Recently Added
joes-boat-005.jpg img_5831.jpg img_1682.jpg img_1679.jpg digi40518990.jpg
Countdown To
  • Spring launch in 20 days, 12 hours, 2 minutes
  • Backwater bass opens in 22 days, 2 hours, 2 minutes
  • Winter Flounder opens in 44 days, 1 hour, 2 minutes
  • Blackfish closes in 53 days, 1 hour, 2 minutes
Stats
Visitors Today: 206
Views Today: %pageviews%

Total Visitors: 40781
Total Views: %totalpageviews%

Visitors Online: 0

Posts Tagged ‘bucktail’

River fluking is hot!

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

Left the dock early to fish the river before the boat traffic picked up. When my buddy showed up with two friends we decided to give outside a shot. Swell wasn’t too bad, confused sea on top of it made for an interesting drift that just proved way to fast in 45′ of water so we headed back in.

It was like fishing in an aquarium just before feeding time. You had a fish on within seconds of the bait hitting the bottom. The lettuce was at a minimum but the only problem was most were shorts.

Coolest part was the water was so clean that in even 12′ of water you could see the bottom, your bait swimming along then either it would disappear of you would see it take off in a different direction if the fluke grabbed the tail of the bait. Tried shooting some video of it but it didn’t come out well. It was really wild to watch 3 or 4 fluke come up off the bottom to all chase the same bait.

Ended the day when the boat traffic picked up with a couple keepers to 21″ and was back at the dock and cleaned up by 10 am.

Independence Day Flukin’

Sunday, July 4th, 2010

My buddy Mark and I decided to stay inside since all the reports we heard during the week were much better from Manasquan and Shark Rivers than from reefs.  I checked the current tables and the current looked OK despite it being the ebb and me personally preferring the flood to fish the Squan.

We shoved off at ten to five to get setup at sunrise and beat the boat traffic.  Got through the canal and despite no moon and very little wind the current was racing and not as anticipated.  We gave it a shot near Clark’s, in the Old Channel between Clark’s and Garden State, Hoffman’s, the doggy beach and the inlet itself.  No matter where we went it was a challenge to slow the boat down to be able to get a proper presentation.  Not to mention the salad was the worst I have ever seen.  OK…insert vegetarian jokes here!

On the plus side so far there were only three boats that had past us so far.  With the poor conditions inside we decided to at least try outside and worst case go wreck fishing.  Got out front to birds working, not sure what was chasing the bait up but we immediately got into a garbage fish blitz!  It was skate after sea robin after miniature dogfish…with short fluke mixed in when you could get your bait to the bottom.  We did manage sea robins to just under 2 lbs but didn’t weigh any in for the tournament.  Did manage to pull one keeper off the Manasquan Wreck before the current went slack and the drift died.

Moved off to the Sea Girt Reef hoping for better drift conditions and there was a little more breeze and a drift.  Again had non-stop action with birds, skates and short fluke.  We also had some short and keeper sea bass mixed in and picked up another keeper off the reef before the drift died there.

Headed in a bout noon.  By then there were finally people on the beaches and some boats out.  We were both surprised at the amount of boat traffic.  It didn’t really pickup till between 10 and 11 and even when we headed in the canal was busy but it sure didn’t seem like a holiday weekend.  Not that I am complaining but it sure didn’t seem like that many were out, certainly not like AAA said there would be a huge increase in vacationers driving to closer destinations to home.

Anyway all in all a great day on the water till we hit the railroad bridge on the way in and we realized how hot it really was out.  Ended the day with a nice 3lb sea bass, two fluke 19 and 20 inches, about 50 shorts (many 17-17.75″), one with almost a completely brown belly (will post a pic of it shortly) and probably a hundred sea robins, skates and dogfish combined.  Although there were only a handful of doggies.  And it was really nice to fish all day with the light outfits and 3/4 to 1.5 ounce bucktails even out on the reef.

First keeper fluke of 2010!

Saturday, June 5th, 2010

snc00315.jpg Broke the inlet shortly after 5 and starting working bunker, wouldn’t call it pods…they stretched pretty much from the inlet all the way south to Ortley/Lavalette. Some of them were thicker than others but unfortunately they were all happy bunker and swimming for their lives. Talked to Tuna Kahuna, Bri-Time, Loanfish and a couple others and everyone seemed to be doing the same…stocking up on crab bait.

Once I got a 10 gallon bucket of bunker I headed off to the Axel Carlson for sea bass and fluke. My first drift I put a nice 24″, 4 lb 12 oz fish in the box. As I was motoring back to the beginning of the drift a buddy a few slips down from me is anchoring up right on my MOB mark from where that fish was caught. I circled him a couple times, busted his stones and moved off to another piece. Only had short sea bass, cod and fluke after that.

