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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The Straight Dope on Striped Bass by Capt John McMurray

The Straight Dope on Striped Bass

             This post by Capt John McMurray originally appeared on www.reel-time.com on August 8th

Forget about slot limits and gamefish… address fishing mortality!

Capt, John McMurray talks about Striped Bass Conservation

Capt. John McMurray

Having served on the ASMFC Striped Bass Advisory Panel for 6 years (not to mention having pretty much built a business on striped bass) I read Lou Tabory’s recent Striper Report 2013 piece in Fly Fishing in Saltwaters Magazine with interest. I have great respect for Tabory. He was a pioneer. His piece provides an interesting historical, albeit anecdotal, perspective on striped bass from the point of view of someone that has fished for them hard over the course of three decades.  Yet, I’d have to say that it reflects a general misunderstand most anglers have on the issue.

I’m guessing very few readers of this column would disagree that stripers appear to be headed for trouble.  Sure there are still fish around. In fact I’ve had some epic days in the last few years. I’ve seen more 40’s and 50’s in the space of a few days than I’ve seen in my entire life. But it generally lasts no more than a few days as bodies of large fish move through. Gone are the days of consistent schoolie action, with the occasional large fish, which I built a business on. The new pattern seems to be that I’m on them for a few days, then there’s a precipitous lack of fish, sometimes for long stretches. Years ago, getting skunked was rare for me. I can’t say that’s the case anymore. I’m certainly not alone in such observations.

When you look at the recent science this sort of thing makes sense really. Each year, young-of-the year seine surveys are taken in various spots in the Chesapeake Bay. Given the bulk of the striped bass resource is produced in the Chesapeake watershed it’s a pretty good indicator of what we can expect to see in the fishery moving forward. During the last 8 years such surveys have shown average to well-below average young-of-the-year numbers, with the anomalous exception of 2011 which was quite good. This trend is much different from the prior decade where we had several banner year classes.  All of this coincides with what guys like me are seeing on the water. Good, albeit very limited runs of larger older striped bass – those fish that are generally older than 9 or 10 years. As these fish grow older we continue to hammer on them while they become larger, yet few and fewer, and there isn’t much behind them.

Why are we having these poor young-of-the-year indices? There is some pretty good science out there suggesting it’s climate-related. NOAA scientists have documented what they’re calling an “Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation” (AMO), a combination of wind and ocean currents in the North Atlantic that seems to change every 35 years or so. When such a shift happens, it affects local weather along the Atlantic Coast, providing deliberate temperature and precipitation shifts, and subsequently river flow and salinity changes. During a warm phase springtime along the East Coast tends to be wet and cool — more rain, more water, and more food for just-hatched stripers. And during such trends we’ve had good young of the year indices, and subsequently striper numbers go up. Then, 35 years or so later the AMO flips and we have drier springs, less rain, less food. After a lag, striper numbers start to decline. This appears to be where we’re at right now.  And guess what… A prior AMO flip coincided with the poor young-of-the-year indices that contributed to the striper crash in the 1980s. When that cycle ended, stripers recovered, not just because of the moratorium, but likely because conditions for their success became more favorable.

So yes, there are likely natural factors at work here, which managers of course have no control over. But… they do have control over fishing mortality, and regardless of the cause, given the decline both anecdotally and on paper, they should be reducing mortality! Just about everyone and their mothers are asking them to do something! But they aren’t… Because technically, striped bass are not overfished, and overfishing isn’t occurring.

Striped bass are managed by fishing mortality and spawning stock biomass thresholds for management action.  These are parameters that ASMFC scientists have put on the stock, that if exceeded, trigger corrective action such as reducing fishing mortality. Thus far, fishing mortality has remained below the threshold and spawning stock biomass above it. ASMFC is generally not compelled to take action until such thresholds have been crossed. It is, in fact, very rare the ASMFC would take management action unless the science indicated it was necessary. In this case it hasn’t.

Striped Bass Conservation ensures the future commercial viability of the species

Photo by Capt. John McMurray

While certainly Commissioners hear from their constituents, it’s difficult for a lot of them to comprehend there’s a real problem with striped bass conservation when a.) A number of the fish they manage are technically overfished, and/or overfishing is occurring (e.g. winter flounder, weakfish, tautog etc.), b.) There are still pockets of very good striped bass fishing even as the stock contracts, and c.) Most Commissioners simply don’t spend the time on the water that we do. Believe it or not, there are still those managers who frequently say stupid things like “striped bass are eating everything” when discussing species they have failed to properly manage like winter flounder, or river herring. Such assertions are ridiculous give the historical abundance of such species side-by-side in the same environment.

