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Fishing Tackle garage sale Friday & Saturday

My block is having a garage sale the next two days, and I’ll be including fishing tackle at 1552 Osprey Ct., Manasquan Park, NJ 08736. The hours are 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Call 732 757-5531 for additional info.

All sea bass reports have been very good during the first two days of the season.  Capt. Stan Zagleski said it was limits for all on his Elaine B. II from Bahrs in Highlands — and that seemed to be the case for all.

Tank Matraxia and his crew from Lyndhurst fished aboard Lock & Load from Neptune and were limited in short order. Tank not only put ALS tags in sea bass, but also in an 18 1/2-inch cod that Marty caught as part of a double with a ling on a jig.

Chuck Many had his nephews from Slate Hill N.Y.  aboard Ty Man from Gateway Marina in Highlands as we wormed in Shrewsbury River for a pick of school stripers up to 16 inches, though the bass were very fussy. An afternoon attempt to catch big stripers in the ocean with live bunkers didn’t produce as no bait was marked.

Capt. Rob Semkewyc said the hot gigging bite of large stripers in Raritan Bay wasn’t repeated. He had to change locations and go to bait to put a few keepers aboard the Sea Hunter from Atlantic Highlands.

John De Bona of The Fisherman magazine reported there was hot bluefishing from the docks at Belmar Marina this morning.

The forecast for the morning is southwest winds at 10-15 knots with gusts to 20 — and a chance of afternoon showers.

Another fishing tackle garage sale this weekend

Though my recent garage sale went well, there’s still lots of fishing tackle left — and I found some more that hadn’t surfaced  during the last sale. Since my block is having an area sale this weekend, I’ll be adding my tackle to my wife’s household goods. The address is 1552 Osprey Ct., Manasquan Park, NJ 08736. I’ll have details in tomorrow nights blog. My phone is 732 757-5531.

The few reports received so far from today’s sea bass opener were good. The Golden Eagle from Belmar started out jigging bluesh from 2-10 pounds before heading offshore for sea bass which were 75 percent keepers. They’ll be doing the same thing at 7 a.m.

The Mimi VI from Point Pleasant had many sea bass limits plus ling. They sail open for $75 the next two days. Call 732 370-8019 for reservations.

It was a good day for Atlantic Highlands party boat seeking stripers in Raritan Bay. The Sea Hunter limited out with bass up to a 30-pounder on jigs and shads — and added many releases. The Fishermen had a similar report as ganetts were diving and two 24-pounders tied for the pool.

 

It was so cold this morning in Point Pleasant Canal that I thought an Ice Age was upon us. Never before have I experienced cold hands in mid-May. I had to take a break for awhile to warm my hands at Castaways Tackle in Poiny Pleasant, but managed to pick four blues on a 3-ounce bucktail tipped with a Z Man, Only a few other blues were caught while I was there.

The party boat fleet was fishing inside Manasquan Inlet, but I didn’t see shore anglers catching when I checked it.

Grumpy’s Tackle in Seaside Park reports big blues are still thick in Barnegat Bay, and there should be more in the surf for Sunday’s Governor’s Surf Fishing Tournament.

Allen Riley, John Mazzeo and Mitchell Mc Kee fished the Sandy Hook surf this morning with fresh cut bunker. Allen caught bass of 19, 21 and 22 inches and missed two others. John released a 5-6-pound blue, and Mitchell released a 3-4-pounder. The water was barely over 45 degrees, and the air was 44 degreeThe forecast is for southwest winds at 10 knots in the morning with a 60 percent chance of showers.

Good weather for sea bass opener in NJ

It’s looking good for Wednesday’s sea bass season opener in New Jersey. Moderate northwest winds should knock down the swell, and gusts to 20 knots from that direction shouldn’t be a problem on near-shore wrecks and reefs. As noted in last night’s blog, the limit is 10 sea bass at a 12 1/2-inch minimum. Some boats will be running limited trips which require reservations — so be sure to check with your favorite boat before coming down.

