Posts Tagged ‘fluke’
River fluking is hot!
Sunday, July 11th, 2010Left 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, 2010My 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
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.
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.
Mixed bag
Sunday, September 20th, 2009Had high hopes of running out to the Glory Hole but my crew bailed. Left the dock at 6 am solo, broke the inlet and was greeted to birds working and only two other boats in the on the action. Had non-stop action with spike weaks for two hours until leaving fish to find fish.
Moved out onto the Axel Carlson Reef and with very little wind or current and the few boats that were anchored and doing circles decided to drift the deck barges and rock piles. Again had non-stop action with mostly short sea bass and monster porgies. Had triggers coming up with the porgies but couldn’t hookup with any. Also released several would be keeper fluke. After boxing a few porgies I said screw it and headed further off.
Put lines in at the 15 line and the inshore slough and headed toward Little Italy. Shortly after I had a falsie on a green/yellow mini feather daisy chain. Reset the lines and 10 minutes later had another one. Circled back around and had big splash on the mini spreader bar. Then a smaller splash and I thought I finally had something good, but it came unbuttoned after about three minutes. Reset the lines again and trolled back toward Manasquan Ridge without a touch. Had great marks deep, never stopped to jig, didn’t feel they were concentrated enough warrant it, in hindsight, probably a bad idea.
Picked up and ran back to the reef and boxed a few more porgies and at 2 pm called it a day.
I also started using the Lucanus jigs that have been in the boat all season, they work pretty well. Had weakfish and sea bass on them Sunday and sea bass on last Tuesday. Only reason I tried them for weaks was I had broken off the leader on my spinning rig and didn’t want to take the time to re-rig so I tied in a dropper look to put on the chartreuse/yellow clouser that I was doing so well with the weaks and I started getting double headers. The jig that worked for the weaks was the green/gold. It was the 3oz size which was overkill for the drift we had in 30′ but I had only planned on using it get the teaser down but the weaks were all over it.
I normally don’t stay out that late and now I remember why…the inlet, train bridge and canal were a zoo. The hard charging outgoing from the moon and the SE breeze didn’t help the inlet with all the joy riders that haven’t been out in a month but it was still a great day on the water and glad I went. Water inshore was 66-68 degrees and pretty clean and green/brown, offshore was clean, blue/gray and 64-66.
Played hooky
Tuesday, September 15th, 2009I bugged out of work early and headed down to the marina. Tommy and I left the dock at 1 pm and were on a rock pile by 2:15 pm.
We moved around to a couple different rock piles before we found one holding some keeper sea bass. Most were returned as they were right on the line of being legal at 12.5″ but we did manage three that were over 14″. I also had one fluke at 19″ that was measured and returned to fight another day.
The water has cooled a bit to 69.8 degrees but was very clean, including the water in the inlet and the Squan River. Bait of choice was bits of squid.
We were back at the dock and had the boat cleaned by 6 pm.
NJMFC Sept. 3 Meeting Update
Tuesday, September 1st, 2009I just received an update from Tom Fote about this weeks NJMFC meeting about sea bass, scup and summer flounder.
…Tom McCloy sent out the notice below in maroon telling us that these agenda items have been removed from this Thursday’s NJ Marine Fisheries meeting.
Tom Fote
Greetings,
Just completed the conference call of the ASMFC Summer Flounder, Scup, Black Sea Bass Board to discuss emergency closures in the summer flounder, scup and sea bass recreational fisheries for the remainder this year, 2009.
Even though the projections are that ALL fisheries will be over the harvest target (significantly for scup & sea bass) the Board failed to approve any action for an emergency closure this year.
Therefore, there will be NO action required by the Council at the Sept 3 meeting on these species.
Be advised that management measures for these species could be extremely restrictive in 2010.
Please note that NJ’s recreational summer flounder fishery is projected to exceed our target harvest by 29%.
Tom McCloy
No closures for 2009!
Tuesday, September 1st, 2009I just got off the call for the ASMFC meeting today. It took over 1.5 hours for me to even get into the call. So I missed the presentation on black sea bass and the public comment as well. Apparently they only had available seats for 50 callers in the conference call. After Tom Fote, the Governor’s Appointee to the ASMFC, was also kicked out of the call they suspended the call and increased the available seats.
They then re-opened the floor to public comment in favor for a motion to close black sea bass. The motion to close the remainder of the 2009 black sea bass season was overruled 7 votes against and 4 for.
There was no motion on the floor for scup or summer flounder.