But I’m getting into too much detail here. Given the abundant evidence of a decline and the importance of the striped bass stock to the recreational fishing industry, a good case for precautionary action can certainly have been made. Unfortunately, despite the clear fact that the majority of stakeholders wanted to see a reduction in fishing mortality, ASMFC punted with Addendum 3 (their 2011 chance to reduce fishing mortality), and we’ll now have to wait for the results of the 2012 benchmark, which is being peer-reviewed right now, and 2014 (if we’re lucky) for new regulations, assuming ASMFC wises up and opts to reduce fishing mortality.

And simply reducing fishing mortality is all we need ASMFC to do! Yet the point of this blog is that the fishing public (even well respected guys like Tabory) seem to keep talking about things like slot-limits (a fish in-between a certain size limit) and game fish status (making the species recreational only) as if these two things are the antidote to the striped bass decline. They aren’t!

A striped bass coastal slot limit, unless it’s crafted in a way that distributes mortality (which is actually very hard to do), is unwise.  For one, such slot limits tend to place a lot of pressure on very specific year classes. By implementing a slot limit we’d run the risk of severely depleting a weak year class that happens to fall within a slot limit’s bounds. Given the average to well-below-average young-of-the-year indices during the last 8 years (with the exception of 2011) one can see how a coastal slot limit may be problematic in the striped bass fishery.

Because smaller fish (e.g. 24 to 28”) are generally easier for the fishing public to catch, fishing mortality would go through the roof. In other words, a lot more fish are killed with such a slot than if the size limit had remained at 28” (or in a perfect world 36”), and a lot more are killed before they have had a chance to spawn! Allowing a fish to spawn at least once before it’s killed is fisheries management 101, and that’s essentially what a 28” size-limit seeks to do. With a species like striped bass, the key to effective management is allowing enough older, larger and more fecund fish, representing a number of age classes, to survive, in order to assure that there is adequate spawning stock in reserve to make up for the poor or missing year classes. That is best done by reducing mortality, not by imposing a slot limit.

Striped Bass Conservation ensures our children will be able to enjoy the fisheryThe answer to the striped bass problem isn’t a slot limit, it’s actually much simpler. Managers just need to reduce fishing mortality. Whether that’s done with a higher size limit, smaller bag limit, or a shorter seasons is irrelevant. But you generally can’t reduce fishing mortality using slot limits.

Now let’s talk about the popular “gamefish” fix, which a lot of people mistakenly think is the magic bullet. Yes it’s easy to point the finger at commercial fishermen. I’m the first one to admit that it’s incredibly irritating when the boat next to you is bailing fish he intends to sell, either legally or illegally. But assuming the problem is fishing mortality anglers are definitely the largest perpetrators.  The commercial fishery is controlled through quotas, so commercial fishermen cannot go over the “harvest cap” set by the state (at least not legally). The recreational fishery, on the other hand, is managed through bag and size limits. The growing popularity of fishing for stripers and the lack of any sort of recreational harvest cap has allowed a large increase in recreational mortality over the years while commercial mortality has remained virtually static. In 2006, the year the recreational striper fishery peaked, recreational dead discards alone (those fish that didn’t survive the release) were around double the total commercial catch. Pretty startling right?

I’m not saying commercial fishermen are not part of the problem. They certainly are. It was hard to miss all the photos and videos of acres of dead discards from North Carolina trawlers a couple of years ago. Equally disturbing were the tens of thousands of pounds of dead stripers caught in illegal gill-nets found in Chesapeake tributaries. This is likely just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to discards and poaching. But let’s be honest. Such dead fish, while an inexcusable waste of the resource, still pale in comparison to recreational mortality. Couple this with the fact that some coastal states who were able to get gamefish status after the last crash ended up giving their commercial quota to anglers, and it’s hard to argue for game-fish with a straight face. Until we get recreational mortality under control, “wealthy anglers taking fish away from hard-working commercial fishermen” doesn’t play well with decision-makers. “Gamefish” is empowering, and of course I support the theory, but these are the realities of the situation.

Striped Bass Conservation makes senseAssuming striped bass continue 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 (perhaps the next one if nothing pressing comes up). Regardless, the reality is that gamefish is politically very difficult right now, and in my mind a nonstarter.

