Living the Dream

It was good to see some of our readers at route 110 Flea Market. Next on tap is the big NJ Surf Day in about three weeks. I pray that God will take a pity on us and let up with the constant snow. I am sure many of you are sitting down with a heating pad on your backs. I know I am.

I am sure many of you are jonseing for some fishing but that seems so far away right now. You are probably going stir crazy in your garage reorganizing your plugs for the twentieth time. I kind of like our Art Director Tommy’s approach, let everything simmer in a tangled mess until the days get a little warmer. If you ever seen his plugs, first thing you’d notice is nice “patina” finish on his hooks.

For those of you that like to curl up with a book reading, you probably already read John Skinner’s new book Striper Pursuit. There is another book that I want to tell you about because you probably have not hear of it.

Charlie Soares ocasionaly  contribute Tale End stories on the end of the Surfcaster’s Journal magazine. This kind of writing is right up my alley for winter reading. Ok, for anytime reading. I just love the stories of yesteryears and how the world , fishing (and people) were. It fascinates me and besides watching Flip Pallot narrate in Walkers Cay Chronicles, no other author really touches something deep inside of me like Charlie does. Maybe I see a lot of my late grandfather in his writing, maybe I just yearn for days when life was simple, or probably, I just like the way he makes his stories come alive

I just finished reading Charles new book Living the Dream and loved it. I liked it enough to add a dozen signed copies to our online store but you can also find it on Amazon. I am not sure which retailers carry the book. Anyway, a nice read after you got a brandy in your hand, snow shovel is put away and fire in the fireplace

Living The Dream

A Lifetime of Fishing Adventures

Pursuits of a Longshore Fisherman

“While so many other modern angling scribes have been trying to write themselves into the foreground of striper history, Charley Soares has been living at its epicenter, not missing a beat. His formidable bass-catching credentials and expansive institutional memory have in no way diminished his ability to write about our foremost fish with genuine humility, humor, and conviction, as well as an unparalleled sense of storytelling. You should buy this book.”

– Zach Harvey, Fishing Editor, Soundings,

and former Editor, The Fisherman, NE Edition

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2014 Year in Review by NY Surf Fishing Guide Bill Wetzel

  

Bellow you will find Year in Review from NY Surf Fishing Guide Bill Wetzel

Every time Bill goes out fishing either with a customer, on his own and even with his kids, he posts a report the next day on his website. That alone is worth price of subscription, never mind the spirited discussion on forum open only to subscribers and Bill dispensing his wisdom along the way

check it  out at www.surfratsball.com

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Every year we have a cold winter I hear we are going to have a great sand eel run and the fishing is going to be awesome. Well last year we had a cold winter and very limited amount of sand eels for 2014, not to mention a below par season. As of this writing I am convinced that there is no way to predict a good year of striper fishing or abundance of bait before the season begins. It is great conversation and keeps many rats head in the game through the winter months, but conversation and reality are two different things. In the spring of 2014 due to the cold winter and spring, the general consensus was that we were “two weeks behind” schedule meaning that the stripers were migrating later due to the cold water temperatures. That seemed to be about right, but by late May early June we were right on target.

April full Moon 4/15, New Moon 4/29

    For my charters and I April did not hold much fish. I was busy skiing and enjoying what was left of the winter, and I only managed fish three out of just four trips.  Most of the information I was receiving was slow everywhere with the exception of good shots of schoolies towards the end of the month in Montauk.  I also heard from a few Connecticut casters that they were having a ball with winter hold overs at the mouth of the rivers.Killington-525_zps590fa0eb

May Full moon 5/14, New moon 5/28.

