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Would you believe — a fluke on a popper

The water looked beautiful this morning at Manasquan as the swell was down  far enough to produce ideal casting conditions for striped bass. However, I didn’t raise a thing until a long cast in the surf produced a small fish hook-up that I thought might be a cocktail blue. You can imagine my surprise when I didn’t see anything splashing at the end of my line when the fish hit the beach because it blended in with the sand  — a 17 1/2-inch fluke hooked in the mouth on a 2-ounce Tactical Anglers Bomb Jr. popper.

This should have been a once-in-a-lifetime experience, but I had actually done the same thing several years ago just a bit further north — and with the same plug except for the color which was a white model then and green now. Tommy Cox was casting along the beach with his ironworker buddy Harry when the latter released a school striper on a popper. I almost got lucky as I was talking to them about a dead adult bunker on the beach and dragging my plug in the wash when a small bass suddenly got hooked before getting off in the wash.

Allen Riley, John Mazzeo and Duke Matero found good conditions in the Sandy Hook surf where Riley quickly caught a couple of cocktail blues and had other hits on a Mann’s Super Stretch 1-Minus, though they wouldn’t hit metal lures. Bluefish strips produced lots of short fluke — but they ignored the usually effective Gulp.

The Sea Hunter from Atlantic Highlands had good fluking with keepers to 4.5 pounds.

The Golden Eagle from Belmar had good news about the bluefish jigging as it not only continued today but the fish got bigger at 3 to 8 pounds. They also had a 6-pound fluke plus some sea bass and porgies.

The forecast for Saturday is northeast winds again, but at only 10 knots before going east in the afternoon.

 

A state record lost?

Catching a state or world record fish isn’t easy to do, and it’s a shame when the rare moment is lost because no one realizes the possibility in time.

That happened a couple of years ago on an Atlantic Highlands charter boat when a 5-pound scup (porgy) was officially weighed in, but only the state record was checked. Ironically, it turned out that the IGFA world record was lower at 4 pounds, 9 ounces. That can happen because the IGFA didn’t start listing records for the species until a few decades ago. Unfortunately, by the time I found out about that catch the fish was filleted and taken home. That prevented identification according to IGFA procedures.

The latest possible miss was on the Fishermen from Atlantic Highlands on Wednesday. Capt. Ron Santee had a good day of fluking, and noted that there was also the largest triggerfish he’s ever seen — 8 pounds.  Unfortunately, even the photo of that fish didn’t come out. It took me only a minute to find that the state record for grey triggerfish was set in 2016 at 6 pounds, 11 ounces. The IGFA world record is much larger at 13 pounds, 9 ounces from Murrell’s Inlet, South Carolina.  The grey triggerfish has become very common in N.Y. and N.J. waters over the last several decades. I’ve never heard of any other triggerfish caught locally, though the slightly larger ocean triggerfish or ocean tally averages somewhat larger in the open ocean where it’s easily distinguished from the grey. The queen triggerfish is a tropical species with a body coloration that looks like a Picasso painting.

If there’s any question about a record possibility just Google the state’s recreational state record fish — and you’ll have an answer right away. The IGFA search (IGFA world record fish) will take a couple of minutes . Keep this in mind should the opportunity ever occur.

Ocean bluefishing held up again today. The Golden Eagle from Belmar reported some medium blues were mixed in with the small fish  — and some big porgies were also jigged. The Big Jamaica from Brielle had a similar bluefish report, and they also jigged some sea bass.

The Manasquan River Marlin & Tuna Club Offshore Open got off to a very slow start due to the northeast winds this week. Andrea’s Toy got offshore to troll skipjacks, eight yellowfin tuna and 30 dolphin. They weighed in tuna of 16.75 nd 15.90 pounds plus an 11.55-pound dolphin. Bug took the lead in tuna at 59.25 pounds. The 48-boat field is either heading out how for their overnighter, or will be using their last day tomorrow,

The surf has cleared up, though there’s still a large swell. It was rough, but very fishable this morning at Spring Lake where Vinny D’Anton caught two stripers up to 25 inches on his Chug Bug. I only raised one fish at Manasquan, and released a 24-inch striper on a Tactical Anglers Bomb Jr. popper before joining Vinny to fish sand fleas in the whitewater surf without a hit.  The west winds should make the surf even more fishable this weekend.

