Author Archives: zhromin

Savage Gear Striper Bass long sleeve shirt giveaway

We are interrupting your regular scheduled programing to bring you a …….Giveaway, what else?

I know you wont mind, we’ll get back to Costa Rica Diaries afterwards but today a giveaway from our friends from Savage Gear USA. I would like to thank them for not only providing this giveaway but for sponsoring the StriperDay 2016. Many of you have received their lures in your attendee  door package. We were trilled to be able to give you stuff that you can actually use in your pursuit of striper bass, instead of stuffing your bag with stuff some manufacturer was trying to get rid off from their inventory. Same goes to Super Strike Lures, Spro, Hogy and Tactical Anglers products. Thanks to all of them.

Today giveaway is a Savage Gear USA long shirt with a Striped bass logo

Two winners picked at random, each will receive a long sleeve Striped Bass Shirt from Savage Gear

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Costa Rica Diaries Part IV- the bait vs plugs

This is one of those a little “out there” kind of things that might only happen in my head and not in reality. I don’t talk about it because people generally do not agree with me, and are looking at me like I have two heads. But once in awhile you run into a guy who feels the same way you do, and you say to yourself, hey, maybe I am not as crazy as everyone thinks.

On more than one occasion I enjoyed a good pick of fish on lures when someone walked up to the beach and tossed a chunk or a live eel and start catching. And I stopped getting hits. I also had nights where I was getting solid fish en rigged eels until my partner tossed a live eel and I went fishless afterwards. Yeah, I accept that this is probably in my head, and this does not happen often enough to make any kind of pattern I could hang my hat on. I fact, a lot of times a guy with a plug will out fish a live eel guy, one of the reasons for that, he can cast further.DSC_5408

On this trip to Crocodile Bay Resort, live bait was employed almost all the time. You jig them up on saki rigs first thing in the morning, then you slow troll them behind the boat along the shore. I think regardless where you go in the tropics, this will be your best chance of success.

But forward moving boat, in and out of the gear, makes it challenging to make proper presentation with your lure. The first two days we spent inshore, it was fairly slow for few of us that tossed plugs in comparison to the back of the boat that trolled live bait. Not that they had an epic days, but they did better than us. Patrick Sebile felt that the live bait trolled behind the boat was killing his chance of getting fish to eat his plugs. So on the last day he refused to let the captain use bait and the whole crew just used plugs. Low and behold they had the best day out of three we spent fishing, with almost 25 roosters making an appearance behind the lures. Hooking those suckers a whole different story.

So that made me think that there might be something to my thesis that live bait can kill the bite forplug guys sometimes. I have no proof and I probably just imagining but I thought I’d throw it out there. I KNOW many of you guys have fished next to a chunk slinger who hammered the fish on bait and you did nothing on plugs. How do I know? I was with many of you. Perfect example, here is Bill Fischer hammering bass on just about every cast while there are dozens of guys around him casting fruitlessly. Yeah, we all say, “they want meat” that day.

But would they take plugs if there wasn’t any meat ?

That is a $64 000 question

Costa Rica Diaries Part III -Sebile 2nd Generation Lures with video

Ok, I got to be honest here. Dave Anderson and my canal friends are always raving about Sebile Lures. Its has somewhat of a cult following on the banks of Cape Cod Canal. On Long Island, you just don’t see as many people using them as up North.

Maybe when they see this pending 25lb+ NY State record bluefish, it will get them more intrigued. I will admit that I fall into the “intrigued” camp. I use it but nowhere as often as my other plugs. But I got to tell you, after fishing with nothing but a Sebile new prototype Stick Shads and Magic Swimmers all i can say is (cover your kids ears) holy f***!!!!!12195918_10153746033033421_3394113657949121165_n

(note the no-hook on the back of the plug-Patrick talks about this is video below)

The Magic Swimmer in particular is one of the SICKEST lures I have ever had the pleasure of using. Since we were here to test the new PENN Clash, Spiderwire Camo and new Sebile 2nd Generation lures, that’s all we had and so we beat the shit out of it. First of all, watching Patrick Sebile work his lures is like watching a magician with his wand. Also, the Magic Swimmer in particular has the sickest action in a lure I have ever seen! And here is the kicker: the faster you crank it, the better it looks. Captains did not believe that you can troll the darn thing since it had no lip until Patrick made them do it just to prove the point. What I am trying to convey is it’s not going to pop out and roll over on the surface. And when you casting to the rooster you need ALL the speed your reel can muster and then some!DSC_5429

I am sure catching rooster from the beach is awesome. But let me tell you, I never had my knee buckle before by watching the speed with which a fish moves through the water before. It is absolutely insane to watch it from the bow of the boat. So if you go to the tropics and you are fretting that your reel is too “fast”, trust me it’s not. I don’t think a humans made a reel fast enough which roosters cant chase down.