    May was another slow month with the exception of my trip to Cuttyhunk.  My charters and I were all over Long Island in May, but the fishing in general was poor. Casters across the east coast were complaining of the same poor fishing, many blaming it on the cold winter and the run being behind schedule. In my opinion it had nothing to do with the cold winter, and all the more to do with the decline of the species.  Even if you believe the fishery is in a downward spiral as a fisherman or at least myself as a fisherman am optimistic every time I wet a line.  With that in mind on 5/28/14 I found myself on a small ferry with Mike K. heading to the famed waters of Cuttyhunk. Zeno Hromin and his crew of surf bandits happen to be going at the same time we were. As we shared the ferry with the gang, Zeno told me that he just got back from the canal and it had been dead. I remember being hopeful that we had the moon on our side, and anything could bust loose during or after the moon which was on 5/28/14.  Sure enough most casters did pretty well during those three days I was there, and I managed fish to 42 lbs. and swear I had a truly special fish on that I dropped. I met some great folks in Cutty including a rat name Ray that I shared a tide with. Neither one of us could stop talking about the sport. If you have not been to Cutty you should put it on the list.P5310880_zps2d95cc61

June full moon 6/13, New moon 6/27.

    June was a really rough month. I fished it pretty hard and strictly stuck to Montauk. The first moon of June was full on the 13th. I remember being hopeful that if we were behind schedule this moon would come at a great time, as it was in the middle of the month instead of the beginning. Therefore water temps should have been warmer, hopefully sparking the migration of what I like to call local sand eels. The locals begin in the Peconics and usually reach the north side on Montauk right around the first moon of June. Unfortunately the run never happened and even my money spots were nearly void of stripers. By money spots I mean spots that have been very consistent for the past twenty plus years, and were now near void of striped bass. One might blame it on the lack of sand eels, but I blame it on the lack of fish as there was plenty of other bait around. The money spots have also been getting consistently worse every year for the past 4 or 6 years. The following was taken from one of my June logs and it kind of summed it up (go to Bill’s log” in the Surf Rats Ball forum to read entire log); “Over to the sand beaches- not a tap. Over to the light- not a tap. Over to the south side- not a tap. Over to the north side and not a tap. This is June mind you……” The good news was that I heard of some decent picks of fish on the south side of Montauk, I just never got into many.  I am not saying that June was doom and gloom (we had some fish), but what I am saying is that it was very poor and well below average for most Montauk fisherman, and from what I was hearing, most east coast fisherman as well.  I remember speaking with charter boat captains, bait and tackle owners, and even commercial fisherman that month. Want to know the funny thing? One hundred percent of them said fishing had been poor and one hundred percent of them said the fishery was fine.  I remember one bait and tackle shop refused to discuss it. I guess they feared I was going to scare customers. It made me sad. The 9th annual Surf  Rats Ball East Coast Striper Tournament ran from the beginning of June until its end and John Hanecak came away with first place with a Connecticut striper at 48lbs.O

July full moon 7/12, new moon 7/26.

    July is a great time to target resident fish and sometimes they can be very large. It can also be very sporadic, but for whatever reason it was the more consistent than any month prior for 2014. Once again I was nearly strictly at the office in Montauk.  I needed family time so personally my efforts were down this month. Although I had fish on nearly, if not all the trips I made that month, the best for numbers of fish came on 7/27 with the new moon. The thing that was most interesting was the fish were all in the day and very numerous. We had about 70 something schoolies that day in very nice looking white water. It was nice to see, and I expected good cow fishing in August as the boats had been hammering monster stripers in the rips all month.  We also had the Surf Rats Ball annual shin dig this month.  We gave the winners of our tournament thousands of dollars in prizes and then raffled off another $10,000 or so  in prizes with over $6,000 going to kids with cancer. A special thanks to all our sponsors and Jeff the Chef and Rich P. for cooking and providing the all the eats. Not to mention Stu from Sno flake Ice cream in Riverhead for cooling us off!P7110896_zpsa6a3a5ec

August full moon 8/10 New moon 8/25.

     August is my favorite month to fish bar none. It can be brutally hard work to find a bite and you really have to have lots of patience. But, if you can find the spearing and snappers you just might land a fish of a lifetime. Nearly every August I take my largest striper of the year, as the resident slobs come in to feed on night tides. For the 2014 season I had my doubts as I already had one 42 under my belt from Cuttyhunk.  August was a decent consistent bite of schoolies to teen fish, but by no means what it once was. I like to hunt for trophies this month, but up until the new moon all my charters and I had were  schoolies and teens.  My favorite charters of the year are what I refer to as trophy trips. They are trips when we exclusively target the cows in the bolder infested surf of Montauk. They are usually pretty brutal trips with long walks and sore feet. The rewards of these trips can and have been a fish of a lifetime, but can also put a hurting on your ego. Ironically it was on a non-trophy trip on August 22nd somewhere deeeeeeeep on the south side of Montauk that I whacked a 46lber on a Super Strike needle fish, with a charter that did not want to wade out to even one foot of rocky water. There was no way I should have ever got that fish in, as she took me around a rock in defiant underwater laughter. By the grace of the lord all mighty, I took my line off the roller and free spooled her out of trouble and manage to land which was my largest fish of the year. August struck again! This time kokerless, in a T-shirt, no top, and without warning. Go figure?P8210915_zpsf4861df1