Decided to look at a couple other wrecks but there wasn’t much life on the sonar so I didn’t bother stopping. Despite the wind against the tide in the river I decided to give it a shot. The kelp was pretty bad but if you kept your rig clean there were tons of fish there. Weeded through the shorts and put a 19 incher in the box before a boat anchored up right in the path of all who were drifting. Called it a day and headed in.

snc00316.jpg

Had 52 degree water when I broke the inlet along the beach that warmed to 54/55 when I left bassing for bottom fishing. On the reef the surface was a bit warmer and was up to 60.3 at one point. After my buddy got back from wreck fishing they had a cooler full of sea bass and cod, 8 keeper cod I think he said with at least that many more shorts. They also had released a dozen or so keeper blackfish and countless short sea bass but no fluke for them while on the hook.

5/1 & 2 – Lots of work, few fish…

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Headed to the rocks both Sat and Sun. Saturday got up there early but it did not matter what I did I could not keep anything on the hook. Didn’t matter if it was a spoon, plug, jig, heck even a Rapala plug with three treble hooks and I was dropping fish. Also had a knot failure near the boat, was the closest I came to boating a fish, about a 15 lb bass…if anyone catches a bass with a chartreuse Rapala in it, can I have the plug back?

Sunday I was going to stay close to home due to the forecast. Broke the inlet a little later than planned as my crew never showed. Worked some blues near the inlet for a little while and felt better that I was able to keep something hooked. Then worked spoons South off Bay Head and again was hooking up and dropping fish. Even changed out the hooks the spoons, guess I have new rod syndrome.

Got some calls on the radio and phone to head up North again. Conditions were no where near predicted with just a 2′ swell with a little chop on it. So I picked up and ran up to the rocks but got there at the end of the bite and only picked up more blues.

Both days it great seeing fish boiling on the surface taking baits. It is a shame so many have to drive right through them and break them up. Seems like the lack of courtesy and boat handling is getting worse the more that obtain their captain’s license…oh I mean boating safety certificate.

The amount of spearing around this spring is amazing. Hopefully that is going to lead to a great fluking season as it did back in 2007.

I was amazed at the difference in the ride of the boat after having more work done on the wheels again this winter. Despite the conditions on Sunday I was able to cruise with a following sea at a comfortable 26 knots with no pounding on the way in with the swell and chop on the front quarter at 22 knots passing every other boat but the Fish Monger and the 36′ Bertram across the creek from us on the way home.

What happened to Danny?

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

I went down to the boat Saturday morning to ride out the storm and rearrange the tackle lockers Saturday and hopefully install rod holders and maybe the outriggers on Sunday.  Tropical Storm Danny was a big disappointment.  There was no wind to speak of and not much more than your average downpour as far as rain.

Got the lockers straightened out and hopefully in a more user friendly arrangement.  Billy came back in with a limit of fluke from a rough inlet.  He lost a couple of big fish in the 6 to 8 pound range trying to net them.  I then had a hard decision to make, go fishing or work on the boat.

I did what any self respecting fisherman would do…I went fishing.  I made a quick stop in the river before heading to the inlet.  Got a couple hits in the river but quickly moved on.  The inlet produced all the shorts you wanted, had a few hits on a jig that felt like weakfish but never came tight, which made think more that they were weaks being finicky and just mouthing the bait.

Was back at the dock by 1 pm, got cleaned up and just hung out with friends and enjoyed the beautiful day.  Hopefully I will get to the installations this weekend since fluke will be closed and wreck fishing may be as well.  I will post info on the pending closure of scup and sea bass as soon as I find anything out.  I should have an idea Tuesday night.

River slaughter

Sunday, August 9th, 2009

Since I was doing a solo trip I decided to stay inside instead of running off to some lumps for bonito after hearing from a buddy that it was a little sloppy out.

Had lines in at 6 and the slaughter continued until I ran out of bait. Fished from the mouth of the canal on the North side to the sea wall. Didn’t really matter where you were but what bait you were using. Out of all the boats I saw out there I think I only saw about two dozen fish caught. I fished fresh peanuts netted the night before and that morning. Took a whole 2.5 gallon bucket full to the top and used it all!  Lost count on how many shorts I caught after thirty something but would venture a guess of well over a hundred due to the amount of bait and leader material I went through.

Did manage two nice keepers both 21″. Water wasn’t too dirty from the rain and the rain was either light or stopped but came and went throughout the morning. I tried various gulp baits, spearing, squid…all they wanted was peanuts. They hit both the trailing hook and the bucktail and I had several double headers and several times when the drift was light where the fish had both hooks in its mouth.

They are feeding heavily and voraciously most likely fattening up to start moving on. Plus if this tropical depression off the Cape Verde Islands forms and comes up the coast you can bet that will chase them out in a hurry. I would definitely concentrate outside though, the last few trips we made outside produced some really nice fish…get them while they are still here.

Fluking picks up

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

Went out Sunday with Mark, Wayne and Mike.  Had a blast, first time I have ever been out with Mike…he his hilarious.  Always a good time at the marina with Mike around and now he is certainly welcome as a crew member anytime.

Decided to stick close to home in case the storms rolled through early so we headed to the Axel Carlson.  Tried a few wrecks I haven’t fished in a while and had a slow pick at short fluke and sea bass until a couple of dive boats showed up, at which point I decided to move to other structure.

On our first drift on some rubble I boated my personal best summer flounder, it measured out at 24″ and 5 lbs 6 3/4 ounces.