If the recreational fishing community continues to perpetuate the myth that it’s commercial fishing that’s causing the decline or, that a slot limit is the answer, it will just strengthen the idea that many, if not most, Commissioners harbor– that the recreational community doesn’t really get it.  And so, they can just disregard us. I’ve had personal conversations with such Commissioners who have told me, in so many words, that this is the case. This is essentially what’s been happening over the last several years as Commissioners fail to listen to constituent pleas for precautionary management action.

We need be clear on what we, as a community of stakeholders, want. A reduction in fishing mortality.  So that we can enjoy the abundance of fish we had just five years ago and so recreational fishing business can continue to thrive and so that anglers can continue to enjoy a rebuilt, abundant fishery. I don’t see any reason for a two-fish coastal limit. And really, the size limit should probably be higher. But how it gets done doesn’t really matter to me, and it shouldn’t to you. Reduce fishing mortality! That’s what our message should be!

At this point, whether ASMFC does reduce fishing mortality is really contingent on what the 2012 benchmark stock assessment reveals, and of course how much noise those of us who fish for this amazing animal (and those of who depend on this fishery make a living) make.

The 2012 assessment is currently being peer-reviewed, yet I suspect it will be released very soon. I will let readers know what it says just as soon as we have it. Stay tuned!

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.

The Midnight Rambler ” Das Boot”

The Midnight Rambler

By
John Papciak

Das Boot (The Boat)

In a prior blog I remembered 1975, the year I realized that surfcasting was far more appealing to me than boat fishing.

But I conveniently left out the ironic fact that I spent the best part of the next 30+ years as a surfcaster, trying to find more creative ways to get myself and my lures further and further out there.

I just never felt that casting from the dry sand was good enough. To this day, I live in fear that the better fish are just beyond my reach.

Thank god for Jetties-

The coast of New Jersey is littered with jetties, like no other place I’ve ever seen on the east coast. Some jetties were and still are clearly more fishy than others, but most importantly, some remain less accessible than others. Case in point, at times, Spring Lake and Belmar had some jetties with sections submerged at high water, and inaccessible – unless you were willing to swim a little.

And this always was fine by me. With a wetsuit bottom, I could get past the low spots and then climb up on the rocks to finally get my lure out further than the rest (And lose most of the crowd in the process).

I got pretty bold in doing this over the years, but there were many close calls. I finally bought it early one morning throwing AVAs to blitzing albies on a Cape May jetty, during some rapidly building seas. Waves were washing clear over the jetty, but I somehow thought I would stay put. I always had. Then a wave twice as large as the previous sets came in (they always do) and over the rocks I went. Bye-Bye.

I’ll save you the scary details, but I was very lucky to be able to climb back up and get off the jetty with some painful bumps and bruises. But when I stepped onto the sand I realized something was terribly wrong. A trip to the ER confirmed my Achilles tendon had ripped clean from the bone.

It was kind of weird trying to explain to friends and family how something as “easy and relaxing” as “fishing” could result in the same injury that ended Dan Marino’s 1993 NFL season, roughly a week earlier. How about I got washed off a jetty? And how about Marino tore his in the pocket at Cleveland, without being touched?

Both Achilles injuries ended our seasons. But Marino wasn’t done with football, and I wasn’t done with jetties.

The following year I was fishing more on Long Island, and I was immediately drawn to some of the larger, well-known jetties favored by surfcasters. The Jones Beach West End II jetty became a new favorite, not only because of the fishing possibilities, but because of the challenges in getting out there. (What is it they say about what you can’t have?) For a while, the gaps and broken up sections kept all but the most adventurous away. At high water, and on rough days, a wetsuit was almost a prerequisite – getting washed off was a real possibility. In fact, a number of fishermen did get washed off during this era, with at least one fatality that I can recall.

WE II has since been rebuilt, but subsequent visits in later years had me heart-broken: Now it was high and dry, any ding-bat could fish it, and so came the boom boxes, lanterns, flats of bait, and six packs of beer.

Of course there’s Wetsuiting-

Plenty of ink on wetsuiting in SJ here, and other publications. What I should point out is that there is fishing in a wetsuit, and then there is wetsuiting. No knocks on either approach, but I’d be dishonest not to point out that some of this wetsuiting really stretches the definition of surfcasting, especially if you have to swim to a location, or you find yourself doing more floating than standing. I fondly recall the hilarious debates, the letters to fishing magazines, and blogs over the year… grown men debating the legitimacy of wetsuiting – with the same purity and conviction – as if they were debating “the role of supply-side economics in creating wealth in a post-industrial economy.” Yeah, real important stuff, wetsuiting that is.