Capt. Hans Kaspersetz, of Sheri Berri from Twin Lights Marina in Highlands, has returned from another trip to Quepos, Costa Rica where he fished on the Pacific Fly to catch nine marlin, one dorado (dolphin) and three tuna.

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Ocean bluefish bite continues

Bluefish in the 2-5-pound class were breaking on the surface again today, and the Golden Eagle from Belmar reported that it was “all you want” fishing again.

The Jamaica from Brielle was into that action yesterday, and reported a sew bigger blues among them — such as the pool-winning 10-pounder by Jose Mendoza of Philadelphia. Some bonito and Spanish mackerel were mixed in along with even a blackfish. They noted that there are two large bodies of blues in the area.

Capt. Ron Santee had a good day with larger fluke on his Fishermen from Atlantic Highlands. Capt. Ron Santee Sr. was along to boat a 7.9-pound fluke. The pool went to Allan Mustachio, who had 5-pounder in a cooler of five keepers caught along with his brother. Santee also mentioned an 8-pound triggerfish. More about that tomorrow.  He also noted that anglers should bring heavy rods as 10-ounce sinkers may be required.

There was less wind today, and the forecast for the morning finally includes west winds that might settle the ocean except for swells from the offshore hurricane. The morning should see 10-15-knot northwest winds with 3-4-foot seas.

The surf was still rough and unproductive this morning when Vinny D’Anton tried to plug at Manasquan. A move to Shark River got him into good conditions, but the fish didn’t cooperate.

I worked Point Pleasant Canal with Z Man paddletails, but didn’t hook up with a 4-pound bluefish until almost the end of the incoming. A few small blues were caught, and Jim Gates had a blue of about 8 pounds on that spit the hook on the surface. He later jigged two small stripers. Joe Melillo, at Castaways Tackle in Point Pleasant, said a 26-inch fluke was caught at the canal pier yesterday by an angler casting mullet.

Tred Barta R.I.P.

Tred Barta, a pioneering figure in canyon fishing and a controversial one, passed away on Aug. 12 after a long battle with an illness that left a great outdoorsman in a wheelchair.

Barta started fishing the canyons in a relatively small boat out of Shinnecock, Long Island, and quickly developed a reputation for catching bigeye tuna when those fish were just becoming known to the sportfishing community. The photo below is of the young Barta with a world record bigeye. Tred was outspoken and opinionated – traits which made him both friends and enemies. He seemed to enjoy the controversy  – and named his Versus Channel TV show “The Best and the Worst of Tred Barta.”

Tred also was a regular contributer to Sport Fishing magazine, and involved with boat companies in designing craft suitable for offshore fishing. Eventually he also got involved in running tournaments for charity and getting kids started in fishing. I used to see him at boat shows, and we always had cordial conversations with none of the bluster that some accused him of.

While on a hunting trip in the west, Barta was struck with a rare spinal stroke that suddenly immobilized him one night. Very shortly he was paralyzed from the armpits down. Yet, Barta managed to go on with his writing and TV. I remember him doing a show catching a sailfish from his wheelchair.

Barta, who also fought cancer, was born on March 28, 1952 and lived a very full though short life. Yet, his fishing and rigging tips will be remembered  by anglers for many years to come.

Tred Barta

The Golden Eagle finally got out of Belmar as the ocean calmed a bit, and they once again found super bluefish jigging. The action with 2-5-pounders was so fast that they were releasing by 10:30. Some king mackerel and porgies plus a few bonito and sea bass were added.

Capt. Rob Semkewyc, of the Sea Hunter from Atlantic Highlands, said that ” All in all, it was  a decent day” as there was one fluke limit plus a fair amount of keepers even though he couldn’t fish some areas due to the sea conditions. He emphasized that just dragging bait with catch some shorts, few keepers are hooked unless the rod is being worked.

Vinny D’Anton tried to fish the Manasquan surf, but said the waves were actually dangerous and left after a couple of casts. Betty & Nick’s in Seaside Park reported the weather has been good, but five days of northeast winds stained the waters. The inshore forecast is east winds at 5-10 knots tomorrow with 2-4-foot seas.  The surf should become fishable during the next two days.

I fished Point Pleasant Canal for bluefish this morning and never had a hit, though I was told a few had been picked before I arrived.

 

At last a shift from NE

The persistent northeast wind has shifted to the east and diminished. There are still small craft advisories for tomorrow, with 3-5-foot seas, but fishing activity should increase.