September Full moon 9/9 New moon 9/24.

With only one big fish in August I was hoping for many fish for September. For many fish you have to have lots of bait. Montauk is famous for its white bait blitzes, which at times are so thick it can turn the surf a different color. Usually I see the first sign of white bait in late August. For 2014 the first sign of it was on 8/31/14, but never really developed until later in the month of September. Despite lots of northeast wind and lots of bait the bite was not all that great, or at least not as great as it should have been considering all the NE winds. We did have some very good bites this month especially towards the middle of the month, but if I had to sum of September in one word it would be “inconsistent”. Inconsistency is nothing new for September, but there were nights when we struggled to find just one fish and that has been an increasing trend for the past seven years or so. The highlight of the month was the Montauk Classic. I fished it with Mike K who had also booked me the year before for the classic. This year was a bit different, as a catch and release division was added to the tournament. If they had not done this I do not think I would have entered. I let Mike know that we would strictly be catch and release for the tournament, and we painted our rods like measuring sticks to measure our hopes and dreams for a win. I had come in second a few times, third, and even fourth, but never had won the darn thing. In 2014 we had light south winds and flat surf, which are the conditions I love for a Montauk tournament. That wind and flat water eliminates much of the luck, makes for harder fishing, and you really have to tweak your tides.  Mike and I had a banner weekend while most other casters struggled. We slammed many high teen to twenties fish, and I managed to take first place with a 32lber and Mike hit second with a 24. The 32 was also the biggest fish overall. It could not have worked out better, because the goal was to win and promote catch and release. Truly one of the highlights of the season.classic32pic2_zps5b8b7cf8

OCT 8th Full moon Oct. 23rd New moon.

    The big thing I was waiting for was the juvi weakfish run. With the September new moon on the 24th and the October full on the 8th, I had thought to myself that if the run came it would probably be on the October moon as the September moon was a just a tad early. I’ll be damned if I did not nail it. On the 7th Lee Solomon and his bud, had planned the trip with me in hopes of hitting the juvi weakfish bite, and they did just that. The baby weakfish were everywhere and we had striper after striper to ourselves on darters and bucktails.  Between 10/10 and 10/13 we  hammered the fish, and even got into a 70 plus fish day, with Jamie Howard films getting it all on camera. Hopefully his film will be out soon. Yee who say bright nights suck have probably not fished enough of them to know better. By the middle of the month we had some big water come through and the fishing just really seemed to shut down for long after that. jamiefilms_zps98452edf

November full moon 11/6, New moon 11/22.

    November started out with NE winds and lots of fish. On 11/1 we had nonstop schoolie action on bucktails and what looked to be mullet getting hammered in a gale wind. Montauk was a disappointment for most of the rest of November despite a large run of adult bunker early in the month. This is especially interesting as bunker are a rare sight in Montauk, and I have never seen adults this late in the season. I decided to hit mostly the south shore for November and had nights with some rewards with fish feasting on bunker. Big 3 oz. bottle plugs were the ticket and I have to say that was a fun run of fish. While I was in Montauk local south shore casters had that bite to themselves for over a month before I even attempted to fish there.  On a side note the sand eels never showed anywhere.

Despite a good showing of herring, December was a bust as it got pretty cold quick. In my opinion there were not enough fish in our current striper fishery for the December hold overs to make a showing.

