Author Archives: zhromin

Issue #21 of the Surfcaster’s Journal Magazine

The new issue of the Surfcaster’s Journal Magazine was uploaded yesterday for your reading pleasure

In this issue at https://surfcastersjournal.com/

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Reading the beach by Tony Stetzko – a story about how to fish sand beaches by a legendary cape cod surfcaster. He also touches on the state of the surf on cape and dealing with seals.

The eye of the striper by “Grampa” Greg McNamara – Greg works in the field of ophthalmology and has an immense understanding of how the eye works. Through his research he has learned a lot about how a striper’s eyes work, how they see color and how they hunt. He details all of this and more in this story.

Boat wise surfcasting by Corey Pietraszek – Corey is one of the premiere inshore charter capts in new England and his understanding of how stripers relate to inshore structure is like no one else I’ve met. He talks trophy bass, where they hold, how to decode a reef, rip and point and how best to call them to your lure.. Complete with diagrams and excellent photographic examples.

Hard up for Hardtails by Jack  Sprengel – this article details methods for catching the elusive Albie and bonito from shore. Jack talks feeding patterns, location, tide, strategy and baits

 

You favorite SJ columnists

  • John Skinner
  • Big Rock
  • DJ Muller
  • John Papciak
  • Chef Andrew Chase
  • Al Albano
  • Roger Martin
  • Lou Caruso
  • Dave Anderson

Original videos in this issue :

 

  • Forty minute video interview with legendary Super Strike maker Donny Musso
  • Casting distance, which reel is the king, VS, ZB or PENN?
  • Making bucktails with Lou Caruso

Yup, it’s a big one, 192 pages in all. Maybe the best one yet.

If you are not a subscriber to the Surfcaster’s Journal Magazine you should strongly consider joining us. If you subscribe in the next seven days you will receive a free copy of my book HOOKED via mail after subscription. But the offer is only good until 17th of September. And yes, you can do it at The Fisherman Show on Thursday too…or click here https://surfcastersjournal.com/amember/signup

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Go and read and enjoy what we have put together for you

 

Win a set of special mackerel Super Strike Little Neck Poppers

When Steve Musso from Super Strike Lures talks, we listen. For example like last night when he dropped us an email asking if we were interested in giving one  SJ Blog reader a chance to win a set of special mackerel Super Strike Little Neck Poppers Steve is making specially for the Fisherman Show retailers on Thursday.

Hell yeah!!!!

These lures will be available for purchase from Super Strike dealers at the Fisherman Show & Seminar this Thursday in Huntington. We will be there with new SJ designed t-shirts so stop by our table. And Super Strike will be there so make sure you stop by their display and say hi to Steve and Don Musso. They have always been so generous to SJ readers.

So here is your chance, to win one of the best giveaways of the year.

Thank you Super Strike Lures.See you all at the show on Thursday

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Almost there

I know you are all waiting with a baited breath for the debut of issue # 21 of the Surfcaster’s Journal Magazine. It should be up within 24 hours. I got a peak at it yesterday and it might be the best thing we have ever put together. I mean, Tommy and Dave are just getting better and better and content is not taking a step down either. Dave is doing one last time check, before he gives Tommy ok to make it live.192 pages I think..holy crap !!

In other news, Fisherman Show on top this Thursday at the Huntington. Many of our sponsors will be there like Cow Harbor, The Surfcaster, Saltwaters Tackle, Paulie’s, CTS, Century, Super Strike Lures, Daiwa, Tsunami, Guides Choice, St Croix, ZeeBaaS and many others. I believe the admission is $25 but you get a gift bag of lures that will be worth much more than admission price. Let’s not forget all the great seminars scheduled for this evening.

 

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As far as SJ is concerned, Tommy will have his newest creation at the show in the most popular sizes. First comes , first served, limited quantities and limited edition. Might be one of those show specials that we are famous for like our hats or stickers..ha-ha.

