Established in 1935 as the West Coast's oldest sportfishing company, H&M Landing runs Point Loma's flagship open-party and long-range fleet from 2803 Emerson Street on San Diego Bay. Beyond sportfishing, the landing pioneered offshore whale watching in 1953 and organized the first natural-history expeditions into Baja California, a maritime-heritage legacy anchored on the peninsula alongside venues such as the Nautical History Gallery & Museum. The current fleet at H&M's docks spans long-range vessels including the Horizon, Red Rooster III, Spirit of Adventure, Top Gun 80, and Sea Adventure 80 alongside overnight and half-day boats such as the Legend, Old Glory, Premier, Grande, and Tradition. Seasonal December-through-March gray-whale migration cruises follow the Point Loma coastline past Cabrillo National Monument with naturalist narration on dolphins, sea lions, and seabirds alongside the whale sightings. H&M's long-range pedigree traces through the Lee Palm / Sportfishers fleet merger that opened multi-week Guadalupe Island trips, and the landing launched the 65-foot H&M Speed Twin -- the West Coast's first aluminum catamaran sportfisher, which once towed 58 water-skiers in a single pull for a recorded world mark. The deepest schedule on the calendar is a multi-week long-range expedition into the Revillagigedos Islands aboard the Red Rooster III or Spirit of Adventure, where trophy yellowfin over 300 pounds and multi-day wahoo programs define the peak of the West Coast long-range season.