The Point Pleasant Canal bluefish bite wasn’t up to yesterday’s, but I still managed five that were all large — three over 10 pounds and two six-pounders. One of the latter engulfed the 3-ounce bucktail tipped with a Z-Man paddletail — and then gulped it down as I was trying to get it out. I also added a 22-inch striper before the bite died out.

Castaway’s Tackle in Point Pleasant is stocked up with clams and squid for the sea bass,

Despite much better weather, it appears that most party boats didn’t get out. The Golden Eagle from Belmar will be sailing at 7:30 for a mixture of stripers, blues and sea bass. .

Nasty weather brings winter back

After a near perfect day on Saturday, Sunday turned out to be a real bummer with rain and strong winds followed by winter-like temperatures this afternoon with a gale advisory up.

Monday doesn’t look great either as east winds in the morning drop to 15-20 knots with gusts to 25. Light rain and drizzle is supposed to die out early, but return later in the afternoon. Dress for winter if you’re out early.

Grumpy’s Tackle in Seaside Park Reports that big blues made their first real showing Saturday evening in the surf with 6-10-pounders on both bait and lures. The bay remained hot for big blues. Gene Topoleski and his son loaded up on jumbos to 15.7 pounds.

Chuck Many reported on Facebook that he and Dave Donahue fished with Bryan Pieros on his Bid Time in the Battle o the Border. They didn’t catch many bass, but all were big up to the 42.3-pounder that won the contest. All of the bass were released, including the winner.

Capt. Stan Zagleski has finished striper fishing after only finding three shorts on Saturday, which was a terrible day for the party boats. He switches Elaine B. II from Bahrs in Highlands to sea bass on Wednesday’s opener.

Jerry Lasko and Maren Toleno dressed in full rain gear this morning and got into a hot bite of mixed-size blues from shore in Manasquan River. They fished in IBSP Saturday evening where Maren released stripers of 36 and 32 inches on an SP Minnow along with a small bass and blue.

Maren IBSP bass.jpg

Haertel & LaGrossa were double winners in N.J. Skillful Anglers Contest

Paul Haertel of Clifton  had an unusual double win in the 2018 N.J. Skillful Anglers Contest as he trolled a 54-pound striped bass on May 28 off Asbury Park on a Tony Maja bunker spoon, and in Sept.  added a 30-pound, 9.5-ounce cod on an offshore wreck.

Phil LaGrossa of Toms River started off the year right by boating a 10 1/8-pound weakfish in Barnegat Bay which also stood up all year in the Fisherman magazine Dream Boat Challenge to win that division. Then LaGrossa added an 11 1/2-pound doormat fluke on Aug,. 5 with Gulp.

Surprisingly, there were no bluefish entries, along with many other species. Stacy Fowler from Pa. won with a 16-inch, 1.32-pound kingfish.

In the release category there was a double winner as Christopher Pereira of Hopatcong fished Sandy Hook Reef in August to release a 20-inch black sea bass and a 30-inch fluke. Larry Newman of Brick released a 35.5-inch bluefish  on May 25 from his kayak in Barnegat Bay.

It was a beautiful day, but the only striper and blue report I got was of a tough day for Capt. Ron Santee on the Fishermen from Atlantic Highlands. He spent six hours just looking for a bite even though he read bait and some fish, He went into overtime to avoid the doughnut, and that payed off in a late two keeper stripers and a short. There will be no trips Sunday and Monday due to the forecast.

East winds gusting to 25 knots come in after midnight, and the gusts increase to 30 knots tomorrow.

The Ocean Explorer from Belmar had plenty of bottom fishing action with some ling they could keep and lots of sea bass that will be a target on Wednesday’s season opener. They won’t be fishing again until then.