Back to Sebile:

Ok, so here it goes, while everyone trolled live bait and stayed in the shade I casted nothing but Magic Swimmers and Stick Shads for three straight days on the bow. I did not have any poppers other than one I threw in my luggage so it was stick shads all the time. I have a new perspective on these lures and newfound respect, not only for the lures but for its creator Patrick Sebile.

These are not “new” lures. They have been reinforced with better internal hardware, new paint patterns and new, yes, much lower price.

But don’t take my word for it, here is world renown angler and record holder, Sebile lures creator Patrick Sebile

Costa Rica Diaries Part II- Spiderwire Camo

As I was writing these blog entries, something popped into my head that you might  find strange…..until you think about it more closely. I am talking about relationship between live bait and lures. What do I mean by that? Have you ever had a good bite shut down on you when someone tossed an eel in the water? Have you ever had a rigged eel bite  die when someone tossed a live one? It happened to me on multiple occasions, and it happened to Patrick Sebile I guess one too many times. On the last day he refused to get into the boat unless the captain was not going to use bait of any kind. Guess what, they had the best day out of three days on Sebile lures…that is now spinning in my head, I will elaborate on it, but give me few days to put it in words.

Every single PENN Clash reel on this trip was spooled with new Spider Wire Camo braided line. You might say “yawn, another braid” which is what crossed my mind until they told me they can’t make it fast enough in a factory. When there is a product that a manufacturer can’t make fast enough, I get curious.SPIDERWIRE-WEB-IMAGES-BWCAMO

Lets look at some characteristics:

  • Varying blue/white/black color pattern designed to blend naturally with open blue water conditions
  • Color-Lock coating technology – casts farther, lasts longer
  • Dyneema® PE Microfiber construction is strong, smooth and round
  • Fluoropolymer treated microfibers – shoots through guides like a bullet!
  • Whisper quiet for “Stealth Attacks”
  • Resists “diggin in” on reels
  • SpiderWire Stealth® Blue Camo Braid is made from Dyneema®, The World’s Strongest Fiber! Blue Camo is uniquely colored for low-vis in proclaimed blue water lakes and saltwater conditions. New and Improved Stealth Braid is constructed to provide ultimate strength with the thinnest diameter for smooth and quiet performance. The no-stretch properties of Dyneema PE fibers provides incredible sensitivity to instantly detect bites and structure.

I think it’s selling like hotcakes because it’s probably the coolest looking line on the market and I was told os one of  the most affordable ones. Did not check on pricing so you’ll have to check this out for yourself.

How did I like it? I had a hard time telling between that line and the one I usually use. It felt a little coarse and not as smooth as some super slick lines but that is right up my alley. I don’t like super slick lines and I been the biggest Fireline fan for years although everyone and their mother has become a nuclear physicist last few years and declared Fireline to be too “flat”.IMG_2469

I wish I had a surf rod with me, but on a 7 foot PENN rod and Clash reel this line performed very well during the whole trip. Smooth flowing through the guides, no mysterious breakoffs like some other (ahem,) lines. One day I did get bunch of so called “wind” knots only to correct the problem by cutting back on the line. The reel was simply overfilled with line, problem solved. 

I think the “camo” property of the line wont matter as much to striper maniacs as it will to blue water anglers but if you are one of those guys who freaks out that bass will see your line, while you trying to feed it a 9 inch GIANT wood lure with steel hooks…we’ll I got nothing more on that.

I don’t remember the details about the second day but I do remember it was HOT and I got to fish with the legendary Patrick Sebile.

And I will forever remember this Cubera Snapper

DSC_5391

Warning !!!!

If you ever get to fish with the man DO NOT give him your DSLR. He will mess up every setting on your camera thinking he knows better than you, and proceed to shot about 500 overexposed useless white pictures..haha..true story

But boy can the man fish. I am not sure If I ever met anyone so wired to fish, sleep and fish. Not many people I have fished with are as intense at Patrick and none I know are more. Wouldn’t it be a real treat if we can get Patrick to attend a show and give a seminar here in Northeast? That would be freaking awesome.blinkof 2

Coming up ..the darn Sebile Magic swimmer. I have fallen in love all over again. And video interview with Mr. Patrick

Photo credit Kevin Blinkoff – On TheWater Magazine 

Here is a Fisherman Video from Day 2

Striper Day..or the future of it

I don’t drink much, maybe few beers a year but Saturday night after the Striper Day I came home, hugged the wife and daughter and poured myself a massive glass of Pelinkovac (Croatian bitter liquor). It was awesome seeing many of you and yeah, thanks for the kind words. SJ crew did a great job under challenging circumstances and my son busted his ass on his feet all day too at SJ table.