The Golden Eagle from Belmar hasn’t sailed the last two days, but they’re anxious  to get back to the good jigging they had for small bluefish along with some Spanish mackerel and bonito — plus a shot at sea bass and ling.

Capt. Ron Santee sailed his Fishermen from Atlantic Highlands today and found conditions weren’t as bad as anticipated. Bill Richold had a fluke limit and the 6 1/2-pound pool winner, while others picked at keepers and shorts.

The Canyon Runner from Point Pleasant reported good water is back in Hudson Canyon, and so are the tuna that had been missing. They trolled seven yellowfins during the last trip, and the party had all they wanted before leaving early while a bigeye bite started then as two boats combined for eight.

The Canyon Runner has a couple of open boat spots at a discount over the weekend. Call 732 272-4445 about that opportunity.

Small blues are showing up inshore as blogger Dan reported 2-4-pounders in Shrewsbury River Sunday morning, and Vinny D’Anton said there were a few blues and school stripers in Shark River this morning. Joe Melillo of Castaways Tackle in Point Pleasant cast metal in Point Pleasant Canal for small blues this morning.  The surf may be dirty after all the wind, but should clear up after a few tides.

The forecast for tomorrow is east winds at 5-10 knots.

The Mimi VI from Point Pleasant sails open for bottom fish at 7 a.m. with a guest skipper — Capt. Dennis Bogan. The fare is $75. Call 732 370-8019 for a reservation.

Dave Lilly wins another fluke tournament

Dave Lilly of Hazlet didn’t want to fish in Saturday’s northeast blow, but Tony Olswsski had already entered the Lacy Marine Fluke Tournament — so they decided to tough it in Tony’s Grady White 25 powered by twin 200-HP outboards from Keyport. It was already so rough that it took an hour just to get to Ambrose Channel, and Dave couldn’t even fish his rod as he was backing into the sea all the time so Tony could get to bottom in as deep as 80 feet with 20 ounces of lead. A bulky bait wouldn’t have worked under those conditions. Therefore, Dave used long Fisherman’s Choice squid strips soaked in shedder crab oil on a two-hook rig that produced an 8.16-pound fluke to enter in the big fluke contest. He also caught a few smaller keepers plus  a 2.49-pound sea robin for the “trash fish” Calcutta. Dave was exhausted from fighting the sea constantly with the engines, and they quit by noon before wind against tide started to make matters worse. As it turned out, the one big fish won by almost two pounds, and the sea robin was also a winner.

That was Lilly’s 16th lifetime fluke tournament victory!

Surprisingly, Capt. Stan Zagleski of Elaine B. II from Highlands said Saturday was actually a good day of fluking for anglers on his party boat out of Bahrs.  Catches ranged from one or two keepers up to limits plus shorts. Bryan Turten from Wyckoff took the pool with a 5 3/8-pound fluke over a 5 1/8-pounder by young Johnathon Steiner.




At Atlantic Highlands, Capt. Ron Santee also did well Saturday on his Fishermen, but today drifting conditions were too fast even between tides. Robin Harabin managed a pool-winning 4 1/2-pounder.  Santee advises those willing to give it a try tomorrow to bring heavy rods and big sinkers.

Bob Matthews, at Fisherman’s Den in Belmar Marina, reports the boats there didn’t sail today. That was a shame because ocean fluking had been the best of the year with lots of 6-pounders until the blow.

Monday’s forecast is for more northeast at 15-20 knots — but switching in the afternoon to east at 10-15.

The Manasquan River Marlin & Tuna Club is hoping for better offshore conditions for their Aug. 24-31 39th annual Offshore Open.  Boats may fish two days or one overnighter during that period. Bluefin tuna are not eligible.

Capt. Rob Semkewyc was sorry to see the northeaster spoil what had been better fluking on his Sea Hunter from Atlantic Highlands, but cancelled this morning and is doing the same tomorrow.

The MidAtlantic wrap-up

Following up my late night blog, the official press release from Jeff Merrill appears at the end of this blog as there was an exciting finish to the MidAtlantic. There were no blue marlin qualifiers until the last day, even though it was an exceptional tournament for blue marlin releases.