Fluke August 2nd

We continued to take the same drift and put a few more fish in the boat, fish were either shorts or over 20″.  We also continued to pick away at short and keeper sea bass.

Conditions were great, flat seas, light breeze and warm water for a change.  Temps ranged from 71.4 to 74.3.  Throughout the day we had bunker flipping and occasionally being harassed by something.  A couple times there were slicks around the flipping bunker so we suspect that blues are starting to make a showing.  We mainly fished water 80′ in depth and I used a 2 ounce bucktail all day while others used 3 or 4 ounce ball jigs and bucktails.  All the bigger fish hit bucktails or ball jigs and spearing seemed to be the preferred bait.  Didn’t get even a tap on peanut bunker or squid heads.  Also tried the Hogy Squid and caught a few skates but nothing else.  This was in one of our first spots so I will definitely try it again for fluking with the 7″ bait.  I think it will be a good addition to our lure selection for other species as well including, striped bass, offshore wreck fishing, tile fish, tuna and maybe even as a trolling lure.

Headed in around 11 and got the boat and gear cleaned with time for a beer before the storms stated rolling through.  Got some pretty high winds up to 46 knots and near horizontal rain for a while.  And some pretty big lightening strikes as well.

First river fluking trip of ’09

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

Decided to make a quick trip to the river and then work on the boat. The storm at 4:30 delayed my departure by about an hour. Figures…there were weakies crashing peanuts in the creek during the lightening show. Finally left the dock at 6 and had the river to myself. Tried gulp, spearing, and finally peanuts. Had a fish on as soon as the peanuts would hit the bottom. Problem was no matter where I tried they were shorts…from about 8″ up to 17.5. Moved toward the Inlet and had a steady pick of almost keeper fish and some of the smallest sea bass I have ever caught or seen.  Soon after stemming the tide a bit to slow my drift down I started overheating. Threw the hook, hooked up the raw water wash down to flush the motor while waiting for it to cool a bit, cleaned the strainer (not much in it) and then headed back to the dock.

Pulled the water pump apart…had some grooving in the housing so I am ordering a new one today. Runs fine at higher RPM but at idle I guess the slight grooving causes it not to pump enough water. Not sure how long they usually last but she has almost 700 hours so it is probably time. Also checked the heat exchanger and that is clean as a whistle.

Drift was a little fast for my liking, water temps were 72.4 to 74.5 depending on location, peanuts were the best producer and the water wasn’t nearly as dirty as I thought it would be after the rain on an ebbing tide. There were also tons of small spearing all over. While throwing a small diving plug they would spray when the plug hit the water and while coming to the surface near the boat.

Day off

Monday, July 20th, 2009

Played hooky today and went fishing before the week of rain got here.  Took the Admiral to Atlantic City on Saturday and she was kind enough to give me Today off to go fishing with the boys.

Turned out Mark had to work so it was just me and Tommy.  Left the dock at 5:30 and was fishing by 6:40 off Monmouth Beach. Flat calm conditions with very little drift. Water was in the 69-70 degree range.

Right away we had a few short fluke, skates, robins and spider crabs.  With mostly garbage fish we made a move and shortly put a 23″, 3.75 pound fish in the box. Repeated the drift several times and nothing but short sea bass.

 Made another move and we started bailing sea bass shorts and keepers.  After trying a few more spots we put another fluke in the box, it was about 20″. 

On the ride in we tried to locate a wreck I have fished on other boats in the past with great success but failed to find it.  I have a book that has notes on where it is by landmarks…have to spend some time this season and find it.  it was always a good producer on the way in.

We ended the day with 16 sea bass to 17″, 1.97 pounds and two fluke. Water was very dirty, 69.x degrees and fish hit peanuts, spearing, whole squid and squid heads. Back at the dock by 12:30 and back up North by 5 pm to take the Admiral to the spa.

Got wrecked again!

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

Headed out a little later (6:30) than normal knowing we probably were staying close to home and not doing much fluking. I wanted to run back up to Monmouth Beach to fluke but had a feeling the ride back when the SE kicked up would not be fun. Ran out to the Axel Carlson in a ground swell with very little drift. Was able to keep the jigs vertical with 1 to 1.5 ounces in 72′ of water and immediately put some nice sea bass in the box. We continued with a steady pick of sea bass and ling with some shorts mixed in unlike prior weeks.

Moved in on the beach after the bite died and played catch and release with short fluke on the Mantoloking pipe. When the wind started picking up around 11 we headed in, and glad we didn’t make the run North as we would have had to run into the ground swell with 2′ of chop on top and a head wind. We both had things we wanted to do anyway so it was good short trip with fish in the box.

Didn’t really pay attention to water temps but with ling hanging around still the bottom is still pretty chilly. The sea bass ranged from 14″ to almost 21″…almost my largest to date. They were hitting spearing and peanut bunker, the didn’t seem to like quid strips at all but also hit on squid heads, bucktails and gulp shrimp, with the best producing bait being spearing.

Too bad the garbagefish.com tourney wasn’t this week…we had a few small robins and two small skates but had a huge male smooth doggie, his tail hung off the motor box which is 44″ wide…so he was probably just over 4′! He was released and the numbers of the wreck he was patrolling were written down in hopes he will be there next week!