Did we expect such a crowd? Let me ask you something, if you did something for the first time in your life, could you tell me exactly what you would expect to get ? It got very crowded for about two hours in the morning, after that it seemed like a breeze in comparison. Vendors might like packed house but I don’t and I am pretty sure most people trying to buy stuff would prefer a little bit less. So I’ll use this blog post for you to tell us how we can we give you a better, more pleasurable experience

It is only fair that we take suggestions from our readers , after all we did his show for your enjoyment and to promote the sport we all dearly love. I was very touched that not few but over a hundred of you took the time to stop me in my tracks and tell me how much you enjoyed it and how much local surfcasters needed a show in this area.

BUT

(yeah, you knew that the BUT was coming)

you have to take in consideration these things BEFORE you reply.

  • There is no bigger place on Long Island that has a Theater and big room in proximity of each other. Rent a gym? Sure, do you want us to make another flea market type even on LI where there is NO seminars and no interaction with guides, authors and speakers? Keep in mind that sales rep from co like VS, Penn, St Croix and many more do not attend flea markets because they do not sell direct. Do you really want  another flea market ?
  • If I hear one more time “you guys need a bigger venue”….anyone on this blog knows of a bigger venue WITH not one but TWO seminar rooms in close proximity, one that seats at least 400 people for a seminar? I am all ears. Yes, we know gyms are great location for a show but I have not seen one yet that has any type of seminar room attached, never mind two. It seems that learning and sports do not go together.keep in mind that we spoke to just about every college in LI last year ad visited facilities
  • Please don’t mention the Nassau Mausoleum aka Colosseum . Not even the biggest publication in USA can afford that place. You want to pay $15 or $20 just to park your car? I think not
  • So no ability to get bigger venue except turning it into another flea market. Now that we take that in the consideration, lets hear some thoughts on how to make it better in the future. I bet that takes a lot of wind out of the sails of many but we’ll sit back and listen to our readers

Striper Day this Saturday

I am so glad to be making a last blog post about Striper Day 2016. All this planning and worrying and now finally the day is here. I know these universities can be sometimes hard to get around. We will be there early putting up Show signs to direct you to the venue.

Few things that might help you out

if you put Sondra and David Mack Student Center in your google or copy this link https://www.google.com/maps/dir//Sondra+and+David+S.+Mack+Student+Center,+Hempstead,+NY+11550/@40.7157636,-73.6364814,13z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m8!4m7!1m0!1m5!1m1!1s0x89c27da144ee0851:0xeb3fd4b95a8645ed!2m2!1d-73.6014622!2d40.7157689

it will get you to the right spot

Its located on Hofstra blvd, on the north side of Hempstead Tpke, directly opposite Dunkin Donuts on the south side.

Just few items FYI but all of this information, including admission, raffles, hours who is attending can be found on our website at www.striperday.com

  • First 500 to attend will receive goodie bags from SJ and our sponsors
  • With your admission , you will receive a raffle ticket. That ticket is good only for free hourly prizes we will be giving out. You can check the winning # and claim your prize at any point during the day at SJ table. the winning numbers will be posted there

There will also be a giant raffle with all net proceeds to be donated to Heros on the Water Veteran Fishing organization. These raffle tickers can be purchased at special SJ raffle table at the show. The drawing will beheld at 4 PM and winner must be present so if you cant be around, give your ticket to a buddy who will

Here is the list of prizes

Striper Day Raffle -Drawing 4PM

All Net Proceeds To Benefit Heros on the Water

Grand Prize -Van Staal VSX Reel

2016 St Croix Legend Rod

Pelican 65 QT Progear Elite Cooler

STORMR Jacket

Costa Del Mar 580P Sunglasses /Costa Del Mar Hat/ Costa C-MASK

J.Jaget Set of Custom Lures and Shadow Box

Two Tin & Bucktail Pouches with assortment of Charlie Graves Lures

Korkers K5 Boots

Two Blue Frog Bucktail Sets

Tactical Angler Lure Set

There is no way i can possibly post all the great stuff the lure builders are brings, the bag makers, rod makes and never mind seminars from our experts. I do ask you if you are coming to be respectful before the door open as are we are guests at the campus.