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Also in two weeks  the annual Montauk Fisherman Classic tournament takes place in Montauk followed by Paulie’s Bait and Tackle 7th Annual Fall Surf Fishing Tournament which will be held 10/4 – 10/6 this year. Details to follow

And last but not least…Bob Jones is in the house

In case you missed it, two of our newst videos

first, preview off issue # 21

[youtube]http://youtu.be/7tzPPHeCuzU[/youtube]

Lou Caruso on new Tsunami Rod

![youtube]http://youtu.be/6FzbSYg99Cc[/youtube]

Tsunami Elite Airwave new rods

Few weeks I told you about two new plugging rod that are joining others in Tsunami Elite Airwave line up. Actually I told you about them in February at River’s End Show when I’ve seen prototypes Tsunami Rep Nick Cicero brought to the show. I thought it was very interesting rod for under $200

I finally got my hands on some to test in August, a ten foot  Airwave Elite TSAWESS1062MH rated 1 to 3 1/2 ounce and a 9 foot Airwave Elite TSAWESS962m rated 3/4 to 3 ounce.

As you know, I took the ten footer down to the beach and on a first cast landed this 14 pound bluefish. I loved the way the rod felt but I did not have time to put it to further testing as I had to leave the country for a trip with my son.

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And this is where Lou Caruso our Rod Guru comes in. You can contact Lou trough his website at www.louscustomrods.com at any time. I gave both rods to Lou and told him “play with this” and I went away.

Now, let me make something clear. On multiple occasions over these four years  I asked Lou if he thought we should do a video review of a product. And on some occasions he said yes, but on many more occasions he said he rather not. You have to understand, Lou is an old school type dude. If he does not have anything nice to say, he rather just not say it. Which would be awesome skill if we could teach to many of todays internet keyboard fisherman.

I understand where he is coming from. He does not want to put his name to just about every rod on the market. Because after all they can’t all be possibly worth the praise. And even when he said that he would like to do a video, I avoided asking him questions about it until after we shot the thing. I don’t know about you, but I’d hate to be the guy who puts words in his mouth. After all, he is the expert, not I. I am just a camera dude.

So I was a little bit,  but not totally surprised, when Lou said let’s do a Tsunami Elite video on these two new models. These  are in my uneducated opinion much more of a “plugging rods” than the models they have had in the past. So we did, we hooked up Sunday morning, got eaten alive by no seeumms, shot the video on Tsunami, plug bag modification, leaders in the surf, how to use a manual bail, how to unlock bonded two piece rod and how to set the two piece rod properly. Yeah, we are busy bees…and on a “Labor Day’

I think i might have to call my union rep to check if this was Kosher.

Here is the video of Tsunami Airwave Elite models, you’ll get a lot for under $200. I am pretty sure Nick from Tsunami will be at the Fisherman Show next Thursday in Huntington

[youtube]http://youtu.be/6FzbSYg99Cc[/youtube]

The Midnight Rambler…Tumbleweed Tuesday (Is It Fall yet?)

The Midnight Rambler
John Papciak

Tumbleweed Tuesday
(Is It Fall yet?)

At this time of year, just as tempers reach their breaking point, tourist season at various beach communities ends abruptly with Tumbleweed Tuesday.

The Long Island “citiots” return to Manhattan. The Jersey Shore “Shoobies” go back to Philadelphia.

For most surfcasters, Tumbleweed Tuesday can’t come fast enough.

I’ll no longer feel as anxious about going into downtown Montauk, stressing about the long limes, the long waits for even breakfast, or fearing that my jeep might attract a ticket if I do not hurry back once the tires get marked by seasonal enforcement. Ok, I’ll still worry, but clearly not as much.

But I also know that, even though the weather is basically the same, and the fish might still be in “summer mode” for quite some time, I’ll actually find much more company on the beaches at night now, especially as we move further into September.

I also know that fall is more popular on the east end than Tumbleweed Tuesday would otherwise suggest, and the weekends will still be crowded – as long as the weather holds.

And in the case of surfcasters, if a Nor’easter materializes, we might get even more fishing traffic than if it were a nice beach day.

I’ll be checking the National Hurricane Center website almost daily now, as what happens off Cape Verde West Africa has a way of influencing how the fall fishing might play out. This was most certainly true over the last two years.

August 2011 found me enjoying some surprisingly good fly fishing for medium sized bluefish and some small bass within the LI South Shore back bay system. I found an unusual amount of bait, from spearing to mullet to snappers, and I had high hopes for the coming weeks as things cooled down. Some even larger gamefish were bound find the bait too, and I was sharpening hooks and tying flies like a man possessed.

