Showing posts with label kayak fishing sedge islands nj. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kayak fishing sedge islands nj. Show all posts

Friday, November 17, 2017

The payoff is in the back, By alexi

     November on the New Jersey coast is absolutely THE month to fish for striped bass and everyone knows it.  Almost everyone, anyway.  As I awkwardly  unload my kayak for the third (maybe fourth) time from the top of my truck in the past ten days a passerby asks me "Why are those boats out there? is there a tournament or something?"  No, it's just the first day where a calm ocean has coincided with a weekend.  It's Sunday.  The fleet is already there when  I arrive.

the fleet
Where am I? Spot-burn, the Jersey coast in November.  One giant spot-burn. ( For those unfamiliar with the term: a spot-burn is when you give away a good fishing location.) This whole blog is one giant spot-burn.  The Jersey Coast in November.  Day or night.  Any bridge, any canal, any jetty, any beach, any inlet.  One giant spot-burn.

I tried North.
Keyport Municipal boat ramp

I fished Raritan Bay 2, maybe 3 times.  I lost track.  I was skunked.  It was too windy one night, I was a day late the next trip...Just missed the "bite"  I tried the ocean in Northern Jersey, around Belmar - I saw a dogfish caught one trip, out of a thousand boats, one damn dogfish.  That was funny.  On another trip I was between two boats and they both hooked up with bass on snagged bunker, but I didn't.  So my skunk was persistent.  The wind has been un-predictable.  Two or three times I've had to call a trip short because it was predicted wrong.  Gusting up to 25 or 30 when it was going to be a barely tolerable 15 mph.

I tried drifting eels in the back.  (After catching innumerable shorts in the day) only to come up dry.  No fish on eels.

I tried out front AGAIN, only to be called off by the wind.  Now?  What next?  That's what I asked myself.  Here it is, god-damn November.  The month I should be leaving my Kayak on the top of my truck.  The month I should be leaving my gear ready at the door.  I should be catching fish.

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sedges sunset

Half over.  November 14th.  I start later, I fish later, after reading my own damn blog!  I needed to chase my own reports.  My own spot-burns from previous years.  So I launch at sunset in the Sedges.

...and then the fishing begins...

fishing in the dark

The eels had been collecting in my pond from various trips between Steve and I.  I didn't need to stop at the tackle shop.  I even left a few behind.  I had all of my gear, but once the sun set it was one eel, one rod one circle hook.  I drifted, and I drifted, and I wasn't getting any action.  I made my way to Oyster Creek Channel where I encountered a USCG (Coast Guard) boat with whom I had a peculiar encounter.  The captain thought I was two people on a jet ski.  He said there were no personal watercraft allowed on the water after dark.  I didn't argue, and agreed to head back, which is what I'm always doing once I start fishing.  There is a beginning and an end.  Once I start, I'm on my way back.  And so I made my way around, back through skinnier water that by now I know even better than the back of my hand at any tide.  The night grew long and my toes were cold.  Just as it usually happens with Striped Bass fishing, as the night goes on the fishing improves, and in a very specific rip with a hump and some deeper water I found a school of 26-30" bass that wanted my eel presented in a VERY specific manner.  Finally, a pattern.

night stripers, one of 5 right around 28"


It was just early enough that if I called it a night I wouldn't have to sleep in my truck, so I headed back.  Finally, fall has begun for me.

the end

P.S.
According to the USCG's own website the only requirement to kayak at night is a white light visible 360 degrees.

Sunday, August 24, 2014

"Take the kid fishing" by Alexi

     They say to "take a kid fishing," so I did.  We had a good plan that worked out well.  We were at the launch around 7 a.m.  Early enough to miss the crowds, late enough to stop at Grumpy's and spend a million dollars.
      It was a calm and pleasant morning behind IBSP.  We floated and took in the scenery.  No pressure to catch fish, just chill.  We spotted a nice sized ray in about a foot of water,  many crabs,  osprey, schools of mullet and spearing, and so on...  And so we floated out towards Seal Island (Oyster Creek Channel.)   I had a fluke in (and out) of my boat in one of the cut-thrus on the way there.  I was not too disappointed that I lost it since by my judgement it was not quite 18".  Once we got to seal island it was non-stop action.  Bluefish up to 2lbs on almost every cast.  Now the kid can no longer claim to be terminally and perpetually skunked.
Castmaster, single hook, 1 oz = bluefish magic

Proof that the kid is no longer terminally skunked

I was fishing with gulp and a lightweight bucktail, maybe 1/2 or 3/4 oz chartreuse over white Spro.   I was switching around how deep I was fishing it, and sometimes just fishing it on bottom.  I knew that there were fluke around and so I picked up what is my best fluke of the season so far, at 20".