I been working on this show for so long, that only a flask from my bud Boggie would help but here are two new things from SJ just for the show

new t-shirt from SJ, free with your subscription or renewal at show4295

New long sleeve creeping shirt4303

See you tomorrow

New Giant issue of Surfcaster’s Journal magazine is live

The new issue of the Surfcaster’s Journal is up for your reading pleasure

This issues is different than most, there is a huge 178 page preview issue followed by a 7 day free trial to SJ with mixture of new content and stuff we featured in the past

Included are 4 new videos in Surf Fishing 101

To view new videos in full  and all new  original content in issue 35  please log into your SJ account

Enjoy

Its like having a double issue..lol

Tommy really did a great jobissue35

THE CHESAPEAKE CHRONICLES – Part 1 by Rich Trox

Let me first mention that we are burning midnight candles on ALL ends this week as I am pulling my hair out with show last minute prep while Tommy and Dave are doing the same trying to get a next issue up, which should be happening within the next 24 hours or so. So lets move away from talking about a show for a day and switch gears.

As many of you know, Rich Trox is one of the most brilliant minds we ever featured in SJ magazine. He recently moved to VA and has starting to write Chesapeake chronicles for noreast and he told me if my readers would enjoy it to post it on the blog.

But first , the winner of Super Strike Striper Day Special lures is

ryancoplan1987@gmail.com

Congrats, you have 5 days to email us at info@surfcastersjournal.com with your shipping address and we’ll forward it to Steve MussoPre_StriperDay_Giveaway

THE CHESAPEAKE CHRONICLES – Part 1

By Rich Trox

Part 1

Well it’s closing in on 2 years now since I pulled up my stakes on Long Island and replanted them down here in Chesapeake Virginia. It’s been an interesting transition, but one requiring a lot of time and effort, which unfortunately, hasn’t left me with a whole lot of time to go fishing. Until recently that is.

Now that my business is going fairly well and I’ve recovered from some of my setbacks, I’m finally getting around to learning my new area, from a fishing perspective. And it is quite a bit different from what I left behind. Quite a bit indeed!

After fishing Long Island waters for over 40 years, I just took for granted all that I had learned over that time. I had developed what my friend Billy the Greek calls “the sixth sense”, the ability to perceive conditions and dial in with surety. As moderator and content provider for noreast and other online publications, and through my own youtube channel, I’ve tried to pass forward as much knowledge as I could over the years. I’m not patting myself on the back here, I’m just setting the stage.

I have basically forgotten how much effort it took to get me to the point where fishing the waters of Long Island became second nature. Granted, fishing is a lifelong learning process and there is always something new to learn, but the basics are a long time gone in the rear view mirror for me and others who have been at it for a long time.

I was talking with John Skinner at one of noreast’s Christmas parties several years back, about some of the basic questions I get repeatedly asked on the surf board. I remember asking him “When was the last time you walked onto a beach and saw nothing but water”. He chuckled. That’s the way it is with anything that you do for a long time, you simply forget what it’s like to start with a blank slate and a piece of chalk. To quote Morpheus from the movie The Matrix “Fate it seems, is not without a sense of irony”.

Now that fate has delivered me to Chesapeake and I’m ready to fish, I realize that it’s a whole different ball game down here. And while I’m not exactly starting with a blank slate and a piece of chalk, I have a lot to learn and whole lot of new area to figure out. Oh, I’ve brought a lot of transferable skills from my days up north, to be sure, and have even applied some of them with success. But I still have a lot to learn.

As such, I thought it might be interesting to document the process through these writings and a series of videos on my youtube channel. The videos may show me catching fish at some point, but that won’t really be the point of the videos. There are a million videos on youtube of people catching fish already, besides I can’t afford a go-pro yet lol. What I’ll be focusing on is the process I use to learn my new area, what goes on inside my head, from the top down.

For starters, let me say that you guys on Long Island have it pretty good as far as the striped bass go. Sounds counter intuitive seeing as the Chesapeake Bay is the largest striped bass nursery there is, but believe me, you have it good.

Why you ask? Several reasons really, but the biggest reason is that the striped bass seasons up there are very predictable and you get a lot of shots at bigger fish. They basically do the same thing every spring and every fall. There may be variations in the bait patterns from year to year, and certainly the decline in stock biomass has been felt up and down the coast, but at the end of every year, they came west to east in the spring, and east to west in the fall. Very predictable. Not so down here, and I’ll cover this in detail as I go along.