My unofficial record of having the largest blue marlin that never won a cent in this contest still stands. In 1996 I was fishing with Bernard and Drew Dinardi on their Ab-solutly when I boated a 503-pound blue which would often be a winner. However, that was a year of big blues, and we got knocked out of third place by the winner on the last day. The Dinardis did win the Blue Marlin Points Trophy as we also had a release, but I believe that was the only time a 500-pound blue didn’t win any money.

Particular congratulations are due to Haulin ‘n’ Ballin for following their blue marlin win at the White Marlin Invitational with  another at the MidAtlantic. Though Uno Mas lost their white marlin weigh-in lead on the last day, they also had 10 releases the day their leader was caught – leading to easy wins in the most overall points and white marlin trophy races. — after having finished second among Top Release boats at the White Marlin Open.

The northeast wind that blew in today made it tough on boaters and surfcasters. I didn’t last long at Manasquan as even my 2-ounce Tactical Anglers Bomb Jr. was buried in the white water even though it cast well into the wind. The forecast for Sunday is similar with a small craft advisory. The northeast wind will be gusting to 20 knots.

That didn’t bother the Jamaica from Brielle, as they had good jigging for small blues early before chumming to catch some bonito plus sea bass and a few more blues. Some fares had limits, and Jeffrey Wisher of Philadelphia won the pool with a 4 1/2-pound blue.

Jeff Merrill’s official press release follows:

 

Dramatic Finish as White Marlin, Blue Marlin Dominate Final Day!

Several Tournament Records Broken as 2019 MidAtlantic Comes to a Close!

Iwas a day for billfish and another nail-biting finish at sportfishings Main Event as Moving Day once again lived up to its storied reputation on the final day of the 2019 MidAtlantic!  This tournament has a long and exciting history of major changes to the leaderboard on the final day of the event and this years Day Five was epic to say the least as the leaderboard once again took a beating in two of its major categories.  With a tournament record $3.52 million on the line it was sure to be an exciting finish to the 28thedition of the MidAtlantic and indeed it was!    

A strong cool front moved through the midAtlantic region as 120 boats headed offshore in a moderate chop on Day Five though it didnt seem to have much impact on the billfish bite.  Going into the final day of the tournament the leaders of the white marlin category had to be a bit nervous as the entire fleet was well aware the top three billfish of 71 pounds, 6pounds and 67 poundon the leaderboard were definitely within reach.  Additionally, although over four dozen blue marlin had been caught through the first four days of the eventfinding one that could break through the tournaments 400-pound minimum weight proved difficult.  

The drama began early on Day Five under rainy skies athe tournaments official weigh stations at Canyon Club Resort Marina in Cape May, New Jersey and Sunset Marina in Ocean City, Maryland opened at 5 p.m.  Captain Rob Skillman had Edward Bondarchuks Lighthouse Point, Florida-based Moore Bills waiting athe scale in Ocean City and weighed a white marlin of 72-poundfor angler Dan Bannercon to temporarily take the lead for the heaviest white marlin.  That lead alone atop the leaderboard was very brief however as shortly thereafter Captain Rhett Bailey maneuvered Alan SadlerNorth Palm Beach, Florida-based Intents to the same scale and weighed an identical white marlin for angler Michelle Keeney to tie Moore Bills.  The drama continued when Captain Paul Robertson aboard his Fishing for MD radioed the same weigh station indicating he too had a white marlin to weigh for his angler Ken Garufi.  As rain continued to fall the crews from Moore Bills and Intents held their breath as Fishing for MDs white marlin was measure and lifted to the scale and weighmaster Frank Ingram yelled out the weight at 67-pounds.  Nother white marlin were weighed and as the scales closed at 9 p.m. the celebration got underway!  

The final standings in the white marlin category found Moore Bills and Intents tied for the heaviest white marlin at 72 pounds and Intents received $527,977 while Moore Bills won $453,529.  Brooks Smiths Uno Mas from Stuart, Florida finished in third place with his 71-pounder caught on Day Three and received $111,288.  