Oh yes, let’s not forget, wetsuiters did (and still do) push the envelope. When a dragger picks a guy up in the middle of the night, several miles off the beach, there may be a lesson buried in there somewhere.

And then came the kayak-

Somewhere along the way I managed to convince myself that fishing from a kayak was not quite as sacrilegious as fishing from a boat proper. A kayak was easy to use, I could launch it anywhere, and I could most certainly fish shallow water or rocks, and thus go places where a boater would dare not risk his hull.

This was cool, I caught a lot of fish. But after so many years paddling against strong winds and currents, plus a few capsize incidents in rough water, at night, way off the beach, I came to the stunning revelation that I would be safer and I could fish more comfortably in a boat. (Really, ya think?)

Then the Stand Up Paddleboard-

I actually had a lot of experience with stand up paddleboards, a history of hate. These SUPs were the jerks who could paddle out just a little further, and they could get on the waves before the longboard surfers had a chance. So now the SUPs were screwing the longboarders, the same way the longerboarders had been stealing waves from the shortboarders for years.

But I eventually came around, I got a SUP. Surfing was ok, but I had more fun just paddling around the bays and beaches…eventually fishing off of them.

It was much different from Kayak fishing. You were higher up, and with polarized glasses I could actually see fish that I easily missed on my kayak. Real sight-casting! Yes, balance was a bit of a challenge, but luckily my SUP was big enough, and my balance just good enough, to actually fish. The downside, if there was one, was that there was a strict limit to what I could bring – just a couple of bucktails or shads in my pocket – no tackle boxes, no anchors, no goofy electronics or any other clutter. No more – I already see guys designing bigger SUPs, and adding back all the same clutter. Good luck with that.

DCIM100SPORTWell then, finally, Das Boot-

I might be the only guy on Long Island who had no desired for a boat, but ended up with one at the insistence of his wife.

I actually had very little to do with the transaction.  My mom had owned an 18 foot boat in South Jersey. She bought it new, but it was getting very little use. She went behind my back and hatched a plan with my wife – they would have it trailored out to Montauk.

My part? A single phone call to the Gone Fishing Marina and the deal was done.

I now had a “turn key” situation, and access to fishing beyond anything I had experienced in my life.

And the marina now had my credit card.

Don’t get me wrong, the marina treated me very well, they were diligent, and very honest, but I finally understood that old saying – “A boat is a hole in the water into which you pour money.”

I also came to realize that my style of fishing (all day, rain or shine) was not for everybody. My wife might have had visions of lazy summer days and flat water, yet I wanted to explore the rips. I even got a few comments from buddies like “I think I will need a new set of kidneys after that pounding we took on the way in.”

Racing back in before it got too dark…debates about getting a radar or other expensive electronics to run at night or in fog (fog is a given in Montauk)…constantly watching the wind, or that scary dark patch of clouds to the west…seeing too many prime fall weekends blown out… arguing with the wife over the bills, especially when we only got out a few times the previous month…and then all the plans and preparation…then coming down to use the boat to discover a blown “rear-alternating-lower-what-ju-ma-call-it”… that will now cost me $2250, plus labor.

zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

All this, and I usually ended up taking the boat into the same shallow areas, and well within casting distance of the surfcasters.

From cold to hot

Late August already? Gee, where did the summer go? Although I hate working with fiberglass on a hot and muggy day I am not ready for the fall just yet. No, thankfully my elbow is feeling quite spiffy these days (knock on wood). But I do feel I tore something in my shoulder last week on a  trip to Mexico with my son. No one said we are going to age gracefully…

We were about an hour from Cabo San Lucas and although I have thousand little anecdotes to share, including a bout with that famous Mexican runs for my son I just find myself short on time. I am sure I will get to it at some point but the place is HOT! I mean “cant walk on sand after 11 AM, hot”.

You know that famous surfcaster phrase “you should have been here yesterday?”. We’ll that is what we encountered on the two times we tried fishing the beaches, once in Cabo and once about an hour away in Baja. I got to tell you, the Pacific surf is no joke and I prefer Baja any day of the week. Fortunately my son had a ball on a boat landing a Humboldt squid, three tuna’s, red snapper, dorado and his first marlin all on a same trip. Myself? I was just happy to be there and being a cameraman.