In conclusion it was a pretty poor year for most casters along the coast.  My personal observations were another decline in fish in all areas that I fished. Despite good water temperatures and loads of bait, at times the fish seemed to be nonexistent. This decline has been noticeable to me since about 2007 with each year thereafter getting worse. I have encouraged all my charters to catch and release, and even have turned people away that wanted to meat fish. I personally only took one fish last year only because I could not revive it.  I don’t think I had a single charter take home a fish. Which leads me to believe that party boats could also encourage a catch and release boat, but it seems that most if not all are only interested in filling the boat with dead fish. I believe that we are headed for a moratorium, possibly within the next few years. If that happens bait and tackle shops, charter boats, magazines, web sites, coastal stores, and even I will just be screwed. I hope the few of you that think the fishery is fine and dandy are absolutely right, and I am completely off base. I encourage everyone to please practice catch and release for the 2015 season, and please encourage others to do the same.

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Sebastian Inlet Part Fishing III

One quick note before I continue on Sebastian Inlet 

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Thanks to all who stopped by Connecticut Surfcasters Show yesterday. We had fun hanging out in a very relaxed setting. Two people who have renewed subscriptions to SJ either gave us wrong email address or we took it down wrong. If your email is either raynondcray@yahoo.com or bobbyp62@yahoo.com please contact me at info@surfcastersjournal.com

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if any of you know anyone whose email sounds familiar to these (we might have written down this wrong) please contact me or them. I’d appreciate it.

This Sunday we will be at Route 110 flea Market in Huntington NY. After that we get few weeks break before Surf Day NJ and then all crap breaks loose as we will get more frequent driving miles than a UPS trucker for few weeks.

The winner of the most awesome Guppy Custom Lure Pencil Popper giveaway is John Clerkin Jclerkin@aol.comcvfcv

Congrats, you have 5 days to contact us at info@surfcastersjournal.com

As I mentioned before, I got to meet Patrik Sebile from Sebile lures, have dinner with him few times and fish with him. It was my first time meeting this lure designing legend and all I got to say is “wow”. The man is  one of the nicest people I have ever met in my life and he is obsessed with fishing more than any man I ever meet. He speaks broken Frenglish while I practice Cringlish so we got along splendidly.

The amount of knowledge this man posses about lure design and baitfish movements and reactionary strikes is astounding. We got chased by lightning one night, we fished in a  nasty rainstorms and finally we fished another night along the rocks at Sebastian Pier

Here he showed his prowess by hammering few giant snook while we watched. Unfortunately his back is not that well so he limited himself to short windows of casting but not before landing this very nice snook.kjuy

The last night we decided to try fishing “our” way by getting down on the rocks along the pier and tossing Rapala X Raps, big Sebile swimmers and Bombers too. Here we found some consistent fishing with Ron’s son landing a bull red after dark one night and bunch of very nice snook that fell for swimming plugs.'[kljg

There is a catwalk on under the bridge on both sides and of course, we found New Yorkers there, Gary The Toad in particular was there with a long net and a spotlight hooked up to generator netting big shrimp as they were carried by a wicked current.

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I cant possibly tell you all the fishing opportunities that are available around this places from backside of the inlet which we never tried to pompano out front and tarpon, sheepshead and grouper and God knows what else.

For me the highlight of the tip was not fishing but going to Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral. If that place does not make you feel proud to be an American , I have no idea what will.

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And yeah, my son only had one request on this trip, that I take him to Chick Fill A for the first time because as he said he “wanted to show his support” for the way they operate. Believe it or not, first time we found one was on a Sunday and they do not open on Sunday instead giving their employed a day off. Can you imagine that up here? It would never happen. The food was quite good for a fast food chain and of course I made him flag down a mascot to snap a shot.

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The food was quite good for a fast food chain and of course I made him flag down a mascot to snap a shot.

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If you are looking to do something else, Orlando Magic are only about an hour or so away and tickets are not that expensive, probably because they suck but we had a great time.

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by the way, shrimp and grits are awesome

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The funny thing is as I look back on this trip and realize that I made the same mistake that I often make on all trips to unknown. Yes, just like when you arrive in Montauk for the first time and everyone tells you that you MUST have a bucktail or a darter, sooner or later you realize that whatever you were using back home successfully, works just fine. same thing here. Pork rinds, swimming plugs, all the stuff you use at home including darters and bottle plugs are not taboo IF used in proper conditions within the structure. Unfortunately by the time you (or I should say I) come to this conclusion , the JetBlue flight was waiting.

