Author Archives: zhromin

A Special Veterans Day Custom Bag giveaway

 

Thanks to a very generous donation from the Surfcaster’s Journal subscriber Gerard Doyle we are going to award this one of a kind C&R Surfcasting Gear bag to one lucky veteran who is the surfcaster.
You know how we do this, you nominate a friend who is a veteran and who is a surfcaster right here on the blog and we’ll take care of the rest. In about a week or so we’ll tally all the entries, and pick a random winner. Only one rule, that your nominee is a surfcaster.
Happy Veterans Day to all, and thank you all for your sacrifice and bravery.

Thanks to Mr Doyle for his generous donation and Vinny from C&R Surfcasting Gear for making a kick-ass one of a kind bag.You can visit C&R Surfcasting Gear on Facebook and like their page while you at it. Here is the link https://www.facebook.com/pages/CR-Surfcasting-Gear/308702119230040?ref=br_tf

Here is a short little video so you can get a better visual just how gorgeous this bag is and more pictures. I hope i can do it justice

[youtube]http://youtu.be/Kr4JhMVs6Dc[/youtube]

 

 


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New issue of SJ and Veterans Day giveaway preview

Tommy is putting finishing touches on the new issue of the Surfcaster’s journal magazine. We expect the issue to debut in few days.
On Veterans Day we are going to have a special giveaway here on the blog to honor all our veterans. Surfcaster’s Journal subscriber Gerard Doyle graciously and sleeks donated a special surf bag that he won in the raffle. He wanted it to go to deserving veteran surfcaster and he wanted us to help him make this possible. Its a special bag made by C&R Surfcasting, you can visit them on https://www.facebook.com/pages/CR-Surfcasting-Gear/308702119230040?ref=br_tf

Thanks to Gerard and thanks to C&R Surfcasting for making such an awesome bag.

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We are also giving away a special performance hoodie from DEEP but you are running out of time to enter. We are picking a winner on the Sunday but you must enter on our Facebook page. The post is pinned to the top of our page and all relevant info is there. Go, make one click and enter

Here is the link

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Surfcasters-Journal-Online-Magazine/365270663420

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And last but not least, a new book by SJ columnist John I-can-catch-a-fish-in-a-roadside-puddle Skinner is now available. I am uncomfortable giving you my review because I am acting as a distributor for John who self published the book. I told John to send a copy to Dave Anderson for a review. All I will say is, that in my opinion, its the best book ever written on the subject. And might have the best damned cover on any book on surf fishing ever. That’s is. It is available in our online store as off today (you can click HERE) also at your local tackle shops. Just about every tackle shop in Northeast has received an advance copy so when you ask for it, they will know what you are talking about. Many SJ partners have it including Fisherman’s Headquarters, The Surfcaster, East End Tackle, Saltwaters tackle and they are on the way to River’s End. Also on Amazon and John’s book website

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The Midnight Rambler – Sharing the Stoke

 

The Midnight Rambler

John Papciak

 

Sharing the Stoke

 

“stoked” – adjective – to be “stoked” is to be completely and intensely enthusiastic, exhilirated, or excited about something.  To be in a state of happiness, excitement, anticipation, pride, and optimism. Word used often in Southern California by most surfers and skateboarders. (Urban Dictionary)

 

Surfcasters don’t really have a word for this, so as much as it might pain a reader or two, I’ll use it here.

 

Surfcasting used to be a much more solitary and secretive sport. That’s what the Old Farts (ahem, Old Salts) will tell us anyway.  If you caught fish, you never said how or where.

 

Well, that’s not exactly true either. Surfcasters always talked. They might not have told you the truth, but they talked. They most often fed you a complicated mixture of truth and fiction. And just like the Oscar Meyer Bologna of the day, it was up to you decide if you really wanted to consume it – but good luck trying to figure out exactly what was in there.