4th of July Weekend

Sunday, July 5th, 2009

fluke July 4th Saturday we went fluking up off Monmouth Beach. Ran up at 28 knots and was fishing by 7. Tons of fish up there, many 17 to just over 18″ fish. We didn’t keep anything under 18.5 so there was no question if stopped on the way in. Heard a number of boats were boarded. Fish were taking spearing, squid heads and peanut bunker. With peanuts getting the most attention and stronger strikes. I had a couple of double headers of both fluke and sea bass. Also had tons of sea bass with many shorts. Probably had 60 plus fluke and about the same sea bass keeping 12 fluke and 11 sea bass for the table. We also had birds workign around us most of the day, not sure what was under them didn’t really cast to them at all nor did we mark anything really when we drifted through them.

sea bass July 4th

Sunday I mainly mated for a buddy who had to take a friend and his two kids fishing. This trip we headed out to some numbers I did well the week before with sea bass. Shortly after arriving in 75′ of water we had the first fish in the boat. I was hooking fish and handing the rods off to the kids. Once both were bringing in fish I decided to catch my own…big mistake. The rods I was handing off all had keeper fluke and big sea bass (16-20″ fish) but all I would come up with were skates, sea ravens and sculpins. Only fished about two hours but we put a couple nice fluke (19-21″) in the box as well as another 11 sea bass but none of the keepers were under 16″. Had a dozen or so short fluke and probably two or three dozen short sea bass to keep the kids on constant action. We also added a few ling to the box for a little variety. The ling weren’t as thick so bottom temps must be coming up a little. Again bait of choice was squid, killies, spearing and peanuts.

The peanuts were not big, only about 1.5″ to 2″ but very thick in the marina this weekend. After a fall, winter and spring of not throwing the net I was pretty rusty and only yielded a dozen or so a throw I was still able to put a good amount together for this weekends trips. Definitely need to get a smaller net to through in the launch ramp where they appear most of the time. The 8 footer is just too big for the small space.

Water temps were down a little but sinkers and fish were coming up warmer. Surface temps ranged from 66 to 69 degrees both days deepening on location and time of day. There was a small pod of dolphin just outside the inlet making the inlet a little more interesting with it being a holiday weekend, with all the armatures out with them site seeing at the same time.

Highlight of the weekend was Saturday night just after the fireworks displays up and down the creek there was a supposed jumper off the Beaverdam Bridge. The emergency vehicles and state police cleared out pretty quick though, not sure what the outcome was but they were cruising up and down around the bridge and walking all the docks in the marina.

I also heard rumors from sources I wouldn’t waste gas on but heard from a few people that a couple guys got YFT in the eastern parts of the mud hole yesterday. I do know there was another thresher pulled off the Sea Girt Reef over the weekend and heard a bunch of BFT caught south in the Fingers and also up toward the Mako Hotel.

Bass moving on?

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Decided with the weather being a crap shoot to leave the dock late and sleep in. Shoved off at 5:30 with the sun rising, light to no wind and few clouds. Broke the inlet and was greeted with flipping bunker.

Pod hopped for a couple hours moving North as we moved on. Bunker was from MI pretty much all the way up to Red Church. Unfortunately they were small pods, scattered easily and had nothing on them. Most pods would sound as the line hit the water over them or the snag hit water.

Switched over to fluking and picked away at them and sea bass. frustrated with fish that were right on the 18″ line or just under we moved further North to where we had fish last week.

Right away we found a pod of fish making short 50-75 yard drifts over them. But again the fish were just borderline keepers. We kept a few that were just over and a couple of sea bass.

Also had a few small robins, a sculpin and a skate. Larger robins were kept for crab bait. Almost forgot…I guess we had some sort of inshore Garbage Fish Slam…sea robin, sculpin, skate, star fish and Jersey snow crab (spider crab). At least we had variety. We tried but could not find a doggie to complete the Grand Slam!

Water was flat for the most part, one in a while there would be a big roller. Had a couple sprinkles start about 11-11:30 as we were heading in. water temps ranged from 60.2 to 65.5 depending on time and location. Bait…pretty much anything worked…spearing, squid strip, sun dial strip, squid heads (my favorite) gulp jerk shads and shrimp.

Got back to the dock, gear off and the skies opened up…perfect timing…let nature do the washing!

Are the striped ones moving on or did the coming storms put them off the feed?  Hopefully they were just taking some time off of feeding and stick around a few more weeks.  Unfortunately next week we will be busy with the shark tournaments and Fourth of July weekend we usually take our first offshore trip.  If they stick around hopefully they wait till mid July to move on so we can get one more shot at them.

Long weekend roundup

Monday, June 15th, 2009

OK…I get down to the marina, unload the truck…forgot my tackle bag. No biggie we go and buy new hooks, leader, swivels, snags, etc for fluking, sea bass and striper fishing for the weekend and pickup bait and Entenmann’s for breakfast. No we are not Norweigan…the bait is for fishing and the Entenmann’s is breakfast!