It was not to be, Irene hit on August 28, and from my viewpoint, all that bait was gone and the local back bay fishing never fully recovered the remainder of the fall.

We all know how 2012 turned out with Sandy

While it is unusual to see two major storms making landfall in NY/NJ on back to back years, it is more likely that these kinds of storms will be steered away from land, as they make their way north. With any luck, the only evidence might be large swells and rough surf.

This is almost predictable, one reason why a world championship for pro surfers was held in Long Beach a few years ago.

We are now entering that time of year (early to mid September), when the potential for clashes between surfers and surfcasters will be at their peak. More specifically, a large swell coupled with a south or southwest wind, will create a unique wrap-around on the North Side of Montauk Point, with clean (less choppy) waves on the north side only, but with poor surfing conditions elsewhere. Should this happen, with nowhere else to go, some surfers will no doubt test the “no surfing” rules, much in the same way that some surfcasters would test “no parking or “no trespassing” signs if the fishing was good enough. The phone lines to the state parks will light up and you know the rest.

The fly boats will likely also be there in the surf zone. The Bay Anchovy phenomenon has been repeating with some regularity, and the sight of fish rolling on bait in the daytime, and within spitting distance of the shore, has a way of tempting captains to come in rather close at times. (Come to think of it, the sight of blitzing fish in so close has a way of turning even some level-headed surfcasters into drooling idiots as well. Not always, thankfully, but sometimes.)

Like surfing, the fly boat contingent is no longer a modest presence. We can expect many of the established fly/light tackle guides from New Jersey and New York to relocate to Montauk for September, and a good part of October. Yours truly has been reaching out to a few guides to book a trip or two (in lieu of hauling my own boat further east for the fall). I can tell you that most of these guides are 110% booked for the prime weeks out there, and have been for quite some time. I can wave $700 – the going rate for a full day – at them all I want. I will have to settle for a late cancellation or an off date, if I really want to take a break and let a guide do all the work for a few tides.

To be sure, I personally think many of the guides have gotten much better in the courtesy department, at least from my vantage point.

There was also spell there when a couple of guides ventured too close, especially during a swell, so these customers were treated to a thrilling fishing/surfing combo trip – the trip ended with the boats literally up on the rocks. Here too it seems captains are operating with better awareness of the conditions. Let’s hope I am right.

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And beyond the fishing, we can expect each weekend in Montauk to be jam packed with other non-fishing activities.

For starters, September 21-22 (the same weekend as the Surf Classic Tournament) kicks off with the Montauk Seafood Festival. There will be a two-day Triathlon Festival of Races on September 28th-29th, with hundreds of bike racers expected on the roads each morning, particularly West Lake Drive, East Lake Drive and all along 27 to the lighthouse and back. Another Fall Festival and Chowder Contest will take place over Columbus Day weekend.

This means more motels are requiring minimum stays, and more “Off-Season” rates have been rebranded as “Early-Fall” rates.

Nevertheless the overall mood will be more laid back, the way most want Montauk to be. And your blood pressure will most certainly drop a few points the farther you travel along 27 going east.

But I am not so sure I’d call it Tumbleweed Tuesday.

For those of you with firm plans to visit Montauk this fall, I wish you all the best of luck. I hope you are able to enjoy the fishing and can avoid some of the crowds. Contrary to popular belief, it is still possible to find a secluded beach, and it is even possible to have a blitz all to yourself. But you will need to walk a bit further.

But if you do find your line being crossed, try to have a sense of humor about. Some of my best “fishing in a crowd” experiences involved catching a few but then sitting back on a rock to enjoy the entertainment of this mass hysteria… maybe help repair someone’s tackle, get a hook out of a hand, or even help pull an overanxious newbie out of the drink.

Sharpen your hooks

Who’s got a starter pistol for the official start of the fall run?

Ready , set, fish

Not like you guys have not been fishing all year. But this is when many of you will kick it into another gear. I’ve see a lot of peanut bunker around milling around the inlet at Jones Beach this weekend so I am cautiously optimistic. Just keep your fingers crossed that we don’t get any hurricanes. Two years ago the backside of the inlet was primed for some great action and the Irene came trough and dispersed everything. I am not going to even say the name of that other storm from last year that caused so much damage to lives of so many of you. I’ve seen some weakfish caught yesterday so they are still around, although they have been eluding my efforts this summer.