There is always next time

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Sebastian Inlet, FL surfcasting Part II

Before I continue some thoughts on Sebastian Inlet in Florida, few announcements.

First, SJ will be at this weekend Connecticut Surfcasters Show in Clinton CT .

If you are attending, make sure you stop by out table and say hi. You can renew your subscription, get some free SJ stuff and just shot chitt. We are looking forward to it

FOURTH ANNUAL

CONNECTICUT SURFCASTERS

SURF EXTRAVAGANZA AND SALE

January 24, 2015

10:30 AM to 2:30 PM

Clinton CT Town Hall

54 East Main St. (Rt.1)

Clinton CT

The Connecticut Surfcasters Association is pleased to announce the fourth annual CSA Surf Extravaganza and Sale. The location is the same as last year but with more space reserved for vendors and demonstrations. The facility is located on the Indian River in Clinton and may provide for some outdoor demonstrations.
A five dollar suggested donation to the CSA will be collected at the door. Lunch consisting of our chili selection, along with hot dogs and soft drinks and coffee will be available for purchase. We will have plenty of both new and used tackle of all kinds for sale or trade.JoeBaggs Bucktails

Tank Surfcasting

Couch’s Cedar Works

Van Staal

Fluke Skywalker Fishing Arts

The Surfcaster

24/7 Lures

Al Gag

Guppy Lures

Big Water Lures

Surf Asylum Lures

Tsunami Fishing

New England Dive Center

Goo Goo Man Lures

Rayzor Baits

Otter Tubes, Tails and Spoons

FiberStar Composites

Harris Outdoors

ZeeBaas Reels

Surfcasters Journal

Century Rods

Gear Up Surfcasting

CTS Rods

Magic Tails Bucktails

Salty’s Lures

ComboLock

1:00 AM – 11:30 AM: CSA Member Joe D’Agostino – Rigging Eels & Soft Plastics on Jigheads

11:30 AM – 12:00 PM: CSA Member Matt LeJeune – How to Finish a Plug Kit

12:00 PM – 12:30 PM: CSA Member Pat Vogt – Weakfish Tactics

12:30 PM – 1:30 PM: Dave Anderson – Plug Fishing Logic

1:45 PM – 2:15 PM: CSA Member Ian Skillings – Installing Grip Studs in Wading Boots

CSA club members Mike Mullen and Billy DeLizio will be doing ongoing demos throughout the day at their table regarding different techniques for crafting wooden fishing lures on a lathe.

CSA club members Bill and Debbie Goeben will be doing ongoing demos throughout the day on the finer points of saltwater fly tying.

Two, the winner of this awesome Guppy Custom SJ pencil power announced in the next blog post.

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And last thing, if any one has issues logging in or needs password reset or forgot username feel free to contact us at info@surfcastersjournal.com and we will take care of it for you. If you have no access to SJ because you credit card on file has changed over last year like so many with Target debacle last year, log into your account and click on Add/renew subscription if expired or just update your cc info if your account is still active

So there I am, standing on the tip of the pier and shooting bull with a SJ fans who are hooked up onto giant reds. I am saying to myself how in the world will I land the fish if I hook one? I am twenty feet above water level. Then I watch guys lower a giant net in the water and slide fish on top of it, then hoist the fish up. Go ahead, make a cast they urge me, someone will help you.

But making a cast is not as simple as making a cast and retrieving, no Sir. You have to go thirty yards back, make  cast then jig and walk towards the tip in rotation with everyone else. Imagine 50 anglers with all kind of rods and reels walking instep and jigging. Its Crazy!

Once you get to the tip, retrieve  your line and go back thirty yards and do it again. They use synthetic  bucktails, the kind we use for parachute jigs, ones with synthetic hair with red hair blended into it. I took out my regular buck tail, added strip of pork rind and made a cast into the madness of birds and breaking fish. The outgoing current is ripping and I am having a hard time feeling bottom. For a second I am thinking I am hanged up when suddenly the bottom moves.  Mother of God , I can only describe the feeling to one being hooked to a freight train. If these fish were hooked tail to tail to a same size striper the striper would have no tail . My muscles were burning up, partially from not fishing for weeks and partially by awesome strength of the fish. I worked my way to the tip where along with few other anglers I tried to get the fish under control with very little luck. While we were fighting the fish the rotation just kept going around us. I finally made some headway and brought the fish under the pier, just enough time to see its massive shape before I pulled the hook.