On a trip to Cabo with one of the owners of Buena Vista Resorts in Los Barillas and also the owner of Jansen Tackle in Cabo we found ourselves in a bit of a pickle when large pelican got tangled in the line. Ok, they were in the pickle, I whipped out my camera of course.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8mRQiqXUHUA[/youtube]

the winners of a book STRIPERMAN by Sherwood Lincoln are

chris buchta

Wahoo88

You two dudes have 5 days to email me at info@surfcastersjournal.com with your address and I will forward them to Sherwood

dvrfr

oh yeah..

We got special Offer from Surfcaster’s Journal! Open to NEW Subscribers for a LIMITED TIME ONLY!! Subscribe to the Surfcaster’s Journal Magazine today and receive a FREE, autographed copy of , HookedFishing Stories from the Surf. Your copy of this new book will be hand-signed and delivered to your door free of charge! (total value approx. $21). As a subscriber to SJ you will enjoy full access to all of our past  issues, all the articles, exclusive videos and lots more! The clock is ticking on this special offer, so don’t wait, subscribe TODAY

Here is a subscription link

https://surfcastersjournal.com/amember/signup

sxs

legal mumbojumbo

 

*This Limited Time offer expires 9/17/2013. Offer available to new subscribers only. Not valid with any other offer. New subscription payment required. This special offer includes one year subscription to the Surfcaster’s Journal Magazine and access to all our past issues. After receiving notification of your payment, we will ship you an autographed book “Hooked, Fishing Stories from the Surf by Zeno Hromin. Offer limited to USA residents only.

and last but not least..giant eels !!

Cow Harbor Bait & Tackle has just acquired over 100 lbs. of prime sized rigging and lure skin eels….Nice & dark colored!!!

Call the shop to get then while they are available. This might have been the last harvest for the season that includes large 18″-24″ eels.

Pick any size you like

Feels like fall

I  recently went on a fishing trip to Mexico with my son and when we landed at JFK on Monday I said wtf???

Did we stay there for a month or only a week? It was cold, much colder than I expected. Getting up for work this week, I could not help myself but to think I should be on the beach somewhere. Brisk, cool and refreshing, it felt like last of September, not last of  August. I said to myself that if we get about four to five days of hard east winds to follow, we might have something special.

But it’s not meant to be I guess as the wind turned southwest.

Anyone remember few years ago when we had something like ten straight days of east winds and rain at the end of August and Montauk lit up like a candle? That was fun but I am afraid most of us are not ready for the fall run just yet. I know I am not, I’d like to enjoy whatever is left of the summer. But these temperatures are playing games with my head.

So, it is time to at least get ready. And if you are not going to go all out, and spend a day in a garage changing all the hooks and retying the leaders you can still watch a Master Skinner videos that will make you a better surfcaster

These videos are from SJ Winter seminar we did few years ago. Might be time for another this winter? Who knows…

John on Inlet Currents

[youtube]http://youtu.be/8AoBxRJ_RWw[/youtube]

John on Tsunami Shads

[youtube]http://youtu.be/9D42XGI3mTg[/youtube]

John on Live Eels

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

St Croix Avid Surf Rods

Its candy apple red, kind of metallic, it has awesome power, it’s made in USA and it’s got a St Croix awesome warranty behind it. Yes, I am talking about the new Avid series Surf Rods from St Croix Rods. I think I should preface ANYTHING I ever say about ANY rod by saying this.

People have lost their collective minds when it comes to rods, rating, recovery rate, fast tapers, slow tapers, grips, splits and don’t even get me started about guides. Low riders, hi riders, no riders, thongs..wait, are we still talking about rods or butts?…no, not those butts! But my mind is drifting into Kate Upton’s direction. I wonder if she has a candy red swimsuit that would compliment new St Croix Avid rod? I would say most likely

Avid_Surf_main

Back to important stuff. The metallic red color. It’s unusual for a rod. And for sport that is dominated by old,square cranky people like yours truly. But after few days I found myself admiring the rod in my hands and saying “this IS  a cool color”. Not that it has anything to do with performance. But then again, it is St Croix, do you really expect anything less that great from these people?