And what can you say about fluke? I never was a big fluke-from-shore guy, most of my catching was a by-catch while targeting other species. But not this year (thanks Mr. Skinner). Some days I caught more fish on Gulp than I would catch in a season taking my kid on a party boat.

Hopefully once we get the new issue done in  few days we can concentrate on nothing but family and fishing till November. Yeah, we’ll work but how much will we actually accomplish is debatable. Boss says I need this done, buddy texts the fish are breaking. Boss says you need to bring your A game to work and you tell him all you got is C at best. A and B are left somewhere on the beach that morning.

Before I share some thoughts on the new issue, let me get the winners of Guppy Pencil Popper Giveaway announced. The winners are Tim Carey & Jorge P.

Each one of you will receive one Guppy Lure Co pencil popper if you email me your shipping address within 5 days at info@surfcastersjournal.com.

For more information on Guppy Lures, visit  http://www.guppylure.com I was told that the Cow Harbor Bait and Tackle in Northport will have a lot of Guppy lures at the Fisherman Show in Huntington in a week or so.

Back to new issue. We have some very interesting contributions in this upcoming issue. Obviously all your favorite columnists are there along with late Frank Pintauro. Legendary  angler Tony Setzko is making his first contribution as is the TV/celebrity/stud Grampa Greg McNamara. Just busting on Greg but many of you probably did not know that in addition to being a contestant on the Animal Planet’s show Top Hooker he also is an expert eye dude. Yeah, like helping you see better in a white coat kind of dude. He will share some research on striper vision. Also there are contribution from Jack Spangel and Corey Pietraszek.

On the video front, we will take a break from Montauk and give you a full 37 minute interview with Legendary Lure Builder Donny Musso. Everything you ever wanted to know about his life, lure building, association with Pichney, colors and shapes, his switch from wood to plastic, it’s here. Grab a cup of coffee and get ready to  go through the history of Super Strike Lures

Lou Caruso, our rod guru will show you that he is not only experts on rods. In the video we shot few months ago he will show you how to make a bucktail from start to finish.

And last but not least is a video that I did with my son a week ago where we went to a football field with a ZeeBaaS 25, Van Staal 250 and Penn Torque 5. We loaded them all  with identical SpiderWire line and used a CTS Vapor Trail rod to cast Super Strike Heavy popper without hooks, five times with each reel. Then we only took an average distance to be fair. I think the results will surprise you

Here is a video preview of the new issue

[youtube]http://youtu.be/7tzPPHeCuzU[/youtube]

Gulp..its what’s for dinner

 

I got home today to find that my son is still at volleyball practice, my little angel was icing her rolled ankle on a couch and texting up a storm, of course. Da Wife was moving like a tornado trough the house with a broom. Wait, that came out all wrong. She was doing her last full house cleaning before she goes back to work on Tuesday.

I had about two hours to kill till dinner. I could have sat on my PC and return thirty emails…or I could run down to Jones inlet and fish for an hour. Emails, fishing, emails, fishing, emails, fishing, fishing, fishing, fishing…..

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So I told my wife I will be back in two hours or so and I grabbed a 7 foot  St Croix rod and a four pieces of three inch Gulp swimming mullet along with some pork rinds. The plan was to probe mid column for weakfish but only for a short time. If I don’t get a bump in 20 minutes I was going to switch to trying to catch a fluke..or two

I was greeted by strong south wind, much stronger than I expected but hey, I  was already here. I probed the water with a bucktail and pork rind for fifteen minutes but quickly lost interest after it was obvious that no one was home. I cut the leader off and tied one of those “John Skinner Gulp” rigs as I call them. Bucktail on the bottom tipped with three inch Gulp and a dropper loop with a single bait holder hook and another Gulp bait  about a foot or so above the bucktail.gulpmulletpearl

I spent a half an hour tossing this into the wind but got no fluke to show even a passing interest. I was surprised as I had a half dozen fluke here few days ago, same tide although the wind was much calmer. Depending where I was casting, I would have a huge bow in the line and this made working a bucktail difficult. Or I should say it made it hard to “feel” what my bucktail is doing. Which I absolutely detest. If you don’t feel that the bucktail is almost at extension of your hand, I doubt you will get out fishing the bucktail as you could. Or should.