Go to fuel the boat up…lose forward on the way to the service slip. Figure let’s get her fueled up since I need it and then look at the shift issue. Go to move her back and not only don’t have forward but get stuck in reverse. Luckily the service slip is only three slips away and we float her back to her slip. It’s already dark out so we figure we will just take a buddy’s boat and look at in on Saturday, plus we figured there would be fog anyway so we would probably end up taking his since I don’t have radar.

So now we are down one boat the first day of the weekend.

Saturday…get off to a great start. In the first 20 minutes and less than a mile from the inlet we get on spraying bunker, put a 38 pound fish in the boat and have two other run offs. Then Wayne on his flounder rod gets spooled by a big fish.

The not being far from the inlet it was not long before the fleet of fluke tourney boats runs through the school of fish, puts them down and they scatter. We tried for another half hour and on a few more pods but then gave up and switched to sea bass. Had tons of shorts and decided to go fluking. Ended up putting 5 nice fluke in the boat with two 16″ sea bass and then while moving we smelled diesel.

Shut her down and look for the leak. Tanks look good, lines, everything. Can’t figure out where it is coming from. Start running again and same thing, now we get it down to the starboard motor so we come in on one and after close inspection find a broken return line right in front of the turbo! Good thing we didn’t keep running…could of been a serious problem if the fuel found its way closer to the turbo.

So now we are down two boats in two days. 

We had planned on fishing a different boat on Sunday so at least we know we are still fishing tomorrow. Sunday rolls around leave the dock EARLY to get in on the great bite we had early the day before and wanted to be out even earlier to hopefully get a longer shot at them.

First drift we make bait, hookup and drop two fish. Go to move off the beach and again the starboard motor won’t fire. Get off the beach on one motor and start jogging while we try and diagnose the problem. Ignition circuits keep tripping and paralleling batteries doesn’t do much either.

Check the current charts and it is slack at the inlet and slowing in the canal so we decide to run in on one while the getting is good. It is always a good day when you come in on your own power and safe…even it is on one motor.

Get back to the dock and it turns out to be the starboard battery. Voltage was fine with no load but under load went into a dead short and even smoked a bit.

So now we are down three boats in three days.  

I make arrangements to be hauled Monday morning and check with the Admiral that it is OK to stay over one more day…good thing I always pack extra clothes.

So in the mean time I run over to Harbor Freight to get a jack and jack stands to rotate my tires. Cashier is ringing me up and the register dies. So now my buddies conclude the hex is caused by me!

Monday…get hauled out and the problem with the shifting is a loose cable clamp, check the cable, no nicks or wear in it, reset the clamp and all is well…or so we think. Decide while it is out to check the drive fluid.  Nice shade of light gray. Dipstick was only hand tight and the o-ring on the drain plug was rolled. Only person to blame for that is me since I changed the gear oil.

Run to the gas station get a can of diesel and flush it three times. Fuel was clear after the second, did the third to be safe and also flushed a half gallon through from the top. Filled her back up and went for a test ride and all is good.

Now we just have to wait and see. Everyone was telling me they have seen worse but with my luck I will need a new drive by season’s end.

Hope everyone had a better weekend than us.

Getting started with sinker, lure & jig making…

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

With one of the harshest winters in a long time taking hold in our area  many are getting cabin fever and going stir crazy earlier than normal.  I have seen many questions lately about rod building and tackle craft.  It is no secret that if I can make it I fish it.  I love making my own bucktail jigs as well as other lures and rigs.  There is definitely a huge amount of pride that goes with catching fish with tackle that you have made and rigged yourself.  This will be the first in a multi-part series of articles on creating your own jigs and lures.  For now I am going to go over some of the basics of getting started and as I start molding and tying again I will take a lot of pictures and videos to help you get started or to give you some new ideas.  For the sake of this article I am going to assume most readers are new to rolling their own and start with the basics.

First you will need some basic safety equipment depending on what you will be working with.  I have safety goggles, dust masks, heavy cotton apron, heavy leather gloves, light leather gloves, flame proof mat and keep a fire extinguisher handy as well.  As always, when working with lead work outdoors if possible and position yourself upwind from your work, if it is not possible to work outdoors make sure you have adequate ventilation.

I get my jig making supplies from Sun Harbor Bay Club, most of it is special order but comes in within a few days usually.  Depending on how involved in lure making you want to get you will need some or all of the items below, I will go into detail on each later:

Of course you will need lead.  It can be in the form of tire weights from the junk yard (I tend not to use these, more detail later), old lead plumbing pipes, or you can buy it from many retailers and on e-bay in ingots of various sizes.  Make sure you lead is clean before putting it into the melting pot.  Tire weights tend not to be, have a horrible smell when melted and smoke a lot.  Tire weights are also considered hard lead which is not desirable for molding or casting jigs, you can get away with it for sinkers but they will be slightly lighter than their stamped weight.  Usee extra caution with old pipes, if there is any moisture inside it will create a rocket effect and shoot any debris inside the pipe out as it is heated during melting.