There were several states that asked questions as to how the projected landings were calculated and there were some very concerning answers given. The projections were calculated on the 2008 seasons, bag limits and minimum sizes. If any of the states had put in place shorter or longer seasons, changed bag limits or minimum sizes those regulations were not used in the projections. Most states have changed seasons, bag limits and minimum sizes on summer flounder in particular, sea bass has pretty much remained unchanged over the past few years.
The ASMFC had acknowledged they had problems and this was one of their first webinar and conference calls but they were pleased with the amount of callers and attendees to the webinars and that they had more people on the conference call than have ever attended a board meeting. They hope to continue with this forum and look to work out the kinks to be able to provide more opportunity for the public to be involved with the process.
What happened to Danny?
Sunday, August 30th, 2009I 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, 2009Since 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, 2009Went 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.
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, 2009Decided 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, 2009Played 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, 2009Headed 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
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.
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, 2009Decided 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, 2009OK…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.
No stripers but scored ling and sea bass
Sunday, June 7th, 2009We figured with the last few weeks being an early bite as well as the full moon being yesterday we should make an effort to get out early…well we shoved off at 4:05 and were out the inlet by 4:40.
Ran a little North found nothing and then decided to be a creature of habit and run to where we had fish three weeks in a row. We found bunker but no bass. Water early was about the same as last week-57.8 degrees. Bunker were flipping with an occasional spray and some coming clean out of the water. It looked like a good unhappy pod. We worked it for a little over an hour, chased down some other pods that were more scattered and returned back to the more active one.
We did not hookup on livies or cut bunker nor did we see anyone else except Capt. Murph hooked up for a few minutes on a mystery fish. Eventually we gave up on bass and switched over to wreck fishing.
With the cold temps we decided to not even bother fluking and went right to some rock piles for sea bass. With the direction and slow speed of the drift it made for nice long, slow drifts over the piles.
We immediately were picking up sea bass and ling. As the day went on the ling got thicker and you had to weed through them to get to the sea bass, a welcome nuisance compared to doggies.
We ended the day with a little over a dozen nice sea bass and kept six ling. Surprisingly at the dock the ling were in high demand.
Good talking to all the Barnegat Fishin’ Hole members and trying to find fish and work together covering a lot of ground.
With the presence of large schools of ling, the temp the sinkers coming up and gulp baits being almost brittle speaks volumes about the water temps on the bottom. I did however hear of a few good catches of fluke to the North with several fish in the 4-6 pound range. We will probably be headed left out of the inlet next week with bass, sea bass and fluke being the target.
Foggy but managed…
Saturday, May 16th, 2009Stayed at the dock most of the day with the fog and got a few things done on the boat. When it finally lifted in the afternoon we figured what the heck lets give it a shot. Got to the inlet and there was maybe 100′ visibility outside so we headed back up the river. Poked around, threw metal and popers…nothing.
Headed up river to get out of the wind and anchored up and started chumming 10 lbs. of spearing from last year. Figured we could bring them to us. We did get a few fish to come up our slick…no blues, bass or weakfish…a couple of fat fluke.
They are hear and despite the cold water pretty aggressive. Guess I know where I am starting next week at first light before the boat traffic pics up.
Stripers and fluke making a showing
Tuesday, May 12th, 2009I unfortunately did not get a chance to sail this past weekend. Though it seems as if striped bass have really started to make a showing. With Sunday being Mother’s Day and only having Saturday to fish, and then the AC breaking I had do deal with home repair issues.
I received many reports of bass and some good sized fluke with some bluefish mixed in were caught both inside and outside over the weekend and early this week. Fish have been caught on various jigs, bunker, herring, spoons and umbrella rigs. One common theme seems to be that you needed to search them out. There might not have been tell tale signs of birds diving and fish busting but if you searched out structure, bait and kept an eye on the sonar you found the fish.
Hopefully I will get out this weekend, it all depends on if I can get my current work project done early…if I really move my butt, which I am planning on doing I may be able to fish both Saturday and Sunday.
NJ 2009 Marine Recreational Regulations
Thursday, April 9th, 2009The NJ Division of Fish and Wildlife has updated the NJ marine recreational angling regulations. The most notable changes are the 2009 summer flounder season and the increase in minimum size for black sea bass from 12 to 12.5 inches. There are anticipated changes in 2009 for black sea bass and sharks, we will just have to wait and see what the changes will be. I believe the changes for sea bass will be minimum size as well as a reduction in bag limit to 10 of 15 fish from the current 25 fish limit.
