The Quest for the Ring Atlantic City Tournament was just starting as my troubles with Word Press and malware started, That contest turned out to be a good one as both the weather and fishing cooperated. I’ll have more details tomorrow.

The Golden Eagle from Belmar had a couple of days with limit jigging catches of 1-3-pound blues, but they weren’t there today and that boat they switched to sea bass and ling.

Dan Radal had an amazing report in the Asbury Park Press about a bluefin tuna caught in Raritan Bay as follows”One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean currents collide.One would be hard-pressed to recall the last time a bluefin tuna was caught in Raritan Bay but it happened Wednesday when a 135-pound bluefin took Steve Nosti of Holmdel for a Nantucket Sleighride – around Flynns Knoll and through the Sandy Hook Rip in Nosti’s 12-foot aluminum Jon boat, the Silver Bullet.

Steve Nosti holds up the bluefin tuna he caught fishing the Sandy Hook Rip on Wednesday.

Nosti, who works in the charter industry and has a permit for such fish, had seen the bluefin in tight to the beach and left from his dock slip at Pleasure Bay Yacht Basin in Oceanport after sunrise to try to get one. He was outfitted with an 80-pound class tuna rod and reel and some Ron-Z lures. He called it “a shot in the dark.”

It’s about an 8 or 9 mile ride from the marina to the tip of Sandy Hook, so Nosti said he stopped at Bahrs Landing in Highlands to fuel up his 12-gallon tank. Then he was off to area known as the Rip, where the bay and ocean meet. “

Unfortunately. the remainder of Dan’s article was lost in the transfer.

3 Comments

  1. Hey Al. FYI That tuna story with Steve nosti is a prank. I would take that down. Asbury park
    Press got duped. I know the guy who witnessed what actually happened for the prank.

    Sent from my iPhone

    Like

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