a couple of friends, one who was using my swimbait reel the whole time, so I wasn't able to plug for stripers. Had another rod rigged with sardines to see if we could get a leopard or a bat ray--got a few strikes but nothing big. We ended up focusing on sabiki with shrimp (friend's first time saltwater fishing) and brought up several huge jacksmelt and one large walleye perch. My largest one measured at 15"! All were released and we headed back around sunset. I did not see any other fish caught on the pier other than smelt.

The fourth time, I went to exclusively target stripers. I was casting lures the entire time, but only got one solid bite but set the hook too early and the lure popped out. I saw a lot less activity than other nights and saw no other fish landed on the pier. One angler said he'd gotten two bat rays before I came. While plugging, I had another reel out with a sinking slider but wasn't paying much attention to it. After not getting a bite on stripers for a while, I decided to pack up and head back. As I reeled up my sinking slider rig, I noticed there was something on the line...a crab? A hali? It felt like dead weight. As I brought it up in the shadows, it started to look like more and more like a crab...and then I saw that it was a starry flounder! I'd never seen one before at a pier, much less caught one myself. I know that they've been more of a rarity in the bay. I was tempted to keep it but knowing the declining population I dropped it back into the water using my hoop net. It was a nice 13".

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Some other notes:
  • It looks like the parking lot closes around 5pm or sunset, which is a bit of a bummer as it makes after-work fishing difficult. I had to park closer to the cul-de-sac/turnaround. It's closer to the actual pier but doesn't necessarily feel as safe. You can walk down the fire trail access road and eventually reach the pier, cutting the walk down a bit.
  • I haven't seen frozen anchovies do well here other than the first time I hit multiple rays. I had them on a rod while the stripers were boiling and the bait literally remained untouched for over an hour. Maybe it's also presentation...these were fairly fresh anchovies as well, home-brined.
  • The variety of this pier makes it interesting. Within two weeks, not one of my trips has been the same as the other.
  • I had a good reminder to always clean up after the pier during one of my visits. A woman had brought her dog, which was unleashed. It eventually picked up a small hook and line from someone else's tackle and the hook got caught in its mouth and tongue. I found myself having to do impromptu surgery and cutting off the eye of the hook before she took the dog to the vet.
 

Stickman

Active Member
#20
Great write-up! Thanks for the report - especially the "clean-up" reminder. If the lady had to take her dog to the vet, and she makes enough noise with city hall, fishing will be banned faster then you can say striped bass. And it's not enough to take care of your own stuff. The "good" fishermen have to clean up after the "bad" fishermen. It has always been such.