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You know what, I was not upset about it all. If you know me, I am not much of a “take a picture of me with a fish”  kind of a guy anyway. My son hooked into one but came unbuttoned fast. I have to ad that PENN prototype rods we were using preformed admirably. I said to my son , do you want to try the south side where there was no people?

Yes, the bite is probably not that great there but we’d be alone. He said sure but of course by the time we got into car and on the other side, it was starting to get crowded too. However, within and hour after dark most people left.

Now you’d think south side is a similar type of fishing and you’d be wrong, very wrong. Its another “new” way of fishing that often can have you ask question : are you doing what you are doing right or you are just an idiot on the shore casting into the ocean? Because difference is not always evident.

On this side you cast plugs into the inlet. Darters, bottle plugs, swimmers, you name it. You cast it out then you “feed” your line into the current for a hundred yards or so. Only then you engage your lure and start a slow retrieve against the current by moving on the jetty tip in rotation. But you have no benefit of a flat footing on pier here, its coral rocks that will cut you up like a knife if you God forbid take a wrong step. Fortunately my son and I were alone. I casted and feed the line and then passed it to him to retrieve as he would give me his rod to cast and feed the line. Once he was done I’d give him the second rod and i casted again and feed the line. I really was not interested in catching fish myself. I wanted him to hopefully hook up into something.

By the way, many of you will probably asking what is “something”. How big is your imagination?

Giant snook, big shark, giant tarpon you have no chance of ever landing, big jacks, red fish, small bluefish,and host of other species that will kick your ass in short order. A guy on a pier had a 15 pound snook on and while he was lowering the net a 300 pound goliath grouper that calls the pier its home came from under and took his fish…in a flash

We were using Super Strike Bottle plugs this night and my son hooked into fish that was smoking his drag. But after few minutes it was evident that something is not quite right. There is a boat drifting in a darkness and he is yelling towards us. I grabbed the rod and from the angle of his line I could see that is running towards the boat. I am thinking the dude on the boat is hooked up to same fish, or one of them is hooked and the other crossed. He is asking me to give him slack but I am saying hell no, you give slack. After all its my kid that is hooked up. This goes on for 10 minutes and I was pretty darn proud of my kid and knots I tied..haha

Eventually I  did relent as i could see the fish trashing by the boat a hundred yards away and I gave him slack. He netted the fish and yes, he gave me back my bottle plug intact, something that would never happen in NY. Who actually hooked the fish? We will never know

Here is a picture of Matt DiCostanzo whose proud dad Ron is a manager at ZeeBaas with a nice redfish . Photo Credit goes to Lyd Le’Ng

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More to come including fishing with great Patrik Sebile from Sebile Lures

SJTV is live

There is an SJTV button in upper right hand side. Click on it and log in and watch the full 25 minute episode. You must be a subscriber in order to view it. Then tell us here what you think

[youtube]http://youtu.be/smv6ISt7u5k[/youtube]

Fishing Sebeastian Inlet Florida

Many of you will probably disagree with me on this but I find the most gratifying part of fishing finding out how LITTLE do I know about fishing. Not so much about striper fishing although I feel I have just scratched the surface there too. But when traveling to places unfamiliar I try to soak up all the local information that I could.

Having said that, if you are a proficient striper hunter you can easily apply that knowledge to any place in the world you visit. But many of times I have traveled to places feeling good about what I know and how to put in practice only to leave them with a tail between my legs.

Another maddening thing about learning new places, especially ones you have to take the airplane to get to, is that by the time you kind of “get it”, by the time you take the local customs and then apply the way you fish to them so you can fish the way you want, you have to leave. More time then not, its just about when you start catching fish your way.

Why not just fish the way the locals do?