Back to craziness that has been  prevalent lately when it comes to rods. It seems that every guy wants us to buy whatever rod he is using, dismissing all others as too weak, too stiff, too moderate. Yet very few intelligent people on the internet boards actually chime in and say “Hey, just about any rods will be useful in some situations”. Everyone is looking for a wholly grail, one rod that will throw 1/2 ounce bucktails, 3 ounce Guppy Pencil Poppers, 5 ounce rigged eels and 8 and bait. When they invent this beast, please wake me up. Till then how about we actually talk about rods that are useful for specific style of fishing you want to do.

Ok, so St Croix has a affordable Mojo in its line up, and new Avid rods are priced between Mojo and Legend series. And like I said, there is a piece of mind knowing that St Croix is backing all their rods with awesome warranty, check their website for details on each line. I believe its a five year warranty on Mojo and lifetime on Avid and Legend. I will copy/paste the warranty details on the end of this blog post.

I am not going to go into the tangle free K guides, reel seats, cork, alconite grips, I’ll leave that stuff for the official review. I will only tell you my experience with it.

I fished with nine foot St Croix Avid rod all spring, rated for 1 to 4 ounce. This is not your typical nine foot noodle stick to throw small Bombers and tiny lead heads. I primarily used it on jetties to toss one to two ounce bucktails and three ounce Tsunami shads and I can honestly say, for that application, it’s probably the best suited rod I own. I used it to toss some lures too but with my chronic elbow issues not nearly as I did with bucktails. I particular liked it with around 1 1/2 to 2 ounce bucks. In windy conditions it had balls to whip that bucktail into the wind and a lot of power once you set the hook which I often needed to prevent the fish from going around the jetty and cutting me off. Yet it is sensitive enough to feel every bump, from the fish and as the bucktail was bumping on the sand during the retrieve. Since I’ve done more jetty fishing this spring than in last ten years combined, the new Avid was a Godsend for this application. If you are looking for a nine foot rood with which you want to throw small swimmers and tiny lead heads I suggest you look into a rod that is rated somewhere between 1/2 an ounce and 2 ounces. Noodle stick? Yeah but those rods can be awesome too in the back bays and places like Long Island Sound. And yes, many will bring them to Montauk in the fall, claiming they can control the fish “just fine” with it and then they will get their asses kicked by fish, rocks, wind, surf and crowds. The 9 foot St Croix Avid is one awesome rods for inlet bucktailing, shads, poppers and any plug up to about three ounces. To be honest, if I got to cast anything bigger that 2 3/8 ounce Super Strike popper, I am bringing a longer rod. But that is just me

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Avid Surf rods are made using IPC technology. What is it? Instead of me trying to use my high school dropout vocabulary to describe it, how about I use the description from St Croix website.

Developed exclusively by St. Croix, Integrated Poly Curve® (IPC®) tooling technology has rapidly become the engineering leader in rodmaking. Designed to eliminate all transitional points in the rod blank, IPC-engineered rods feature smoother actions, increased strength and greater sensitivity. Continue reading

Special giveaway Fishing Book “Striperman” By Sherwood Lincoln

 

If you haven’t read it, you should. And if you did read it, you were probably asking the same questions that I did “Is this guy for real”?

Yes he is. Pin hooker, past part owner of the River’s End Tackle in Old Saybrook, CT, Sherwood is a legend and not only in his own mind. This book is about his lifetime spent on water as a boat fishing machine. I know there are some awesome boat fisherman out there but I doubt many have accomplished what he did. When you read how many bass over 50 pound has he caught, all documented, you are going to get dizzy

Sherwood is offering two signed books, which he will sign and ship himself. We are going to draw two winners, each winner will receive one book from Sherwood. If you haven’t read it, put it on your to-do list. If not now then into the winter

dvrfr

When It’s More Than Just Fishing

Midnight Rambler

By John Papciak

When It’s More Than Just Fishing

It seems every five to ten years I see a new vintage of surfcasters come, while others go. Some hit the scene like rabid animals, fishing anywhere and everywhere. Some of the most gung ho-go do land some impressive fish. Some become permanent fixtures, but a healthy percentage appear to show burn out after about 8 years.

This phenomenon fascinates me.

On one hand, I am grateful we have this turnover. The rip would be awfully crowded if the crew of 1990 joined the current regulars, and all decided to fish hard this fall.

Sometimes it’s age or health, sometimes it’s a more demanding job. But for the younger guys, it’s sometimes a new wife who will not put up with the shenanigans of late night comings and goings, and a constant obsession that takes away from household and family duties.

