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vicioustattoo
05-25-2012, 06:08 PM
This is the first time going to Manhattan Beach Pier in several years, maybe 10 years or more. The bite wasn't that great. Lots of wind! managed to land a nice size jacksmelt, about 12" Other than that, baitfish was kind of tough as well. Only managed to catch a couple of croakers and caught a couple of baby Halibut on my sabiki. There weren't very many people fishing, but nobody was catching anything. Anybody know any info on Manhattan Pier? Thanks!

murrieta angler
05-25-2012, 07:50 PM
I'm sure someone will chime in who has knowledge of that area.
Thanks for the report,
Robert
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bassfishing24/7
05-25-2012, 08:58 PM
Nice job w the halibut On a sabiki,i caught my first halibut On a brush hog this week in newport.

DockRat
05-26-2012, 06:40 AM
The best thing about Piers is the old destroyed piers that create structure, like Redondo has had several piers in the last 100 years. As per this Wiki info the Manhattan Pier reef is 65' from the end of the pier. The 1928 extentions got torn off too.
Thanx for the report VT.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Beach_pier

History
Pre-history of pier

In 1897, the Potencia Company was incorporated to develop land in the area and proposed a seaside resort with wharves and piers.[2] The area was named Potencia, but the city of Manhattan was incorporated in 1912 with the word "Beach" being added in 1927.[2] The name was chosen by land developer John Merrill[disambiguation needed ], a native of New York.[2]

A pier is believed to have been one of the first features built when the Manhattan Beach community was developed.[3] Two wooden piers were built in 1901, one at Center Street (later renamed Manhattan Beach Boulevard[4]) and one at Marine Avenue[5] called Peck's Pier and Pavilion.

The Center Street pier was 900 feet (270 m) long and pylons were made by fastening three railroad rails together and driving them into the ocean floor.[3] The Center Street pier supported a narrow wooden deck and wave motor to generate power for the Strand lighting system, but sources disagree about whether the system worked.[2][3][5] Part of the wave motor may still be buried in the sands at the shore end of the present pier.[5] This "old iron pier", as it was called, was destroyed by a major storm in 1913.[3]
Current pier gets built
The pier from Manhattan Beach Boulevard

Lack of money, lawsuits, storms, World War I and debates about when and where to build another pier delayed Manhattan Beach from having a pier completed until 1920.[2][3] Engineer A.L. Harris developed the concept of the circular end for less exposure and damage to the pilings by the waves.[2] The pier was completed and dedicated on July 5, 1920.[2][5] The next version built was a cement pier with a rounded end and it was 928 feet (283 m) long.[3] Octagonal house that now holds a lunch restaurant was completed in 1922.[3] In 1928, a 200-foot (61 m) wooden extension was added but it was destroyed in a storm in 1940.[3] In 1991 the pier was restored to its 1920s appearance with a dedication ceremony in 1992.[3]

In 1928 the pier was extended out 200 feet (at no cost to the city) when a Captain Larsen of Redondo Beach offered to pay for an extension in exchange for the rights to run a shoreboat between the pier and his barge Georgina.[2] On January 9, 1940, 90 feet (27 m) of the extension were ripped away during a winter storm. The extension was never repaired and the remaining section was swept away in February 1941.[2]

In 1946 the pier and adjoining beach were deeded over from the city of Manhattan Beach to the state.[2] During the next four decades the pier would remain a focus of beachfront activity, but Mother Nature and old age took their toll and by the 1980s the pier was in sad shape and in need of renovation.[2]

Restoration took place in the early 1990s with a focus on retention of the old time appearance, much like Pier 7 in San Francisco.[2] The original pier had to be fixed as old age and decay required extensive repair, and in fact made it unsafe by the late 1980s (when a jogger was injured by falling concrete).[2]

In 1995, the pier was declared a state historic landmark.[6] It is the oldest standing concrete pier on the West Coast.[6][7] It is managed by the County of Los Angeles, Department of Beaches and Harbors.[2]
Manhattan Beach pier Attractions
Roundhouse Marine Studies Lab & Aquarium

The Roundhouse Marine Studies Lab and Aquarium is located at the end of the pier, and is free to the public. The Aquarium includes a shark tank, tide pool touch tank with animals common to Southern California, tanks with lobsters, and baby sharks as well as brightly colored, non-native fish and invertebrates.[5] The aquarium is open Saturdays & Sundays 10 a.m. to sunset and Monday through Friday 3 p.m. to sunset and group and education tours offered.[5]

The octagonal building includes a Spanish tile roof and large gooseneck reflectors to improve lighting.[2]
Fishing

According to P**********.com the sandy beach area yields the normal surf species; barred surfperch, croakers, small rays and guitarfish (shovelnose shark). The area around the pilings yield pileperch, walleye surfperch, silver surfperch, and other common pier species. Mid-pier, casting away from the pier, yields small tom cod (white croaker) and herring (queenfish), jacksmelt, yellowfin croaker and an occasional halibut. Action at the end of the pier is improved by the surrounding artificial reef which is located about 65 feet (20 m) from the end. Fish at the deepest water end include bonito, Pacific mackerel, jack mackerel, barracuda, an occasional white seabass or even yellowtail, and reef visitors like kelp bass, sand bass and sculpin (scorpionfish).[2] The resident species in Santa Monica Bay may be dangerous to eat, but those that migrate in and out of the bay are considered safe to eat.[2] A variety of baits are utilized.

http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j2/epilowsky/pier_wave.jpg
http://i307.photobucket.com/albums/nn312/npphotog/Dodgers%20vs%20Padres%2009-03-08/Manhattan%20Beach%20Open%20AVP%202008/LaurenFendrickPaulaRoca.jpg

vicioustattoo
05-26-2012, 06:20 PM
Thanks for the info!