Next you will need some molds.  They can be as simple as bank sinkers or they can be ball jigs, bucktail jigs, weighted trebles and even butterfly jigs.   All of my molds are from Do-It Molds.  Below are the molds that I have:

These molds pretty much cover most of our needs from the rivers and bays, to inshore and offshore fishing.  It can be a big investment if you were to buy them all at once, I have purchased a couple each year and was given a few of the sinker molds by guys no longer interested in rolling their own.  You could also buddy up with a few guys to split costs or look into joining a local fishing club.  Many clubs have annual sinker parties and the best part is the members all bring in some lead and the clubs usually have the molds so it only costs a few bucks for hooks and you are all set.

For any of the molds you will need a melting pot and ladle.  I would shy away from the bottom pour pots.  Unless you have very clean and pure lead they are problematic and clog.  Also if you are pouring anything over three to four ounces they usually don’t pour fast enough.  For smaller projects I use an old  ten pound pot on a hinge and for larger work I use a fifty pound pot on a propane burner.

Preparing your molds.  I have found that it is best to smoke the mold, or position the mold cavities just above a candle’s flame.  A thin coat of black carbon soot will form which will help the flow of molten lead into the cavities and also make it easier to remove the cast lead.  Once that is done you need to heat the mold prior to making a production run of whatever it is you are going to mold.  I simply sit the mold over the pot for a few minutes.  If I am making bucktail jigs or anything else that requires hooks, through wires or wire eyes I then mold a few without any hardware to ensure the mold is hot enough and I get a good even pour.  Then I add the hardware and begin my production run.  When making your pours make sure to have enough in the ladle to fill the cavity completely in one continuous even pour.  If you do not, the jig will come out wrinkled and could break apart at the seams.  You don’t want the molds to get too hot, there is no race-take your time and be safe, lead does not cool quickly, especially when on skin.

No matter if you are molding sinkers, snag weights, bucktail jigs or any other lure do not remove the sprue right away.  Give it a chance to cool a little and you get a much cleaner break.  When removing the sprue you want to grab it and rock it back and forth, with pliers if that makes it easier.  Rocking it until it breaks will give you a much cleaner edge than using a pair of cutting pliers or shears.

It may be tempting to dip jigs into the powder paint right after they have come out of the mold, I have tried this several times but have found that it is better to let the jigs fully cool first.  In most cases you will need to remove the sprue (the sprue can be saved and remelted), you will probably also want to use a coarse file to smooth out where the sprue broke off from.  This will ensure a smooth even coat of the powder paint.

For any jig or lure that needs to be painted I separate the sizes and styles by colors, that way I can dip all jigs for that color in one batch.  I use a standard propane torch to heat the jigs from a second or two to a minute depending on size.  The smaller jigs (up to three ounces) only need a few seconds, you don’t want them too hot or the paint will bubble.  Then you swish the jig side to side into the powder paint and remove immediately.  You only need a very thin coat of powder to cover the jig.  You may need to setup some sort of rack for allowing the jigs to dry.  I made a three tier rack out of oak that works very well.  The powder paint needs to be kept loose and fluffy, I will dip from one to three or four jigs depending on size and then put the cap back on the jar and shake it up to loosen up the powder before continuing.  You can then bake the jigs at 350 degrees for 15 minutes to harden the paint even more.  I usually skip this step since I tend to fish a lot of structure and either lose the jig before its paint is chipped or toothy critters remove the hair. 

Once you have all your jigs painted up and have allowed them to cool they can be dressed.  Dressing can be as simple as applying stick-on eyes or as elaborate as painting scales, gills and adding bucktail, synthetic hair and a touch of flash.  No matter how simple or elaborate I always add eyes to the jig if it has eye sockets.  I don’t just peel and stick, I apply a small amount of head cement to the eye socket first and then apply the eye.  This insures it stays put after being bounced off rocks, mussel beds or numerous strikes from fish.  It is also much easier to apply the eyes first on bucktail jigs, that way you don’t have any hair in your way.

Before I put a jig in the vise to be dressed, I sharpen the hook.  Once sharpened I coat the surface of the point and anywhere that was filled with a red Sharpie marker.  This serves two purposes.  One, to easily identify that the hook was already sharpened and two to protect the hook from rusting.  When you sharpen a tinned hook you are removing the duratin finish that protects the hook, the marker applies a thin coat of ink that will protect it while in your box.

There are many fly tying vises on the market, you can get an inexpensive, clamping vise for under $30 or you can get a professional rotary vise for upward of $400.  I have several for different styles of flies and jigs that I tie.  I have a basic vise, the Dyna King Kingfisher that I keep in my tying bag for traveling use.  For everyday use and when creating several dozen flies or jigs at a time I prefer a rotary vise and use the Dyna King Barracuda.  And for tying tube flies the HMH Tube Tool.

The mighty bucktail jig, it can be as simple as plain white, or contain many colors and a touch of flash.  Either way it can be used to catch just about every species that swims in our oceans.  I personally have caught striped bass, summer flounder, bluefish, weakfish, sea bass, mahi mahi, bonito, false albacore and various species of trash fish with the jigs I have made.  Less is more, or so I have been told by many accomplished fly tyers.  I have taken this adage from fly tying to my bucktail tying.  Basically I make only a handful of patters for everyday use in sizes from one ounce to six ounces.  All white, yellow, white and green chartreuse (my favorite and go to combo), chartreuse, white and red and magic bus (yellow, black and white).  Don’t get me wrong, I do also make black back and blue back with white bellies to simulate herring for striped bass as well as blue, green and white to mimic a bay anchovy for smaller jigs.  But with time becoming harder to come by I stick to my basic four-white, yellow, chartreuse and chartreuse and white, with the latter two my go to baits.