As noted earlier, no qualifying blue marlin had been weighed through the first four days of the tournament and many crews focused on that species on Day Five and the drama as fish were weighed was also intensas thstandings changed quickly in this category as well.  Captain Robbie Inglima had the Pipe Dreamer of Colts Neck, New Jerseys Chip Caruso at the scale in Ocean City shortly after the 5 p.m. opening and put a 473-pounder on the board for Caruso, who was also the angler, to temporarily take the lead in the category.  A little over an hour later, Ken Hagers Taylor Jean based in Tinton Falls, New Jersey weighed a blue marlin of 452 pounds for angler Dave Mekendrick and temporarily moved into second place.  The crews of Pipe Dreamer and Taylor Jean held their breath as they watched the weigh-in live via web cam from Cape May where Captain Shelby Myrick was backing Burke Walls Savannah, Georgia-based Trash Man to the scale wita blue marlin for angler Brian DeMille where Weighmaster Chris Booth noted the weight an yelled out 549 pounds to the crowd of spectators at Canyon Club Resort Marina.  However, a mere 10 minutes had barely gone by when Captain Howard Lynch pulled to the scale in Ocean City with Pasadena, MarylandKristen Jezierskis Haulin n Ballin to weigh a blue marlin for angler Zeb Zebley of 630 poundsthe heaviest blue marlin in the tournament.Haulin n Ballin received $556,365 for the heaviest blue marlin while Trash Man won $178,203 for the second heaviest blue marlin.  For the third heaviest blue marlin Pipe Dreamer won $91,253.  

The tuna category remained unchanged as the tournament drew to a close and a pair of big eyes of well over 200 pounds were hard to beat.  CurtiMacomber of Berlin, Maryland aboard his Stalker weighed big eye tuna of 226 and 207 on Day Three and took the heaviest and second heaviest tuna in the category and received $802,275, a tournament record payout for a tuna winner!  The third heaviest tuna belonged to Tommy Hancock of Isle of Palms, South Carolina on his Dem Boys and he received $147,353 for his 96pounder which was caught on Day One.  

In the dolphin category, Laytonsville, Maryland’s Todd Dickerson and his Top Dog and Baltimore, Maryland’s Curtis Campbell on Reel Estate finished tied for the heaviest dolphin at 33 pounds.  Reel Estates dolphin was caught on Day One and Top Dogs was caught on Day Two.  Top Dog received $68,361 and Reel Estate won $34,474.  Anthony Martina of Middletown,Delaware aboard his Sea Wolf finished with the third heaviest dolphin of 29 pounds which was caught on Day Three and received $12,586.  

The wahoo division saw Newmanstown, PennsylvaniaRoss Clubb aboard his Chain Reaction win the category with his 33-pounder which was caught on Day Two and receive $1410.  Tucker Colquhoun of Ocean City, Maryland aboard Special Situation finished in second place and received $57,481 for his 29-pounder caught on Day One.  Andy Schlotter of Hilltown, Pennsylvania on his My Time finished in third place and received $23,735 for his 28-pound hoo which was also caught on Day One.

Some of the boats with significant billfish releases on Day Five included Luke Blums C Boys with five white marlin and one blue marlin released whilBob GenordMiss Victoria released five white marlin.  Nick NearyLit Up released four white marlin while Danny Veids Amarula SunPat Healeys Viking 72, Ted Wills Pipe Dream, Gary Stamms Buckshot and Anne Armendias Give it Away each released three white marlin.  Matthew Webers Max Bet released two blue marlin and a white marlin while Mike Donohues Griffin released two blue marlin.  Bill Hauglands LightOut released a blue marlin and a white marlin.  David Johnsons JT, George Robinson’s Polarizer, Marty Judges Judge, Joe Roberts Love Boat, Joe RahmanAuspicious, Anthony Matareses Reel Chaos and Alan Carters I-Carter each released a blue marlin.  

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tournament record $3,528,760 was handed out to nearly three dozen various winners including seven checks of over six figures and another 17checks of $15 thousand or more!  Prize money totals awarded to the winners vary based on the level of calcuttas entered by each participant and the heaviest fish in each category may not receive the largest payout.  Worthy of note is an incredible 73 blue marlin were caught during the tournament with 68 released which is a new tournament record for both figures!  Additionally, while not a record, 487 white marlin were released by the fleet of 156 boats fishing three days each which translates to just over one white marlin released per-boat per-day!  