More on this in the future, I think. I could write volumes, literally.

Sometimes I wonder if the attrition is linked to when and how the guy got into the sport of surfcasting.

Lots of reasons. I’ve heard some good ones.

Like one guy who started surfcasting in his 60’s after he retired. He was driving his wife crazy and she finally told him he needed to get some type of a hobby “outside of the house.” Then there is always a guy who picks up surf equipment after witnessing a fisherman beach a large bass close to a bathing area. You know the thinking – “Landing that big fish in the middle of the day, that’s so easy, all you need is a fishing rod.” But will these guys have staying power, and will they be at it five years from now?

My own limiting factor right now is time. But when I do have more time (when the kids are back to school), will I continue to have the same fire? Will it always be there? I did have it for most of my life.

I myself started in this game in my early teens. The exact start depends on how you define a trip to the beach versus very targeted fishing with a realistic expectation of catching something worthwhile. There is a difference.

I did a few surfcasting trips with my father in the late 60s and very early 70s, but these were more family outings. Fishing was a backdrop. It wasn’t until about 1975, when I was in Junior High School, that I started to take things more seriously. This was the year dad got a new boat, and docked it at Chris’ Landing in Sea Bright NJ. I remember that year, this was also the summer that the movie Jaws came out. We never looked at the ocean the same way since.

Anyway, my father was as die-hard a fisherman as any family man of that day could be. We planned trips at least twice a week, sometimes more. Yes, we even did party boat trips all winter. There was excellent winter whiting fishing back then. There was even a viable winter surf fishery for whiting. I got to see the very tail end of it, but guys getting into surf fishing today would look at me like I had two heads if I told them people used to go surf fishing on the coldest nights an February and actually had good fishing.

A good chunk of down-time was spent on boat maintenance, or on preparing tackle. We didn’t have much money, so dad got himself a “project,” as opposed to a turn-key fishing machine. More often than not, it seemed, the boat had mechanical problems. Most of you who have done the “boat on a budget” thing know how this goes: wake-up at 4am, pack lunch, load the car, drive for an hour, buy bait …and then the trip is a bust because the boat won’t start. I learned most of my swearing vocabulary from my dad, and a healthy percentage of that explicit language directly from those mornings when the boat didn’t start.

And when he was cursing up a storm trying to fix the thing, I was free to explore, sometimes literally for the better part of the day. On most days when the trip had to be called, we didn’t go back home. He usually stayed to do other boat maintenance. Other times he would sit in a chair in the tackle shop with the marina owners shooting the bull (he knew them from way before I was born). They would usually talk about how the fishing was going downhill, how much better it was in the 50s and 60s. Even then. So I was basically free to roam the town of Sea Bright for days on end.

For those who do not know, Sea Bright sits at the northern tip of the Jersey Shore, just below Sandy Hook. It is a thin strip of land, with the Shewsbury river on one side and the ocean on the other. There is a huge rock seawall that protects the town. It runs the entire length, from Sandy Hook to Monmouth Beach.

My father would tell me how there used to be train tracks underneath where the seawall stands today. This was hard to imagine, because the water so often hit the seawall at high tide in many locations. During storms in the 70s you could see waves washing right over the top.

The local Sea Bright kids were very different from the kids from my own suburban neighborhood. Most appeared to be expert fishermen and surfers. They were a bit more adventurous, even a little wild. I liked that. There were two bridges over the river and on hot summer afternoons we would watch older boys doing trick high dives off the bridge into the fast moving river, right in between the heavy boat traffic. I don’t think this would fly in 2013, I could only imagine the 911 calls if kids tried doing this today. In my eyes, this took balls – and therefore this was very cool stuff.

It also didn’t take long to see that surfcasting held a special position among local fishermen – surfcasters were considered an advanced form of saltwater fishermen. Only the most capable fishermen were surfcasters.

Some of these older kids were also rumored to be expert surfcasters, and I recall hushed chatter that this one or that one had recently landed a large striper off the seawall, or off a local jetty. This was almost heroic – such a large fish taken in the surf – but there was proof right there in the pictures displayed at the local tackle shop, Giglios.

I just had to be part of this.

A month’s worth of paper route money was exchanged for a South Bend surf fishing combo outfit from the Two Guys department store in Union, New Jersey. And then each week I had just enough money to buy a lure or two.