That is easier said than done

I took my son down to Sebastian Inlet in Florida last week. Before you accuse me of being a snob, hear me out. I have never fished on a pier in my life. I don’t own a net or a gaff. I did some venturing on local bridges on Long Island but I always fished from the side, never from the top. Sebastian pier on the north side of the inlet is one loooooong  pier. You’ll find more carts loaded with rods here than in any place I have ever seen. There are guys tossing all kind of setups from 6 to 11 feet, some tossing cut bait, live bait, shrimp and more shrimp, plugs, spoons and yes, bucktials.

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Did I go there to specifically fish the pier? No. But I surely wanted to check it out. The bite was hot on the outgoing at dusk when my son and I arrived one day. Giant pelicans were bombing the water and water off the tip was itself boiling with fish. Quite a few guys were hooked up to the birds instead of the fish. I never expected to make a cast but did walk towards the tip to check the action.

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Now, when you stand a hundred yards away and look at the craziness on the tip, you say this is the craziest thing I have EVER seen. It appears there are hundred guys standing so close to each other casting that they cant even raise their hands to make a cast. But looks can be deceiving. There is actually a method to this madness that is called a “rotation”. You cant see it from a far and really, you cant honestly experience it unless you take part in it.

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What kind of fish were blitzing?

Bull redfish, and I have not seen a single one that was smaller than 25 pounds. I hooked one, three days latter my arm is still sore but that is the story for during the week. I just got up and went to get a coffee and nearly killed myself on a thin layer of ice in my driveway

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Welcome to NY

More stuff to come including fishing few nights with legendary Patrik Sebile from Sebile Lures, Ron D from ZeeBaaS reels and even many Montauk locals shrimping on the catwalk

Its a Crazy Place and I cant wait to get back

XCFDCV

Special Giveaway from Guppy Lure Co

We are going to have a special giveaway today for our readers while you are all hopefully enjoying reading and watching videos in the issue #29 of the Surfcaster’s Journal  Magazine.

Few weeks ago i received this am lure in the mail from makers of Guppy Lures (www.guppylure.com) and I was just left with a mouth open and a drool pouring out of it.

Today, I will give one of you a chance to win one. Guys behind Guppy Lures will be at many shows this winter I am sure. I know I often see them at Surf Day NJ, Berkeley, RISAA and River’s End and considering growing popularity of their lures they probably they added few more shows this winter.

So one winner will get this sweet Guppy Pencil Popper

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I still have a ton of footage that we captured while doing interview in their shop last spring. Hopefully I can get to it soon. This is a small snippets

 [youtube]http://youtu.be/5JY9ByDGn9c[/youtube]

And yes, first 25 minute episode of SJTV is coming your way in about a week if you are a subscriber. Here is a preview

 [youtube]http://youtu.be/smv6ISt7u5k[/youtube]

Show season

The winners of  Respect Striped bass prints from crazy Alberto Knie are Joe GaNun and Michael Callahan. Joe, you get to pick the one of your choice and Michael you get the second one. Both of you have 5 days to get in touch with me at info@surfcastersjournal.com with your shipping info and i will put you in touch with Alberto

We got more giveaways lined up, Tommy is putting the finishing touches on new issue which is coming this weekend and SJTV is coming your way too on January 20th.

This is basically our show schedule, where you can come meet us and tell us how we are doing. And if you are coming to the shows for other reasons just stop by and say hi. We love to meet our readers. You can renew your subscription or update existing one, you might walk away with a free shirt and you’ll probably have a great time at all of these shows

CT Surfcasters Show CT Saturday January 24th 10 30 to 2 30pm

110 Flea Market NY Sunday 9 am to 3 pm February 1

NJ Surf Day February 21st NJ 8 30 to 4 30 PM

East Meadow Flea Market NY Sunday February 22nd 9 to 3 pm

RISAA Providence RI February 27 to March 1st

Berkley Fishing Flea Market NJ Sunday March 1st 9 to 2 pm

Ward Melville HS NY March 7th 8 30 to 3 PM

Asbury park Flea Market NJ Sunday March 8th 9 to 2 pm

Patchogue Flea market NY Sunday March 22nd 9 to 3pm

Something that became THE surf show in the northeast in few short years. no doubt thanks to incredible organization by JSS staff. We are so looking forward to it

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Media Contact: Mark Mead markmead11@gmail.com

Heading into its 9th Year Surf Day “A Day Dedicated to the Surfcaster” has become The Largest Surfcasting Show of the Year

Lincroft, NJ (January 5, 2015) – The Jersey Shore Surfcaster’s (JSS) announces the return of the Ninth Annual Surf Day Fishing Show coming back to Brookdale Community College on Saturday February 21, 2015. Surf Day has become the largest fishing show dedicated to surf fishing in the Northeast with over 70 of the industry’s top vendors and over a dozen seminar speakers providing the most advanced surf fishing techniques every surfcasters needs to know.