To aid in my new fishing adventures I bought a kayak in the spring and have had a lot of fun fishing from it for a variety of local frying pan species but haven’t done anything too hairy chested with it yet, like venturing far out along the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel, otherwise known as the CBBT. Being that it’s only a 10 footer and I’m 6’1” and 200 lbs, I’m not overly confident in it handling the rougher stuff. I’m already on the market for a larger, more stable model and might take advantage of the end of season clearance sales and buy myself an early Christmas present. We’ll see.

So what’s different down here? Without over exaggerating, I’d say pretty much everything. The lingo, species, techniques, bait patterns, migration patterns, tides, access, AND THE WHOLE AREA. Throw in a few things that you would never expect also. So much to learn, so much to reconfigure, and not a great knowledge base to draw from either.

The last comment about knowledge base is not meant to be insulting, it’s just factual. Most people down here who fish have no idea of what they’re doing. This is a big boat fishery down here and surf fishing plays a distant second fiddle. So while I can’t speak too much about the boat guys, those who fish the surf and piers, for the most part, don’t seem to have a clue about what’s going on. And this from someone who admittedly doesn’t know the area well yet.

There are a lot of piers down here and I avoid them like the plague. To me, two is company and three is a crowd, so piers are basically a last resort. Besides, most of them cost money to fish from. But there are two that hold some promise to me, one of which I discovered today and both free. More on those later. Most of the people who fish piers throw out a line and hope something will bite. Then there are the few at the end who know what they’re doing, but don’t say much. On the shore, most everybody I’ve met knows very little about what they are doing or why they are doing it, but they are all very nice people. So inside info is going to be very hard to come by.

While I didn’t have a lot of time to fish my first year down here, and still don’t have a great deal of time to fish, the first thing I had to figure out was how to maximize the time I did have to spend. Even though I didn’t have a lot of time to spend actually fishing, there was an enormous amount of learning I could do in whatever spare time I could find. So the first thing I did was break down the basics into manageable parts and organize them. In essence, I became an internet fisherman. I created folders on my desktop with specific functions, folders in my browser’s [favorites] for the same reasons, and then defined what was going into them by making a list of topics I needed information on.

The list was pretty basic but helped organize my efforts into manageable chunks, and this is still an ongoing effort and will remain so for quite a while. The first thing I wanted to know is what species were available. For each species I was interested in I researched size range, habitat preferred, migration pattern, preferred baits and techniques. The next was bait patterns, what are the predominant baits, how to catch them, or the best places to buy them, etc. The third and most expansive is access. This one will keep me busy for a lot of years, but it’s also the most fun. I’ll explain how I go about this and what I’ve found so far, in more detail when I continue. I’ll also have some funny and interesting stories so,

If you are planning on attending Striper Day 2016 and you have an FB account, click bellow and let us know.It helps us get an idea of who’s coming….and how many strippers to book…err, stripers

Striper Day Event Page on FB   (https://www.facebook.com/events/895814953800660/)

sim

Super Strike Striper Day 2016 Special Giveaway

Steve Musso of Super Strike Custom lures just emailed me asking if SJ is interested in “pre-Striperday” giveaway of two lures he is making for a show.
One lure that you can only get free with your admission by being one of the first 100 people in the line on Striper Day.

And the second one that he is making for his retailers as a show special.
Excuse my crudeness but do you really have to ask if bear craps in the woods?
Hell, yeah, we are all over this

So here is your chance, one winner, two very special lures from Super Strike custom Lures and Steve Musso

Good LuckPre_StriperDay_Giveaway

 

If you are planning on attending Striper Day 2016 and you have an FB account, click bellow and let us know.It helps us get an idea of who’s coming….and how many strippers to book…err, stripers

Striper Day Event Page on FB   (https://www.facebook.com/events/895814953800660/)

sim

New videos

Few new videos we posted on our Youtube channel this week.  We are currently working on a new issue. There will be seven original videos embedded including four new installments of the  Surf Fishing 101 series , two reviews, including one of a shitty product, and also Lou we’ll have a video column this issue

Transporting your rod on a tailgate- with Lou Caruso

I have a mixed feelings about making these “buried in the sand” videos. To some people they prove nothing, to others they mean everything. I am kind of in between on this. Yeah, i am impressed when all the sand flushes out but yet, I think the more significant test is standing in the water and getting hit by a sandy wave, which I have to admit VR handled just fine in limited testing on my part.