20" Fluke

Fluke Gun?

     Once we got tired of catching fish it was around noon.  The wind had picked up a little, the summer people in their boats had come out, and the current was outgoing (against the way we needed to paddle) and LOW.  So, we had a tough paddle back, but we made it none-the-less.  As tough as it was we took our time, and, though it was a bit longer, we didn't walk our kayaks.

    We had ice cream on the way back, at the Sundae Times, and discussed plans for the next kayak fishing expedition.

  

Sunday, June 1, 2014

The Washing Machine, by Alexi

     Steve had a party.  That's the thing most people do on memorial day weekend.  Stay away from the shore.  That's what we do most weekends, and especially on holidays.  Our mutual friend Ross was at the party and he took little convincing to join us for our next surf launch.  Magic Seaweed said the waves were going to be 1 ft, there was no lightning in the forecast, and the bunker were still around.   We were planning to be in the ocean around sunrise, but this time of year first light is really early, like 5:30 A.M.   We were about an hour and a half late.  We would have had to have been passed out on the beach the night before to get there at first light.

no matter how calm it looks, it's good to count sets of waves

 PART ONE: Too Much Bunker

     We were high.  We were high off of Steve's success from the previous week.  We were ready for some even bigger fish.  30lbs is now small, we need a 40lber.   We will do whatever it takes.  We will launch into the ocean right where Humpback whales are breaching.  We will get little to no sleep.  We will float around the ocean with snagged bunker for 6 hours straight with not a single run-off.  And I will eat shit in the surf when I return to the beach.  And I will do it all again as soon as possible.
   
     After six hours of floating in the ocean among seas of bunker I started packing away all of my gear.  I scoot back and forth to the front of my kayak putting one thing inside, then another.  The moment of admitting defeat.   I  put everything inside of my kayak except for the crate itself and my cheapo kayak light which was stuck in my crate.   I help Ross prepare his kayak for landing in the surf, put his rod in his hatch, and I paddle over to what looks like a good place to land.  So far this year I've had no problems surf launch/ landing, and I was confident this would be no different.  I counted two big waves, and started my decent.  Before I had time to do anything about it, a third wave was cresting onto the nose of my kayak.  I had time to make two strong paddles, then I was underwater.  I was in the washing machine.  Wave/ undertow/ wave/ undertow....I was separated from my kayak.  I noticed quickly that we were moving at the same speed in the same direction.   I also noticed that it was still upside down.  Steve was pretty much right next to me, attempting to get my crate which had become detached.  As he got closer all I saw was a wave behind him and his boat on a trajectory for me, so I shouted something like " SAVE YOURSELF! GET OUT OF HERE!"  Right where I happened to be was a shoal, and the waves were breaking high and fast over it.  After a couple of minutes I was able to catch up to my boat and turn it right side up.   I half walked, half floated it back to the beach, and watched my crate float away.  Steve attempted to retrieve it, but with surf-fisherman's lines in the way, and a ever increasing surf, it was lost.
   
     We decided it was picnic time.  I was physically exhausted from the washing machine.    We went to the winter anchorage at IBSP, ate a snack, and stared into the wind at the bay.  The wind picked up while we stood there, and we decided to call it a day.   (I learned later that that evening two kayakers were blown out to sea by a 40mph gust, and had to be rescued.)

     I felt like I was well prepared for flipping in the surf, but there's always one more thing to put away, whether it's as simple as a hat, or sunglasses, or underwear.  I lost my crate and light.  I needed a new one.  When we need kayak fishing stuff we go to the Kayak Fishing Store in North Wildwood.