This year the JSS is extremely excited to announce the two main seminar speakers will be ‘Crazy’ Alberto Knie and author John Skinner. Both presenters will be providing 90 minute seminars with extensive live Q&A sessions.

Crazy Alberto’s presentation ‘The Big Hunt Secrets’ will be an entertaining session with expert tips and secrets with a focus on the importance of conservation for our Striped Bass fishery. John Skinner who recently published his third book titled “Striper Pursuit’ will be speaking on “Condition-Based Bass Strategies”. John adds “It always strikes me that weather and water conditions often dictate how we can or should fish, and that these conditions are something we have no control over. To be consistently productive, we need to know how to deal with the whole spectrum of conditions.”

When you think it couldn’t get any better there are another 8 seminars to choose from on topics ranging from Chunking for big bass, Wetsuiting, River Fishing, seminars specifically focused on fishing Needlefish, Darters and Bottle plugs and more sessions are to be announced in the coming weeks. These seminars will be hosted by speakers such as DJ Muller, Jimmy Fee, Bill Wetzel, Bill Jakob, Patrick Perrotto, Jason Szabo to name a few.

This year you will also have 4 scheduled workshops to attend that will take place in the seminar rooms in order to get the most out of each workshop and provide plenty of space for attendees. The workshops will cover rigging and loading plugs, teaser tying, rod building and Beach Buggy 101, aka driving on the beach.

One seminar last year that was a huge success was the ‘Kids Seminar’. The JSS will continue on providing a kid-focused seminar that will be hosted by two JSS members Matt and Tim Risser. They’ll be bringing their ‘Kids First’ approach to the children with some great tips on becoming a surfcaster and at the same time providing the dads and moms with pointers on how to keep the kids interested and wanting to come back for more. Between the Kids Booth and the Seminar, each child will be given a free T-shirt

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and ticket to a Kid’s ONLY Raffle for a rod and reel combo along with a grab bag full of goodies. Included will also be a hands-on workshop to let the kids play with the fishing gear and try on waders to get them started and interested in the sport.

The stellar giveaways and door prizes will continue as part of Surf Day as they are every year. Some great takeaway for some lucky winners will include a ZeeBaas Reel, Van Staal Pliers, Custom Built Century Rod, Flatlander Surfcasting Plug Bag, Custom Built Fiberstar Rod, MAK Surfcasting Plug Bag, Pelican Cooler, with over a dozen high end plugs.

ABOUT JSS

Surf Day is the flagship event sponsored by the JSS fishing club. The JSS was founded in 2005 by a small group of die-hard striped bass surfcasters that put an emphasis on two things, fishing regularly and giving something back to the community.

They are an assembly of excellent independent fishermen that are good people that enjoy sharing their success and have no problem with watching others succeed. Every member emphasizes catch and release and conservation of our striped bass fishery.

Contact

This year’s Surf Day event is Saturday February 21st 8:30 a.m.- 4:30 p.m. Brookdale Community College, Lincroft, NJ.
$10.00 Entry Fee. Kids under 10 Free

For more information including seminar schedule, speaker profiles, directions and more go to: www.jerseyshoresurfcasters.com

Find us on Facebook at ww.facebook.com/surfday

Another great NJ SHOW……

 

Berkeley Striper Club ~ Fisherman’s Flea Market

WHEN :
Sunday 3/1/15 ~ 9AM – 2PM

WHERE :
Toms River Intermediate North
150 Intermediate North Way
Toms River, NJ 08753

Berkeley Striper Club ~ Fisherman’s Flea Market

WHEN :
Sunday 3/1/15 ~ 9AM – 2PM

WHERE :
Toms River Intermediate North
150 Intermediate North Way
Toms River, NJ 08753

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