Cash Prize Winners

* Denotes tournament record payout

Heaviest White Marlin – Tie 72 lbs. – Intents  Alan Sadler  North Palm Beach, FL – $527,977

  Moore Bills  Edward Bondarchuk  Lighthouse Point, FL – $453,529

3rd Heaviest White Marlin – Tie – 71 lbs. – Uno Mas  Sean Gallagher Stuart, FL -$111,288

         

Heaviest Blue Marlin  630 lbs.  Haulin n Ballin  Kristen Jezierski Pasadena, MD – $556,365

2nd Heaviest Blue Marlin  549 lbs. – Trash Man  Burke Wall  Savannah,GA – $178,203

3rd Heaviest Blue marlin  473 lbs.  Pipe Dreamer  Chip Caruso  Colts Neck, NJ – $91,25

Heaviest Tuna – 226 lbs. – Stalker  Curtis Macomber  Berlin, MD 

2nd Heaviest Tuna – 207 lbs. – Stalker  Curtis Macomber  Berlin, MD $802,275* – total for both places

3rd Heaviest Tuna – 96 lbs. – Dem Boys  Tommy Hancock  Isle of Palms, SC – $147,353

Heaviest Wahoo – 35 lbs. – Chain Reaction  Ross Clubb  Newmanstown,PA – $1410 

2nd Heaviest Wahoo – 29 lbs.  Special Situation  Tucker Colquhoun Ocean City, MD – $57,481

3rd Heaviest Wahoo – 28 lbs.  My Time  Andy Schlotter  Hilltown, PA – $23,735

Heaviest Dolphin – Tie 3lbs. – Top Dog  Todd Dickerson  Laytonsville, MD – $68,361

                                                    Reel Estate – Curtis Campbell  Baltimore,MD – $34,474 

3rd Heaviest Dolphin – 29 lbs. – Sea Wolf  Anthony Martina  MiddletownDE – $12,596 

Atlantic Tackle Billfish Points Calcutta – Cape May

Most Points – Tar Heel  Rob Mahoney  Manteo, NC – $10,810

2nd Most Points – 750 – JT  David Johnson – Mount Laurel, NJ – $6,486

3rd Most Points – 675  Trust Me Too – Greg Lentz/Jim Foulke  Cape May, NJ – $4324

    

Atlantic Tackle Billfish Points Calcutta – Ocean City 

Most Points – 1571  Uno Mas  Brooks Smith  Stuart, F– $23,030 

2nd Most Points – 1050 – Billfisher – Judith Duffie – Gaithersburg, MD – $13,818 

3rd Most Points – 965 – Auspicious – Joe Rahman – Wanaque, NJ – $9,212    

The following received calcutta winnings for various positions on the leaderboard during the tournament:

White Marlin

68 lbs. – Judge – Marty Judge – Upper Marion Township, PA – $83,642 

67 lbs. – Fishing for MD – Paul Robertson – Dayton, MD – $19,740 

67 lbs.  Double Barrel  Nick Eubank  Boca Raton, FL – $$30,845

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67 lbs.  Sea Mistress  John Raimondo  Avalon, NJ – $54,032 

65 lbs.  Auspicious  Joe Rahman  Wanaque, NJ – $9274

Blue Marlin

452 lbs.  Taylor Jean  Ken Hager  Tinton Falls, NJ – $31,396

Tuna

80 lbs. – Sushi – Charley Pereira – Nags Head, NC – $9274

79 lbs. – Blue Runner – Tom Kelly – Point Pleasant, NJ – $53,078 

77 lbs. – Lucky Linda Jean – Andrew Hall – Chester, NJ – $19,928 

72 lbs. – Viking 72 – Pat Healey – New Gretna, NJ – $23,876

57 lbs., 58 lbs. and 64 lbs.  Random Chaos  Michael Pintozzi Langhorne, PA – $16,920

Dolphin

27 lbs. – Canyon Lady  Jamie Diller  Stone Harbor, NJ – $1660 

27 lbs. – Trash Man  Burke Wall – Savannah, GA – $1660 

27 lbs.  Big Deal  ERusso  Carlstadt, NJ – $1660

Wahoo

27 lbs.  Fish On  Todd Willard  Greenville, DE – $18,894

27 lbs.  Nasty Habit  Walter Koller  Westfield, NJ – $18,894

Point Winners (Trophies) 

* Ties broken based on time of catch.