 

But even as a teenager in the 70s, fishing Sea Bright and Sandy Hook NJ, I picked up on this complicated game. Someone would let you in on their hot little tip, in hopes that you’d spill some of your own beans.

 

Voice in head  ”…Geez Mister, thanks for that awesome pile of horse sh*t information, now let me dish an even bigger load of my own…”  but at least I smiled and acted the part.

 

Anyway, it can make you stop and wonder why a newbie would ever take an interest in surfcasting. Let’s see… you’ll be doing this in the middle of the night.. you’ll be sleep deprived most days… you’ll be wet and cold… once you get really into it, you’ll be sleeping in your truck … you might go for days without a shave or a shower…you’ll smell like fish… and when you don’t smell like fish, your clothes will smell like mildew… so no, the chicks will NOT be digging YOU.

 

But somewhere along the way, surfcasting as we know it, has come to appeal to a small but sizeable segment of the general population – mostly male, but not all. That population is actually quite small, but if you were to visit Montauk over a Columbus Day weekend, you’d beg to differ.

 

Sure, a very large segment of the population would LIKE to go surfcasting, and many have gone once or twice, but those who have vowed to becoming proficient in the sport is really quite small. And I’d bet most readers would just as soon keep it that way!

 

But despite all the negatives mentioned above, there’s a raw connection to the ocean and the wild that can never be matched on a Links Golf Course. (That’s what many of the men in my age group seem to get most excited about). It’s that connection and ability to interact with striped bass, in the water and in a wetsuit, that I find so very appealing. 

I could say that actually catching a fish is not important, but that’s not true. If I go for a few trips without catching a fish I get cranky just like everybody else. But it IS different from other types of fishing, like boat fishing. Surfcasting IS much more rewarding. And for me, fly fishing in the surf even more so.

 

But getting back to an earlier topic, the secrecy versus sharing thing is a bit of a surfcasting conundrum, even for me.

 

I mostly fish alone. It’s not that I want it that way. But it’s often just too complicated to fish with others. First we have to negotiate where we will fish. And then I have to lobby for why I want to fish where I want to fish. And then I have to go into my reasoning, and then some of that is probably because of my log book or gut feel. Some may be based on additional information that I’d rather not get into. And then there’s the pressure that MY suggested game plan doesn’t pan out. Or worse, if it works out really well, I’ll be fighting for casting room the next 10 weeks.

 

Sure, sometimes it’s easy. The place is agreed based on some clear-cut reason, or maybe a whole bunch of people are meeting up there, and its more a big social thing than a serious fish-hunting thing. And that’s cool, we should all make room for those kinds of trips. Maybe even end it off with a big beach bonfire and BBQ.

 

But the conundrum is that, for me at least, its a solitary pursuit, but the sport can go flat without a little bit of outside influence and enthusiasm.

 

Most of us do need to “share the stoke,” at least once in a while. Sure, you get to compare gear, talk about your favorite lures, and as much as we think we know it all, you learn something whenever you fish with someone new.

 

But above all, the stoke is complete when you feel as if you are looking into the mirror. You immediately recognize the energy and enthusiasm – someone who is not yet jaded, and quite willing to take one more cast. They might not know the spots cold, and be plugged into the INTEL, but they are more than willing show up at 3:00 am, prepared to give it their best, even though the reports have been pretty bad, and the latest NOAA marine forecast is even worse.

 

Even when the day calls for a skunk, I think we all need to set aside a day or two each year to share the stoke. Me anyway.

 

 

Case in point was a small fly fishing get-together a number of us did back on October 18th in Montauk. A great day to share the stoke.