I told myself, three more casts and I am out of here. Only this time I made a cast directly into the wind with no bow in the line. Yeah, the bucktail landed in location that I would have not ordinarily cast into, but beggars cast be choosers. Now I could feel that bucktail perfectly as it was drifting with the current. Bam! Fish on!

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Ok, this was nice, at least I didn’t get skunked I said to myself. I made another cast in the same location and Bam, another fluke. Hey, this is even better , I said to myself. Then cast number 3,4,5,6,7,8,910,11,12  all produced a fish. Twelve fluke in a row! By this time I dropped one Gulp by mistake when rigging,  one was chewed up and another fish just swallowed the third one.

I added the last Gulp swimming mullet on to a bait holder hook and banged another five flaties in the next fifteen minutes. Damn, I said to myself, this Gulp shit is insane. For a moment I almost left like John Skinner! Yeah, catching fish looked that easy! Only John does this seemingly on EVERY trip.

I realized that it was I who was the reason I caught nothing in the first hour. I did not properly adjust my presentation to the wind velocity. But now I just lost my LAST Gulp minnow due to fish tearing it up. No big deal, I said, I will use a pork rind. I kept looking at my watch and kept casting but other than one short hit, I got no hook ups. Then I tried something unconventional, I added a 70 pork rind to a  bucktail and another 70 pork rind to a bait holder hook. It “should” work as well as Gulp. Except it does not. I managed one more fish and nothing else. But I knew the fish were there if I only had more Gulp..OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

How do I know there were more fish present?

I returned with my son two hours later with crapload of Gulp swimming mullets and we put an additional hurting on the fish. It’s like they commit suicide on these Gulp baits!

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAThe only thing I have to ask, has anyone used five or six inch Gulp mullets in a place of a pork rind? No, not occasionally. I am curios if someone has used them instead of pork rind most of time. Would love to know the result…I know my mind is spinning about the possibilities

Win two gorgeous pencil poppers from Guppy Lure Co

We haven’t done this in a while so let’s make someone’s day brighter. Since Yo Zuri discontinued Surface Cruisers, their overpriced and prone to brakeage-but fish catching machines,  I been looking for a replacement. There are some good pencil poppers on the market including the cheap-as-hell but awesome fish catcher Cotton Cordell. But I always liked the Cordell better in calm surf then on the ocean front. I finally settled down to alternating between my chewed up stock of Surface Cruisers and Guppy Pencil Poppers. I do use some plastic one, manly the big poppa from Guides Secrets as every condition should make you think ” what pencil popper should I use” Because not all conditions are the same, and neither are the pencil poppers.

So today we will give two SJ blog readers a chance to win one Guppy pencil popper each, the premier maker of wood lures. One yellow and one white one, and yes, they come with hooks..haha

You can see their whole line here http://www.guppylure.com/

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Hmm. I wonder if they will be coming down for the Fisherman Surf Show in two weeks?

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b-fiyMJPpis[/youtube]

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Striped Bass Gamefish Rationale by Capt John McMurray

Striped Bass Gamefish Rationale

                           This post by Capt John McMurray originally appeared on http://www.reel-time.com/on August 23rd

A case can be made, but it’s not the one we’re making

In my Aug 8th blog The Straight Dope on Striped Bass I mentioned “Assuming striped bass continues to decline, there is a rationale for gamefish, but thus far the angling community hasn’t picked up on it.  I don’t really have the space to fully explain this here but will certainly do so in a future blog.”  So…  Let me do that now.  If you haven’t read the above referenced blog, stop right here!  Read it, then continue.

Let me be clear that on its face, gamefish doesn’t appear to be about conservation.  It’s about a reallocation of a public resource.  Again, on its face, it’s a policy decision, not a conservation one.