NY summer flounder regulations and lawsuit
Tuesday, March 31st, 2009Minimum size: 21″
Bag limit: 2 fish
Split season: 5/15 – 6/15, 7/3 – 8/17
NY has a lawsuit pending and New Jersey’s regulations are being threatened by a recent ruling by a Brooklyn, NY federal judge. The judge found for the state of NY and a coalition made up of the United Boatmen of NY, the NY Fishing Tackle Trade Association and the Fisherman’s Conservation Association to include Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) in the lawsuit. NY is looking to change the coast-wide allocation of summer flounder. It appears that Brooklyn’s Senior Federal District Judge, Charles P. Sifton, has made an unprecedented change to the status of the ASMFC, which, if left to stand, leaves the ASMFC at the mercy of the courts in the allocation of species under its management.
In the mid 90′s, for the first time, a coast-wide quota was set for all coastal states where each competed for a quota. After being in place for several years, this system was found to be unfair to some states and it was agreed by all parties that a change to the coast-wide system needed to happen. The current state-by-state system was determined over twenty years ago by extensive discussion by the coastal states to come up with a fair and equitable system. Ironically, it was NY that made the motion to switch from a coast-wide to state-by-state model.
If NY is successful in changing back to a single coast-wide quota system, then NY anglers will be able to increase their catch at the expense of NJ anglers. As a result New Jersey’s catch will be substantially decreased and this will have a significant negative economic impact on New Jersey’s economy during these troubled financial times.
Please send a letter to the Governor asking that NJ intervene along with the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission and the Secretary of the Federal Department of Commerce to challenge the case brought by the State of New York to change the coast-wide allocation of summer flounder. I have included a sample letter below.
Letters should be sent to:
The Honorable Jon S. Corzine
Governor of New Jersey
State House, PO Box 001
Trenton, NJ 08625-0001
Dear Governor Corzine,
The vitality of New Jersey’s recreational fishing industry, which generates 1.3 billion dollars to New Jersey’s economy, is being seriously threatened by a recent ruling by a Brooklyn, New York Federal Judge concerning the data and methodology used to establish quotas for summer flounder, locally know as fluke, for East coast states.
I request that New Jersey intervene along with the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) and the Secretary of the Federal Department of commerce to challenge the case brought by the state of New York to change the coastwide allocation of summer flounder. Further, I am concerned that Brooklyn’s Senior Federal District Judge Charles P. Sifton has made an unprecedented change to the status of the ASMFC, which, if left to stand, leaves the ASMFC at the mercy of the courts in the allocation of species under its management regime. The judge found for the state of New York and a coalition made up of the United Boatmen of New York (UBNY), the New York Fishing Tackle Trade Association (NYFTTA), and the Fisherman’s Conservation Association of NY (FCA) to include the ASMFC in the lawsuit.
The summer flounder fishery, one of the most important to our state, is jointly managed by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) and the ASMFC. The NMFS has management of responsibilities over fisheries within three to 200 miles and the ASMFC is responsible for the water from New Jersey’s shoreline to three miles out to sea. For nearly twenty years now, each state has been allocated a catch limit based upon its historical catch. Because of its large participation by anglers, New Jersey has historically had the largest allocation of any state.
If New York is successful in changing back to a single coastwide quota system, then New York anglers will be able to increase their catch at the expense of New Jersey anglers. As a result, New Jersey’s catch will be substantially decreased. This will have a significant negative economic impact on New Jersey’s economy during these troubled financial times.
I am deeply concerned that this legal decision may result in a court-mandated injunction that would disrupt the 2009 summer flounder season for New Jersey’s anglers. Because of the large impact a federal ruling could have in this matter, I again request that New Jersey’s interest be represented by our Attorney General as a friend of the court.
Thank you,
Your Name
Your Address
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Some of the above information was obtained from the April JCAA newsletter.
2009 Fish Consumption Advisory
Saturday, March 28th, 2009NJ DEP has published the 2009 Fish Consumption Advisory. Pretty much the same as last year, biggest changes are for some of the species from Raritan Bay and its estuaries. What I am curious about is what the recommended intake on sea bass, blackfish, porgies, tunas, shark and mahi would be. Some are mentioned briefly in the Federal Advice for Fish Consumption, but other than that they are not mentioned. Since these are the species most desired by family and friends and the species we target more often than others it would be nice to know the state and federal governments would like to control our eating habits.
Saltwater Fishing Expo
Sunday, March 22nd, 2009Next to us in the JCAA booth at the Saltwater Fishing Expo we had Joe Calcavecchia of Saltwater Custom Flies. He had a pattern that caught my eye right away. It was a mummichog, or more commonly known in NJ as a killie. Joe Calcavecchia wished he had known earlier that we called them killies here in NJ, he would have changed his display to read killie imitation.