 

 

[youtube]http://youtu.be/HHjaf7Iasf4[/youtube]

List of winners, ASMFC and other stuff

Let me get to the winners of past week giveaway. All winners, you have 5 business days to contact us with your shipping address at info@surfcastersjournal.com

First, we got three winter of Gibbs Pro Series Lures

The first winner who will walk away with A Pro Series Rainbow Canal Special 3.5 ounce Pencil Popper is medic6973@gmail.com

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The Second winner will get a Pro Series Black Scale 3.5 ounce Glider is irenedana@verizon.net

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And a third winner gets for his entry a Pro Series Yellow Canal Special 3.5 ounce Pencil Popper is Typeonme@aol.com

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Very nice, congrats to all winners and thank you to Gibbs Lures for making this possible. You can check out their entire line of lures at http://www.gibbslures.com/

Next, winner of halloween Super Strike Scary Needlefish giveaway is Sbass50@aol.com

Congrats and thank you Steve and Don Musso for making this possible too. you can check out Super Strike at  http://www.superstrikelures.com/

2014 FB halloween

Speaking of Halloween, I hope many of you have managed to get out on the Holloween at some point during that wicked NE wind. There was good fishing to had from Montauk down to Jersey. Real good fishing. How do i know? I read it on FB like the rest of you 

Funny how we came from a sport that was on “need to know” basis for what seems like ever to one when every bite in on FB before the fish is landed. lol….If you remember Continue reading

Win a Halloween Scary Super Strike Needlefish

Happy Halloween Everyone !
Over the weekend we’ll announce the winners of Gibbs Lures giveaway but for today we got something special from Super Strike Lures
Steve Musso asked me if I wanted to give our blog readers a chance to win one of two of these special Halloween Super Strike Needlefish lures he made and I said does bear sh*! in the woods?
The second one Steve is giving away on his Facebook page. Of course if you are their fan on FB you should enter there too.
So here is your chance and we’ll make this short and sweet, both giveaway winners announced on Sunday. new issue is coming ip as is John Skinner brand new book release and yes, the powers that be decided that 1@ 28 coastwise is the right approach to managing striped bass.
Enjoy your Halloween, if you got little ones, soak up that excitement. They grow up too fast2014 FB halloween

New video – Century Nor’Easter ArmaLight Surf Fishing Rods

I got a chance to sit down at Jones Beach with Ryan White from Advance Fishing USA, exclusive distributors of Century rods in USA, They have a new line on Nor’Easter Armalight rods out now, at first look they were very impressive.

Here is the video,,,bunch more stuff I shot with Ryan coming your way over the next few weeks if all goes well

enjoy

[youtube]http://youtu.be/q9RQJq-W2nc[/youtube]

Surf Plugology

I know that if i tell you , this is a MUST read material for and surfcaster and give you a link, some of you will click, most of you wont. So instead and I am featuring the Surf Plugology on the Blog here and urging you to visit bassdozer site at http://www.bassdozer.com/. Particularly the Saltwater Article section. Russ “Bassdozer” might be a bass master these days in Arizona but at one point he was part of Campo’s Crew I believe that wreck havoc on beaches from NY to Cape. You might not be a history buff but there is a WORLD of information within these descriptions.

Enjoy and visit Russ site at http://www.bassdozer.com/

Surf Plugology
Metal Lip Swimmers, Plastic Lip Minnows, Needlefish, Darters, Topwaters and More

By Russ Bassdozer

This story provides information on striper surf plugs that were used during the heyday of striper surf fishing in the Northeast. Striper surf fishing hit its peak from the mid-seventies to the mid-eighties, which is about how long these plugs have been in storage. Many of these plugs are over twenty-five years old. Most are no longer made. This is a collection of plugs that you cannot normally buy off a tackle shop wall any more. I have guarded these closely, but feel it’s time to open the treasure chest, the spoils of saltwater campaigns, and share the booty with other surf anglers and plug collectors who may appreciate hearing about some of these legacies, thereby keeping the fascination of surf lore and surf lure collecting alive and handed down from generation to generation.