The walk from the Chris’ Landing marina to a handful of reportedly productive jetties was under 3 minutes. Suddenly, the risk that the boat would not run, or that the trip would be blown out, became an opportunity to go surfcasting.

From that point on, I packed the surf gear whenever we were bound for Sea Bright. Dad used to shrug his shoulders and questioned why I was bringing the surf rod and lures on a fluke trip. I never wanted to tell him that I had my doubts about the boat, so I usually made up some story about the possibility of running into some bass, blues or weakfish if we were close to the beach.

It got to the point where I would ask if I could make some casts from the beach in the morning, before going out on the boat, even when the boat was running fine.

I remember dad getting really pissed off when I failed to come back a few mornings. He would be there with the boat idling, looking to undo the ropes, but I was nowhere to be found.

But there was probably something more interesting going on in the surf. A single fish hooked in the surf was now worth more to me than ten fluke on the boat.

Hopefully I will always feel this way.

 

Everything you wanted to know about return of the PENN 704/706Z

This interview appears in the current issue of the Surfcaster’s Journal Magazine. We know there is a lot of interest about the reappearance of these reels so we decided to put in on our blog too.

PENN 704Z

We recently chatted with Mike Rice, PENN Reels business manager about reintroduction of Z Series reels, 704Z and 706 Z.

 

Hi Mike. Thank you for giving us few minutes of your time. Let us start at the beginning. Fill us in a little on history of these very popular reels among surfcasters.

 

The Henze family which owned PENN up until 2003 decided to stop manufacturing them in the early 2000s.  This was when PENN was beginning plans to transition some spinning reel manufacturing overseas. The volume on the Z series in the late 1990s and early 2000s was dwindling which made it far less attractive to retool overseas, and with the Spinfisher and Slammer reels being the top 2 priorities it seems like the Z series was left behind.

 

Ok, that makes sense but why are you bringing these classic reels back after all these years?

 

We decided to bring these 2 reels back into production because the number of requests from consumers has been overwhelming. In the world of social/digital media (forums, facebook, youtube, etc) you truly get to hear from the consumer on a daily basis, and you have to be ready to listen, which in this case meant reviving a discontinued product.

 

It is very refreshing to see PENN engage their customers and fans via not only tournaments and sponsorships but with social media too. it shows not only commitment to customer service but also a continued support for the products and willingness to listen to customer feedback. Are they any changes from the original models and are the parts interchangeable with existing reels? I am sure many will ask why you did  not improve the reels with the current technology?

 

Updating a 50 year old design is difficult. Should we seal it? That would be tough…older design with large tolerances was never meant to be sealed…we’d basically need to redesign every part on the reel. Should we add an instant anti-reverse bearing? The way people fish the Z reels if we added an instant anti-reverse we would have constant failures…think about how much salt and sand would come into contact with such a tight tolerance part. If we tried to make all the updates to the Z that it would take to truly modernize the reel we’d be designing something totally different. Not to mention that we already have the Spinfisher V reel in the lineup which is water tight and has the instant anti-reverse bearing.

PENN Zseries All Parts

All parts are interchangeable between old and new models, this was one of the biggest questions we considered with the re-launch of these reels. We are running low on parts, and there are a ton of older reels out there that need gears, and handles, and drag knobs. By manufacturing them exactly as they were, we’re able to get a lot of older reels back on the water.

 

While on a subject of torque are there any plans to possibly introduce a model in between number 5 and 7 in the future?
No plans to introduce a model between the 5 and 7….and no plans to introduce a model below the 5.  This could change of course but there is nothing in the plans at the moment.

Back to Z series, where will it be made? Will there be any custom options available either at launch or in the future?

They will be made in Philadelphia and both the 704Z and 706Z will retail for $200. Not sure on the custom options yet. We might mess around with some different colors but sometimes it’s best to leave true custom work (handles knobs, fancy machining, etc) to the smaller local machine shops.

Some have questioned the need for PENN  to ” test” these reels before reintroducing them in September. After all there were no changes as you stated previously.  Why did you feel that testing should be done before making them available to the public?

Because we’re making them in a different factory (Hunting Park) with different assembly workers then they were previously made, and everyone needed a little practice. We also had to move a couple of the moulds to new vendors. Never hurts to test things…kind of like the old adage “measure twice cut once”.

 

Thank you Mike

PENN 706Z

 

 

To get access to all articles and videos in the Surfcaster’s Journal Magazine, including all archived issues, please visit www.surfcastersjournal.com to subscribe

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