There was a comment following the blog along the lines that, according to my rationale, we should reopen market hunting for terrestrial game.  Sounds silly, and it would be.  But it is true that as long as total mortality is controlled, such populations would remain healthy.  A dead duck is a dead-duck, likewise, a dead fish is a dead fish, regardless of who killed it.  It matters little where the mortality comes from, it’s still mortality.  As Charlie Witek pointed out in the comments section, wildlife managers simply chose broad public access over commercialization.  It’s important to point out that this was not a decision mandated by biological imperatives.  It was a policy decision on how to allocate limited resources.  They chose the greater public rather than a few guys still trying to make a buck off of it.

striped bass gamefish rationale

A nice May striped bass – photo by Capt. John McMurray

Managers obviously haven’t done that with striped bass, and I don’t disagree that they should.  I think decommercialization could achieve a number of objectives, yet I also feel like the entire striped bass gamefish issue has blinded people to the total fishing mortality issue, often to the extent that people can talk about killing smaller slot fish for dinner and then promote conservation in the same breath, while few notice that they’re talking out of both sides of their mouth.

If the true motivation is conservation, and I believe that at least with most gamefish advocates that’s the case, they could avoid a lot of grief by being very clear in their “conservation” goals.  In other words, stop talking about killing small fish, either by reducing the minimum size or creating  a slot limit, and shift the conversation toward reducing fishing mortality.   Decommercializing the fishery may actually be a good way to do that but no one is taking that track, and frankly, I’m not sure they should be right now.  I’ll explain this later.

I do believe that once we get the 2013 Benchmark assessment, reducing mortality, particularly on older fish, will quickly become a management goal.  And, while the “fairness” issue still exists, decommercialization of striped bass is a realistic means to achieve it, particularly since decreasing recreational harvest is likely to lead to increased catch-and-release mortality.  (Again I want to note here that in 2006, when the recreational fishery peaked, the number of fish killed as recreational discard mortality was double  the total commercial catch).

However, such action would only be justifiable if the former commercial harvest is used as a buffer of sorts, to increase the population, and not merely transferred to recreational landings, as was the case in New Jersey when they went the gamefish route.  I’m certainly not bashing Jersey.  The fact is that, given the amount of fish they took from commercials and gave to anglers, only a small portion are actually killed pursuant to their 3rd “bonus program” fish, which I believe was suspended anyway last summer.  So in reality, there is indeed a conservation benefit there.  Of course that doesn’t translate to decision-makers who see only an unfair reallocation, perpetuated by a movement that, instead of promoting the conservation buffer idea, talks about killing a smaller fish.  Certainly they get an earful about it from commercial striped bass fishermen in their states.

Getting back on point, decommercialization could indeed eliminate some bycatch-prone commercial gear such as gillnets and would stop the practice of discarding smaller, dead fish in favor of larger ones (“highgrading”) in order to maximize profit.  (While I hate to say it, that sort of thing happens on charter/party boats as well.)  Regardless, making striped bass a gamefish would likely quell the rampant illegal harvest along the coast.  Sure there would still be some poaching, but certainly not to the extent that it has existed in the last two decades, since the profit motive would be eliminated.

Striped bass Gamefish Rationale

A nice striper from the Navesink River – photo by Capt. Paul Eidman of Reel Therapy Charters

And then there is the economic argument.  It’s pretty well established that anglers create quite a bit more economic activity than commercial striped bass fishermen.  That’s been demonstrated in more than one academic study, and the argument that we deserve more fish, if not a total allocation, as a result has certainly been made.  Yet, having spent the last five years on one of the regional fisheries management bodies, I can say with certainly that managers simply don’t do allocation based on economic value of the fishery.  If that were the case, just about every dual-component fishery would have had all the fishery resources, except perhaps mackerel, tilefish and bluefin tuna, over to the recreational side.  The economic value of those fisheries are heavily weighted to the commercial side; thus we probably would lose them all together if NMFS were to base allocation on economic impact.  Several years ago, Stripers Forever retained Southwick Associates to prepare an economic study of the fishery, which unsurprisingly determined that economic activity generated by striped bass anglers was, I think, 26 times greater than that produced by the commercial fishery.  But it mattered little.  The ASMFC Committee on Economics and Social Sciences reviewed the study, then rejected it in its entirety.  About a decade ago, the Virginia Institute of Marine Science also produced a study which concluded that allocating the entire striped bass harvest to anglers would yield the best economic result.  It, too, was ignored.