Before we get on to the actual lures, let’s tarry a bit upon what was happening with surf fishing back then. It was the heyday, the golden age of this sport. There was great fishing all up and down the striper coast, and there were great striper anglers dispersed along the coast also. These were guys who plied sections of New Jersey, the west end of Long Island, the western Sound, the Connecticut side of Long Island Sound, Montauk, and Point Judith and Jamestown, Rhode Island to name a few of the more proactive angler areas. Even the Cape Cod Canal was a different culture and group than the Cape Cod Outer beach gangs, of which there were several. There were maybe 2-3 dozen key guys – point persons shall we say – who came into play. In most cases, these guys were the proactive agents in surf clubs or the heavy hitters among gangs of surf anglers. Usually, they were associated with a group, held a high reputation within a region, even if they were only known to a bunch who fished together within that region. Mostly, these were isolated theaters of bass fishing, yet some of the top guys traveled around or got to know their peers in other regions. A few truly became luminaries, legends, shining stars of surfdom, and had camps of followers, almost entourages. So when I say 2-3 dozen guys up and down the coast, they are really like the representatives of 2-3 dozen clubs or gangs or tribes of guys.

Now, the Cape – Cape Cod – was a Mecca, a magnet that attracted the best and brightest – and most all of the hot shots strung along the coast line – these guys made pilgrimages to journey to the holy sands of Cape Cod. The Cape always had great fishing – but it never reached mind-blowing proportions until the mid-seventies, and it truly became the surf fishing equivalent of Camelot for a brief and shining moment in the late seventies. But prior to the mid-seventies, the Cape was more of a casual thing, more of an avid angler’s vacation retreat – and more of an individual or family thing versus a large group or surf clan kind of thing.

By the mid-seventies, when the sand eels and the super-run of cows came to the Cape, all that was to change. The run of fish on the Cape beaches in the late seventies was Continue reading

New video and all SJ gear back in stock

Few announcements and new video

First, the SJ store is back to being fully restocked. All sizes of SJ Mermaid shirts including 3XL, New long Sleeve Night Crew T’s, All short sleeve Night Crew are back in stock and yes, Nigh Crew Zipped hoodies are back after a long delay. We have only few 100 % SJ wool hats left, there seems to be a run on those suckers this week. I guess a cold spell ? We’ll give you guys a first shot on all gear.

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In bad news department, Canon has returned my XA10 camera as unrepairable. Too much corrosion damage to main board to be fixed is what they say. Real bummer as not only is the most expensive camera I ever bought but it was a gift from Da Wife. I guess we should expect that being around the water and all. Still a bummer

 

and last but not least, a new video from SJ reader Steve Gallant

He is currently working on a short surfcasting film project that encompasses all the best footage he has gathered this year as well as hopefully some quick interviews with the guys he fishes with and folks from the local tackle shop in between fishing action. He just finished a quick teaser trailer and is shooting to have the finished product (about 15-20 minutes long) done sometime around the holidays.[vimeo]https://vimeo.com/108967689[/vimeo]

Win Three Pro Series lures from Gibbs Lures

A special giveaway today on the Surfcaster’s Journal Magazine Blog from a company whose lures have been fooling stripes for half a century, Gibbs Lures. As you read in the recent interview in the Surfcaster’s Journal Magazine with Matthew Smalley, Gibbs Lure Co has undergone many changes over the years, Their new Pro Series feature VMC Hooks, , glass eyes, improve finish, Wolverine Split Rings and Spro swivels. I am glad to see Gibbs Lure continue in the tradition of late lure inventor Stan Gibbs, whose designs are probably the most influential ever in the sport of surf fishing in the northeast. Visit Gibbs lures at http://gibbslures.com/

Today we are going to give three of a our readers a chance to win one Pro Series Gibbs Lure each

A Pro Series Rainbow Canal Special 3.5 ounce Pencil Popper

A Pro Series Black Scale 3.5 ounce Glider

A Pro Series Yellow Canal Special 3.5 ounce Pencil Popper

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A Pro Series Rainbow Canal Special 3.5 ounce Pencil Popper

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A Pro Series Black Scale 3.5 ounce Glider

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A Pro Series Yellow Canal Special 3.5 ounce Pencil Popper

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