Most Points White Marlin – 1571  Uno Mas – Brooks Smith – Stuart, FL 

2nd Most Points White Marlin – 1125– Amarula Sun – Danny Veid – New Port Richey, FL

3rd Most Points White Marlin – 1050  Billfisher – Judith Duffie –Gaithersburg, MD

Most Points Blue Marlin – 450* – JT – David Johnson – Mount Laurel, NJ 

2nd Most Points Blue Marlin – 450* – Auspicious – Joe Rahman  Wanaque, NJ  

3rd Most Points Blue Marlin – 450* – Love Boat – JoRoberts – Cape May, NJ 

Most Points Tuna – 216.5 – Stalker – Curtis Macomber – Berlin, MD 

2nd Most Points Tuna – 142 – Blue Runner – Tom Kelly – Point Pleasant, NJ 

3rd Most Points Tuna – 115 – Random Chaos – Michael Pintozzi – Langhorne, PA 

Most Points Overall – 1571  Uno Mas – Brooks Smith – Stuart, FL

 

Blue marlin break open as The MidAtlantic ends

There was high drama on the last day of The MidAtlantic at Cape May and Ocean City, Md.

All of the following is unofficial. I’ll pass along the official results tomorrow or when available.

Uno Mas couldn’t hold on in white marlin with their 71-pounder — as both Intents and Moore Bills added one more pound to tie at 72.

More dramatic was the blue marlin division where there hadn’t been a single 400-pound qualifier. Pipe Dreamer ended that with a 473-pounder — and held on as Taylor Jean weighed a 452. The Trash Man knocked both back with a 549-pound blue. Yet, it still wasn’t over as Haulin N Ballin weighed in just after 7 p.m. with a 630-pounder. That is the same boat that won the White Marlin Open blue marlin division with the only qualifier at 465.5 pounds.

All the other leaders held on, though there were some changes in the leaderboards that I’ll catch up on tomorrow.

Over $3.5 million at stake as The MidAtlantic concludes

The 156-boat field in The MidAtlantic out of Cape May and Ocean City, Md. concluded a week of canyon trolling today, and will be splitting up a purse of $3,528,760 after dinner tonight.

Nothing changed yesterday as most boats took a lay day in rough seas. The few who got out released some white marlin, but there were no weigh-ins.

That left everything as it was, with Uno Mas leading in the biggest money white marlin division at 71 pounds, while Stalker seems to have a comfortable lead in tuna with bigeyes of 226 and 207 pounds.

There hasn’t been a blue marlin so far that’s made the 400-pound minimum. There’s a tie in dolphin at 33 pounds between Reel Estate and Top Dog, while a relatively small 35-pound wahoo on Chain Reaction leads that division.

I’ll have the results in a late blog after the scales close at 9 p.m.

There was good news from the Golden Eagle out of Belmar that small bluefish were splashing to the north today as fares caught so many that some were releasing before the day was out.  Some Spanish and chub mackerel were added along with weakfish — and whales put on a show.

The Jamaica from Brielle didn’t find bonito and little tunny on Thursday, and had to settle for jigging some sea bass and ling — except for Brian Wilhoit of Oxen Hill, Md. who had his 1 1/4-ounce pink Epoxy jig inhaled by a 40-inch bluefin tuna.  The Jamaica is switching to the more dependable small blues. They also have a half-night ling trip Saturday at 7:30 p.m. which has been producing well each weekend.

Capt. Vinny Vetere had another good day in the Hudson River with stripers up to 30 pounds on bunker. His Katfish from Great Kills has some openings next week.

Phil Fischer reports Shrewsbury and Navesink rivers are full of bait and snappers. Crabbing is excellent, and blowfish are abundant.  Drifting worms may produce legal stripers, and good-sized porgies are finally making an appearance. Fluking remains mostly a matter of shorts, but that could change when water temperatures start falling.

The Big Mohawk from Belmar had a tougher day fluking today as the drift was too fast. They sail at 6 a.m. Saturday.,

I got back to casting in the Monmouth County surf this morning. Though there was relatively low water, I hooked a 24-inch striper within a few casts with a Rattlin’ Chug Bug. However, a surfer arrived right after the release and I never raised another fish.

The forecast for the morning is northeast at .10-15 knots with gusts to 20.

The MidAtlantic Day 4 was a Blowout

Though the web site listed 138 boats as fishing today, the weather turned nasty and almost all took a lay day. Jeff Merrill reports that only six of the 156 boats actually fished, and there were no weigh-ins — and just a few white marlin releases. Thus, the entire fleet should be out there Friday to conclude the contest and better the standings that remain the same as at the end of Day 3.