Before tying any fibers to the jig I first wrap all the way across the collar with thread, this gives the next wraps that will hold fibers something to bite into and prevent the thread from spinning on the painted collar.  Back to the less is more…when I tie my bucktails I tie the hair so that there is basically no overlapping but each hair right next to its neighbor.  This creates a thin fan of fibers all the way around the jig.  The spire point jigs have a flared collar and once you are done wrapping hair and build up the body with repeated wraps around the collar the hair flares out.  This gives the jig an amazing presentation in the water.  Once the hair is flared you can add a half dozen or so strands of polar flash or flashabou down each side, so as to mimic a lateral line like on a spearing.  Once all the fibers are in place wrap back and forth across the body twice and then finish with a whip finish.

Like the painting I will do a run of similar pattered jigs all at once, I find it easier than reaching all over for different colors and materials.  Once I have several dozen tied I then apply head cement to the wrappings, one to two coats is sufficient.  Again I am fishing around structure and with toothy critters, the jigs are usually lost before they fall apart.  Also be careful applying head cement to the thread wraps, especially if you used powder paint, most cements will make the finish run if you get it on the body of the jig.

Now that you are all stocked up with sinkers, snags and jigs we just need a break in the weather so you can go and test out your new creations.  As the winter and spring progresses I will take some pictures and video to show the entire process and show some more advanced dressings and paintings of jigs and lures.  It can be a very enjoyable and rewarding hobby, as long as you stay safe and are cautious handling molten and hot lead.  If you have any questions please feel free to e-mail me or post comments to this article.

First fluking trip of ’08

Saturday, July 5th, 2008

We got a late start due to partying and watching the neighbors fireworks across the creek.

Left the dock about 5:30 with the intentions of looking for some bass early and then going fluking. Coming out of the inlet that sunken fishing boat is way closer than the half mile reported. It is more like 150-200 yards off the North jetty. The aerials and booms were visible above the water and the smell of diesel was pretty strong…there was no visible sheen on the water though.

Had some great looking pods off Spring Lake…bunker spraying, jumping clean out of the water not just flipping. But did not get a single run-off.

After a the rain passed and it looked like there would be no lightning we started running North. Didn’t see much or mark much till we got just South of Shark River. Off in the distance we saw hundreds of birds working…we figured we hit the mother load. Wrong! turned out to be about 200 carcasses, some filleted some not…all stripers. Not sure if it was from a head boat in the inlet or by-catch from a netter that they took some fillets. There was also a lot of garbage and debris in the area. We kept pushing North.

Our final stop Monmouth Beach. We setup on our first fluke drift and had fish on and in the boat immediately and even double headers! There were a lot of 17.5″ fish but we managed 10 keepers all over 19″ with the largest being 23.5″ at 4 lbs 13 oz. We had pretty solid action for over three hours with about 100 fish caught between the two of us. And for once I caught the largest fish on the boat. I bet if we did not try for stripers first we would have had no problems putting together a limit catch, the early morning bite is always much better up there.

We had pretty clear/clean water up North, it was 62 when we got there and 64.x when we left. When breaking the inlet in the morning we had 61.x. Entering the inlet on the way in there was 59.7 degree water in the river. Again the bait of choice fluking was spearing…we went through over three pounds in just over three hours. Most fish hit the spearing but we also had a bunch on the bucktails with pearl Gulp! jerk shads.

Last ditch bass effort

Saturday, June 28th, 2008

Thanks for calling us down EMALS (BFH Member). We were originally working some pods off Bay Head that every few minutes were spraying out of the water. But between the dozen boats not a single fish was boated.

So we ran down to Mantoloking by EMALS. We did see a few fish caught but wanted to escape the fleet so we ran down to about Lavalette in deeper water (65′) and pretty much the same thing. Tons of bait, marked fish but none biting. After screwing around with a thresher on bass gear for about 10 minutes we started heading back North.

Around Mantoloking we saw up in front of us birds working, huge splashes, real choppy water and reddish/purplish water. Monster blues had a good sized bunker pod corralled and were working them South at pretty good clip. We stopped to screw around with them and then saw some bass mixed in up on top. We were amazed! It was around noon and we were only in 30′ water. Had a couple good run-offs with marks on the baits but did not hook up with any bass. We boated a few blues to almost 13 pounds and then again…our top bait gets slammed. Huge splash and big hole where the bait was. Line starts screaming off, this time it figures its a spinning rod. Then we saw the tail. We just thumbed the spool since we knew we had no shot at this thresher. Another beautiful day on the water.

First trip in over a month

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Since I still have yet to hear from the manufacturer of the boat about any resolution to the condition of the fuel tank we took Mark’s boat out for opening day of the 2008 fluke season.