Grumpy’s Tackle in Seaside Park weighed a 34-inch, 12.6-pound striper caught on bunker in IBSP by Roger K.  Bluefishing was slowed somewhat yesterday by the south winds, but some up to 17 pounds have been recorded.

Doing well in school payed off for Keegan Rothman (13) as his father, Dan, took him to Zihuatenejo, Mexico to catch several exotic fish plus this trophy yellowfin tuna that weighed in at 89 kilos after a 45 minute battle.

Keegan yellowfin.png

 

 

 

 

Manhattan Cup coming up in J.C. on June 7

The Manhattan Cup, presented by Yamaha Outboards,  is returning to its new base at Liberty Landing Marina and Restaurant in Jersey City on June 7.  Entrants can fish in their own boats or with some of the best charter skippers in the Metropolitan area. Combat vets, many of whom are disabled, will join in  enjoying a day of striped bass and bluefish fishing in fly, artificial lure and bait divisions while being treated to a big breakfast, a gourmet lunch box, and then oysters on the half shell before a great dinner. The awards dinner also features a massive auction to benefit the vets and fishery conservation. I’ll have more about the Manhattan Cup in future blogs, but don’t hesitate to sign up for it now by calling Capt. Frank Crescitelli at 917 468-4867 or Gary Caputi at 732 740-9982.

At Atlantic Highlands, Capt. Rob Semkewyc said the ocean was too rough for comfortable fishing, so he fished his Sea Hunter in the bay where there was good action with short stripers plus a few keepers The forecast for Saturday may present an opportunity to get back in the ocean, but it doesn’t look good for Sunday and Monday.

Capt. Ron Santee of the Fishermen also got into lots of shorts plus a few keepers up to 15 pounds in the bay,

Bob Matthews, at Fisherman’s Den in Belmar Marina, said big blues up to 16 pounds have moved into all of the local rivers and inlets. Quite a few fluke are being caught by anglers fishing for other species, and Bob asks anglers to carefully release them before the season opens on May 24. Blowfish are a good bottom fishing target now. Everyone is getting ready for the May 15 sea bass opener, and some party boats are booking special extended hours trips for that day.

The Jamaica from Brielle will be sailing Saturday for blues and stripers at 7:30 a.m. — and then daily until the sea bass opener.

Grumpy’s Tackle in Seaside Park reports excellent fishing for big blues in Barnegat Bay, but only a few small blues seem to be in the surf along with some stripers that are mostly on cut bunker

Mother’s Day is usually the starting point of bluefishing in the surf. Hopefully there will be some anglers trying it this weekend.

Saturday’s forecast is for northwest winds of only 10-15 knots. However, Sunday is a different story with east winds of 15-20 knots plus gusts to 25 — and likely rain.

 

 

Bluefin tuna regs better for anglers

It will be a bit easier to justify a trip offshore for school bluefin tuna this summer as NMFS has eased catch restrictions on school bluefin tuna.

Private boaters permitted in the Angling category will be allowed two schoolies from 27 to less than 47 inches plus one large school/small medium from 47 to less than 73 inches. Charter boats in their category get three schoolies plus the one larger bluefin. Head boats finally get a break with six schoolies and two larger.

Party boats had somewhat better luck with Raritan Bay stripers today. At Atlantic Highlands, Capt. Rob Semkewyc found the weather forecast to be off as it was a lot rougher than expected in the ocean. After a couple of bass were caught, he ran the Sea Hunter back into the bay and didn’t do much jigging before anchoring and getting into a decent bite of shorts with a few keepers mixed in.

Capt. Ron Santee had only bailed out the last two days on his Fishermen by staying for the change of the tide — and warned his customers to be patient, Yet, it was just the opposite as they found bass on top and did best with jigs with tails. The late bite never developed.

Scott Leadbeater has been running his Aquasport out of that port to troll bass consistently  during short morning and evening trips with mo-jos at such nearby areas as Chapel Hill Channel. Most are in the teens plus a few over 20 pounds.