It is his signature fly and a very good imitation of one of our staple baits here. I picked up a few from Joe and can’t wait to try them out. I will also attempt to recreate them but on a smaller scale. The ones I picked up are in the four to five inch range which should prove deadly on stripers, weakfish and blues. When I try and recreate them I will do so in a three inch model. I think the smaller incarnation would be very effective on summer flounder and sea bass, and probably deadly on mahi mahi in any size.
2009 NJ summer flounder regulations
Thursday, March 5th, 2009We have a slightly increased quota for 2009 as many of you already know. NJ’s 2009 summer flounder regulations have been announced and the new season will open on May 23 and close on September 4, with a six fish bag limit and a minimum size of 18″.
I am actually surprised by this. I guess someone thought reducing the bag limit by two and going with the longest season will keep NJ within the quota. I personally don’t know how that will happen when most of the data reports that unless the bag limit is reduced to between two and four fish it will not make a significant difference. I sure hope they know what they are doing otherwise the state with the most relaxed summer flounder regulations may not be that way in 2010. See you out there opening day!
2009 proposed fluke regulations
Friday, January 30th, 2009OK, here is the skinny…tables below are minimum size, bag limit, season start – season end. The below information is take from the ‘Report by the Peer Review Panel for the Northeast Data Poor Stocks Working Group’. The complete document can be found by clicking here. NY is on page 50 and NJ on 52.
Not sure I really like any of them, i was really hoping for a slot limit on fluke, something like two fish at 14-16.5″ and two fish at 18-24″ and a trophy fish-one at over 24″. Whatever they decide we will comply, actually last year we made very few fluke trips. Due to several reasons, one the cold water temps early in the season, there were still good sized striped bass around and then when fluking was picking up we were running to the mud hole after bluefin tuna. Later in the season the sea bassing was hot so we really never dedicated more than about five trips to fluking.
2008 Regulations: 18” size limit, 8 fish possession limit, open season May 24 to September 7
Table A. 2009 NJ Summer Flounder Options that meet Board approved motion that at least 50% of the required reduction should come from a closed season. Seasons were calculated using the 1994 – 1998 Weibull distribution.
18.0 8 June 6 – Sept 7
18.0 6 June 1 – Sept 7
18.0 4 May 31 – Sept 7
18.0 8 May 23 – Sept 1
18.0 6 May 23 – Sept 4
18.0 4 May 23 – Sept 3
Table B. 2009 NJ Summer Flounder Options developed using adjusted percent reduction.
18.0 8 June 17 – Sept 7
18.0 6 June 13 – Sept 7
18.0 4 June 8 – Sept 7
18.0 8 May 23 – Aug 26
18.0 6 May 23 – Aug 28
18.0 4 May 23 – Aug 31
18.0 8 June 1 – Aug 29
18.0 6 May 30 – Aug 31
18.0 4 May 29 – Sept 2
18.5 8 May 9 – Oct 4
Table C. 2009 NJ Summer Flounder Options meeting the Board approved motion that at least 50% of the required reduction should come from a closed season and the Technical Committee recommendation that the closed season should come from the wave of highest harvest. Seasons were calculated using the 1994 – 1998 Weibull distribution.
18.0 8 May 23 – July 20 & Aug 3 – Sept 7
18.0 6 May 23 – July 20 & Aug 3 – Sept 7
18.0 8 May 20 – July 20 & Aug 3 – Sept 9
18.0 6 May 20 – July 20 & Aug 3 – Sept 12
18.0 8 May 15 – July 20 & Aug 3 – Sept 13
18.0 6 May 13 – July 20 & Aug 3 – Sept 16
18.0 8 May 23–Aug 2 & Aug 10-Sept 7
18.0 6 May 23–Aug 2 & Aug 10-Sept 7
18.0 4 May 23–Aug 2 & Aug 10-Sept 7
18.0 8 May 22–Aug 2 & Aug 10-Sept 9
18.0 6 May 19–Aug 2 & Aug 10-Sept 11
18.0 4 May 19–Aug 2 & Aug 10-Sept 11
NJ again requests to have a 1-day opening on Sunday, October 4, 2009; area specific to Island Beach State Park; for the annual Governor’s Surf Fishing Tournament.
Note: Other options may be developed after consultation with Summer Flounder Recreational Advisors and the New Jersey Marine Fisheries Council. These options will be developed using the same methodology as above.