That said, one could certainly argue that decommercialization is valuable not because it will permit a bigger recreational kill, but because it is a reasonable way to reduce overall striped bass mortality, increase the spawning stock, better assure the long-term health of the striped bass fishery and better represent the long term interests of the general public.  However, simply reallocating the resource without reducing overall mortality fails to achieve any of those goals.  The fact that the gamefish advocates haven’t tried to quell the “more fish for me” impression has really harmed anglers’ credibility with fishery managers and it has dealt commercial interests a winning hand

Several years ago, Stripers Forever President Brad Burns told me “If the striped bass were a personal-use-only species, the values of recreational fisherman would control its fate… Sure, a few would be eaten, but a healthy stock and high-quality fishing experience would be the primary values.”  I think he’s right about that when we talk about fly fishermen and even a lot of the surfcasting community, but when you start to look at the party boats and the six-pack charters, along with a significant segment of the private boat community, a lot of bass are being killed.  In those venues, conservation-minded sportsmen can be pretty thin on the ground.

First, Striped bass must be managed in a way that makes biological sense.  Once that is achieved, like terrestrial game, bass should be managed in a way that brings the greatest overall benefit to the general public.  Permitting the continued commercial exploitation of striped bass doesn’t really appear to achieve that objective.  But, we have to keep in mind that this is a historical and culturally significant commercial fishery.  We can’t expect it to just go away.

A nice striper from Capt. Dave Bitters at Baymen Charters

A nice striper from Capt. Dave Bitters at Baymen Charters

Unfortunately, a lot of anglers do think we can just make commercial fishermen disappear.  Such people are still living in the “us vs. them” age.  As I indicated in my Straight Dope column, I get it.  It’s irritating to see one guy kill lots of fish 20 or so yards away from where you are releasing them all.  But at a point in time so critical to the striped bass population, when we have a chance to convince managers to do the right thing, we’ve got to realize that it’s not about what is best for me, it’s about what’s best for the resource (although in the long run that’s usually the same thing).

So, while I do believe gamefish could have benefits for the stock, assuming the fish that had been harvested commercially were all maintained as a conservation buffer and not reallocated to anglers, I also believe that decommercializing striped bass is politically impossible at this time.  Yet, since chasing that impossible goal tends to blind people to the total mortality issue, I can’t say I’m a big advocate anymore.  There are other more important things on the table.

I’ll say it one more time, then I’ll shut up about bass, at least until we get the results of the benchmark: as a community greatly concerned with the future of this precious natural resource, we need to put the blinders on and focus solely on reducing fishing mortality.  Clamoring about gamefish, slot limits etc., isn’t doing us any favors.  There may be a time when there is an opportunity to achieve decommercialization, but that time is not now.  Distracting ourselves from the most important goal of reducing mortality is likely to hurt the bass—and us—in the end.

After obtaining an undergraduate degree in Political Science from Loyola College in Maryland, Captain John McMurray served in the US Coast Guard for four years as a small-boat coxswain and marine-fisheries law enforcement officer. He was then recruited to become the first Executive Director of the Coastal Conservation Association New York. He is currently the Director of Grants Programs at the Norcross Wildlife Foundation in New York. He is the owner and primary operator of “One More Cast” Charters. John is a well known and well published outdoor writer, specializing in fisheries conservation issues. In 2006 John was awarded the Coastal Conservation Association New York Friend of Fisheries Conservation Award.

 

Thank you… to a special friend

bunch of stuff rattling in my head but first things first.

We go through life meeting a lot of people. At work, on a beach, at home, even on vacations. Very few of them become more than people we know and only selected few become lifelong close friends. I am fortunate in some many ways with my wife and kids but I am also fortunate that I got to meet so many great people over the years.

Like our resided Chef Andrew Chase. I might have met hand full of people over the years that made an impact on me only though their friendship. It’s like I told you few month ago about Steve McKenna, we see each other rarely but he always made me feel he was only a phone call away. Andrew makes me feel the same way. He was with us from day one, giving us idea, encouraging us, helping in any way. He got a surfcasting bug late in life but I’ve meet very few who got bitten harder than him or who are more passionate about surfcasting. Andrew these days has a full plate with expansion of Cafe Katja after major construction and some personal stuff that he is dealing with at home. This upcoming issue will be Andy’s last regular column on cooking and all of us at SJ are thankful for all his writing and support over the years. We owe Andy a debt of gratitude and more than anything, on personal level, I am grateful to be able to call him a friend. I know we have some other very skilled and talented chefs on this blog, if any of you would like to contribute, please drop me a line at info@surfcastersjournal.com. Of course, this go for all of our readers.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=znDcIclhdYo[/youtube]