PART 2:  Too Much Water

     Despite a really good plan to drift eels in Oyster Creek Channel and throw poppers on the flats at night behind IBSP, the need for "stuff" steered us towards North Wildwood.  We arrived at low tide.  Stopped by Chris' store.  Bought some rod holders and a light for my new crate, and headed out onto the water.  
     I was drawn towards the inlet with the hopes of getting into some bigger fish riding the beginning of the incoming tide.  It wasn't so. I rode with the tide to try for some fluke between the bridges.  I think the drift was too fast, the wind and current were going the same direction, and my bucktail, though heavy, still wasn't staying in the strike zone.  I gave fluking about an hour, then did what was succcessful the week before: trolled with the current along the sod banks with tube-n-worm.  I had a 24" fish on in a familiar spot pretty quick.
trolling tube-n-worm along the sod banks

     I wanted to keep going forward instead of going back up-current to go over the same ground, so I kept moving.  I had another fish that came unbuttoned soon after that.  Then nothing for a while.  I met Steve out on the flats, and the sun was setting.  I pulled a short bass from a hole on a pink Fin-S with 1/2 ounce bullet head.
     As the sun set I prepared a rod for eeling.  The plan was to eel with the current back to the truck.  Unfortunately, the only action I had was bluefish eating my eel.  Steve had a strong run-off that didn't come to fruition.  With the new moon, and the strong wind from the East there was a ton of water in Grassy sound.  Theories abound, but as for the slow action that night, I think that the bass were way up in the grass taking advantage of the extra-high water, eating small crabs.

     As summer approaches my chances of catching a bass bigger than 28" dwindles.  I wonder if I've been doing something wrong?, but in the end I can't help but think that with all of our exploring and experimenting and the extra long cold spring....  I might have missed my chance.  There's definitely still bass migrating, and big ones too.  And tons of bunker out front.  So I'm not saying it's over, that would be ridiculous.  In fact it may just be beginning....








Saturday, May 26, 2012

Your Dog is a Bluefish and your Bluefish is a dog, by Alexi

The fish dance didn't help...................
      On friday, we went for a casual look and see at the beach. Plan A was to ocean launch and snag bunker.  We  didn't see any  Bunker, and the waves were a little high, so, on to plan B. It was to visit the sedges.
     There were lots of people sitting on the beach.  As a fisherman who visits the beach all year it's always a little bit of a shock to see the transformation of the shore from a nice small fishing village to a sunbathing mecca.   By "shock," what I really mean is a kind of repulsion.  This may come off as callous, but I think those of us who fish often can relate to this sentiment.

memorial day

I've heard this referred to as "snot grass"


    We kayaked out past the sedge house to poke around the outside of the sedges. What's really amazing is that there can be a thousand folks at the beach, and back by the sedge islands only one or two people kayaking around.  
    There was one other person fly fishing a nice corner.   I didn't see him land anything.  
    Trolling tube-n-worm in the bay was not productive. The only worms I could get were fake, and I had ZERO confidence in them.   Besides, the bay was really weedy. A simple bucktail with pork rind was my go to lure once we found some deeper water. I had two hook-ups with bluefish but couldn't land them.  I had chronic knot failure, something that hasn't happened to me before.  I lost three bucktails, all broken at the braid with a twist, as if my knot came unravelled.  There is nothing more unnerving than losing confidence in ones knots.  After it happenned twice I decided to solve the problem by using a swivel to connect my leader to my main line of braid,  instead of tying direct thinking that this was a sure fire way of solving the problem.  And of course it did not work.  I am now going to have to review all of my knots which in the past I have used and caught big fish on.  
    Just one last word about "mojo."  Before we left I had decided this post was not going to include any pictures of fish.  Maybe that's why we didn't land any?  The old jinx yourself.  Most fishermen have some things they do that they think will bring them luck.  Here's a few of mine; there's the fish dance,  buying ice for fish that you haven't caught yet,  wearing my fish shirt, fish hat, really  just about anything.... 


Friday, April 20, 2012

Small spring baits from the belly of the bass (sandworms, grass shrimp, and striped killies).

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

first bigger spring fish...

16 1/2 pounds, 36 inches. Second cast. Live eel. Snake Ditch. Around 8 p.m. Top of the incoming.

Before this I had been waiting around for Steve. There were acres of birds out front diving, and I couldn't resist casting at them seeing as though I had my waders and surfcasting rod with me. They were on Herring. It was fun to watch, some other anglers hooked up, but I had to wait for my Ditch fish. Is the spring going to be as epic as the fall?