Due to all the reports we turned right out of Manasquan and ran down to the bathing beach. We had spoons in the water before 6 am and zig zagged our way to the CGS. Marked a ton of fish and bait, had a half dozen knockdowns, had three fish on for two minutes but nothing to the boat.

Around 10-10:30 we switched over to fluking. Stopped on a couple of small lumps with bait…only dogfish and skates. Moved further North to a small wreck off Lavalette and had tons of 16″-17″ fluke. Spearing was the preferred over any type of strip bait but Gulp shrimp out fished the spearing.

Water was cold…started the day with 51.2 and ended the day in 15′ of water with 55.3…most of the day was around 53 degrees.

I was amazed at the lack of boat traffic. I don’t think we saw 100 boats all day including only 1 head boat. The huge crane being towed North was something…that thing was gigantic.

I did hear from a couple of guys after we returned to the dock that the few that ran North had pretty good results on 20 and 30 pound class fish up on the mussel beds and rocks, and they reported large bunker schools up there as well.

We watched a tug towing a huge crane all day. We first saw it before 6 am a little South of Barnegat Inlet. When we were packing it in around 12:30 it was up to Lavalette. All in all it was a great day on the water…great weather, great friends but not so great fishing but we all still had a great time.

Out First Game Fish Catch!

Saturday, November 10th, 2007

We broke Manasquan Inlet at about 6:30 AM to birds working and fish breaking the surface. It was not long after dropping a jig to the bottom that I had my first fish on-a short striper. Then it occurred to me-just caught my first fish that has game fish status. We figured this is going to be a great day having striped bass to the boat right away. The more fish we hooked into the more blues we started to catch. Moving around with the birds and watching the sonar we were able to keep a steady pick going with bass mixed in with the blues.

Nino got his first bass of the season and almost his first keeper, there were a lot of fish 26-27″ and a bunch that were less than 1/4″ short. As always all short fish were returned to grow up and fight another day.

It was a busy day unhooking, measuring and releasing fish. Something nobody ever complains about even when it is hectic on deck with multiple fish flopping around and more waiting for the net.

When there was a lull in the action we decided to go on the troll, covering more ground and it paid off in short time. With one umbrella rig out rigged with tubes and one bunker spoon we soon had fish on. At first it was blues but then we homed in on where the bass were. Again we had many shorts but after switching to both rods running tube rigs we quickly started picking up some bigger fish.

The bluefish were just gorging themselves on sand eels that must have been carpeting the sea floor. I have never seen blues with their stomachs so extended. The bass were getting in on the feast as well as they too had full stomachs of sand eels. It is amazing how much they can fit in their stomachs…this is the contents of a smaller 4-5 pound bluefish.

At the end of the day everyone had sore arms and big smiles. We ended up keeping 9 blues but released dozens of fish. We also had about 15 stripers and kept two for the table. It was a beautiful fall day on the water with calm flat seas, good friends and plenty of fish.

Last Fluke Trip of ’07

Saturday, September 8th, 2007

It was a sad day on the water with our last fluke trip of the season. All we can do is hope that next year we will not be cut back too much. I would rather see a longer season with a smaller bag limit. We have much better fishing in the fall with better quality fish.

Anyway…we left the dock at 6:11 am and were at our first stop by 7 am. We initially tried to run outside to the reef but it was a little to sporty for me (I just did not feel like getting beat up). We began in the inlet area and had a constant pick of fish from 6″ to 16.5″. We moved up river a little and had the same results…more shorts.

We decided to try and run outside as the wind was laying down. It had changed over from a steep chop to more of a swell so we ran out the East side of the Axel Carlson Reef. Soon after we were catching bigger fish. The first two keepers were about three pounds. We were all by ourselves for the first forty five minutes and were then joined by several smaller boats and Capt. Ron and the Miss Norma K. Then we boated a 5 lb. 6 oz. fish soon followed by a 4 lb. 10 oz. fish. We continued to make short drifts over that productive bottom and ended the day since we had to be somewhere later in the day with six solid keepers and a couple of cocktail blues.

All in all it turned out to be a great day on the water boating the largest fluke of the season…well at least when the season is open. Earlier in the year you may remember Jimmy Bananas boated a fish almost 6 lbs. I guess now we will turn to weak fishing till they leave and wreck fishing until the stripers show.

Last Fluke of the Season

Sunday, October 8th, 2006

I originally was setting out in search of some weaks. After cruising the bay, the Mantoloking Bridge and the Matedeconk I decided to head towards the inlet and maybe outside for some croaker/weakfish action along the beach. Got near the end of the inlet and the 33 foot express in front of me disappeared in the trough so I decided to stay inside. First drift produced a keeper. Next few drifts produce shorts and then another keeper. All fish were caught on homemade chartreuse bucktails with white Gulp! shrimp. Watched a few other boats try the same drift as me to not catch or even get a tap. The action was fairly consistent over the same piece. All in all not a bad way to end the fluke season.

Archives
  • 2010 (19)
  • 2009 (69)
  • 2008 (81)
  • 2007 (47)
  • 2006 (42)
  • 2005 (21)
Pages
Categories