Number two is kind of trivial and comical in the same breath. Out of curiously, after getting spanked in Mexico on casting distance by locals I grabbed camera, my son and went to a football field. I took zb25 , vs 250 and torque 5 and spooled them all with identical 30lb invisabraid from spiderwire. We then used the  same rod, CTS Vapor Trail to cast a Super Strike Heavy Little Neck Popper without hooks five times with each reel. We then took an average out of five casts to be fair. Which reels cast the furthest? I was going to upload the video to YouTube but then I changed my mind. I will have Tommy embed it into the September issue of the Surfcaster’s Journal. It’s only fair that our subscribers get a first shot.

What else is in the upcoming issue? How about 40 minute video Interview with Super Strike Legendary Lure Maker Don Musso? We already featured a shorter article interview in another issue but this is the long version. Basically anything you ever wanted to know about Super Strike and Don, from his childhood, to carving wood at home, to his relationship with Dan and cause of split, to block island green needlefish, Campo and all other kinds of stuff. You going to need a large beverage and comfortable chair.Its like 60 Minutes for Surfcasters:-) Stay tuned.

 

 

Fisherman Show is on tap in few weeks. Here is the press release

THE FISHERMAN SURF FISHING SHOW AND WORKSHOP

The Fisherman Magazine’s  Annual Surf Fishing Show and Seminar, is slated for Thursday night, September 12, at the Huntington Hilton (quarter mile south of the LIE on Route 110). This show grows larger every year, and this year is no exception. More than 50 surf fishing related tackle manufacturers will be represented, and also displaying their wares and offering special deals on surf gear will be many of the best tackle shops and tackle vendors from the Long Island, Metro area.

Attendees are assured of going home with plenty of goodies in the form of lures, line and terminal tackle, as every attendee will receive a goody bag, along with a free chance to a raffle featuring great surf fishing related prizes, including rods, reels and surf fishing accessories from manufacturers like Lamiglas, St. Croix, Shimano, Okuma, Penn, Shakespeare, Daiwa, Van Staal, AquaSkinz, Tsunami and many others.

This year’s seminars and workshops feature an impressive array of surf fishing experts, among them “Crazy Alberto” Knie, Bill “Doc” Muller, Fred Golofaro, Ralph “The Tin Man” Votta, D.J. Muller, surf guide Bill Wetzel, Montauk sharpie Bill Jakob, Toby Lapinski,   rod builder extraordinaire Steve Petri, and Don “Super Strike” Musso. You’ll also be able to pick the brains of veteran casters from LIBBA and the Montauk Surfcasters Association, who will be there signing up new members and renewing current members.

If you’re into surf fishing, or looking to join the ranks of the surf fishing fraternity, you won’t want to miss this show. It will be a great opportunity to stock up on your favorite lures and rigs, and any accessories you’ll need to get you through the fall action. Show doors open at 6 p.m. and the presentations get underway at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $25 for adults, $20 for seniors and children 16 and under.

Twelfth annUAL MONTAUK CLASSIC

Hosted by The Fisherman and Long IslandState Parks, this popular event never fails to attract a crowd, and is timed to take advantage of some of Montauk’s best surf action of the season. Make your plans now to be in Montauk between Friday, September 20 and Sunday, September 22. The Classic kicks off at noon Friday, and continues through Sunday at noon. The awards ceremony will take place at the Point at 1 p.m. on Sunday. All entrants who attend Sunday’s awards ceremony will receive a free goody bag, worth considerably more than the $15 entry fee, as well as a free ticket for the awards ceremony raffle.

Boundary lines for this contest are all shore areas east of the westernmost boundary of NapeagueState Park. The minimum size for striped bass entries is set at 36 inches, while the bluefish minimum is set at 5 pounds.

This is a striped bass and bluefish event with $750 going to the anglers beaching the largest blue and striper of the weekend. Second and third place winners for striped bass,  and second through fifth place winners for bluefish will earn quality tackle and equipment prizes. For more information, call 631-321-3510 or 631-345-5200 Ext.209.

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