Capt. Hans Kaspersetz has stuck with the old favorite stretch plugs to troll bass during morning trips with his Sheri Berri from Twin Lights Marina in Highlands. He recently  released one that buried his 50-pound scale.

Capt. Vinny Vetere continues to do well in Raritan Bay with his Katfish Charters from Great Kills. The boat’s biggest bass so far was a 44.3-pounder boated Monday. Bunkers were hard to net on Tuesday, but the effort involved produced a great catch on both chunks and live baits.

Miss Belmar Princess took a shot to the north, but didn’t find bass where they had been among bait readings in the channels. A move into Raritan Bay put them into bunkers and whales, but no bass.

After not seeing anything doing at dawn in the inlet or river, I cast in Point Pleasant Canal. It was very slow, but I finally caught a blue of about 5 pounds on a white Z  Man paddletail. Only two other similar blues were caught by other anglers.

Fishermen casting on the Manasquan side of the inlet picked a few smaller blues in the afternoon.

A small craft warning is up through late Friday night. The morning forecast is for south winds at 15-20 knots with gusts to 25 — and a chance of showers.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Get your Dream Boat bluefish entries in before the spring run is over

The Fisherman magazine’s Dream Boat 2019 Fishing Challenge started on May 1, and continues to Nov. 30. Subscribers to that weekly  can compete for many prizes up to a Steiger Craft 23 Miami boat with an Evinrude E-Tec 250 hp outboard that’s completely rigged. The eligible species are bluefish, weakfish, fluke, sea bass, scup, sea bass, blackfish, dolphin and even sea robins. Merchandise awards for the largest of each species make it worthwhile to get on the board, and now is the time to do it in the case of bluefish. The minimum weight is 15 pounds, and blues that size were unheard of last year after the erly spring run until a few showed up in the fall. You may not have a better chance to take the lead than right now. See the latest Fisherman for details.

After getting into the best popper fishing for big fish that I’ve ever had in Point Pleasant Canal yesterday morning, there wasn’t a bluefish to be had there this morning. It wasn’t surprising that the big blues didn’t show, but there weren;t even the small blues which had been providing some daily action. Yesterday’s bite wasn’t really a blitz as there were no birds diving or bait being pushed out of the water.  The big blues were just there, and we never would have known it if poppers and swimmers weren’t used.

The only report from Raritan Bay as of 5:45 was from Capt. Rob Semkewyc of the Sea Hunter at Atlantic Highlands. After two days of struggling with fussy stripers that were almost impossible to hook, Rob said it was better today. The pool winner was 23 pounds.

Miss Belmar Princess reported getting into a couple of good shots of big blues.in the morning.  If the Manasquan Inlet blues don’t show tomorrow, they’ll head north to seek stripers.

The forecast for Thursday is east winds at 10-15 knots with gusts to 20.

There was a general lack of shore action in the Point Pleasant area today as big blues seemed to take the day off. An angler at the inlet said there was a showing at 5:30 a.m.

At Seaside Park, Grumpy’s Tackle reported a weigh-in of a 30-inch, 10.85-pound striper on cut bunker in the IBSP surf by Tom Teall. Some blues are also being weighed.

Betty & Nick;s reported small blues are hitting bait in the surf, though the big ones are in the bay. Jim Freda May bass Capt. Jim Freda of Shore Catch Charters at Manasquan sent this shot of a bass that Mitch Wolcheck caught on a Tsunami bunker-colored shad in Raritan Bay.

Bluefish bite continues

Bluefish continue to build up in bays and rivers. Though I never got into them while moving around during the day, I was already satisfied after walking into the best surface plugging I’ve ever seen in Point Pleasant Canal. It started out with spme blues in the 6-pound class which were twice as big as the previous blues. Then the 8-10-pounders took over.  Jerry Lasko released a couple that had to be 12 pounds. There were blues raised on almost every cast for awhile, and the bite even continued into slack and the first of the incoming. Some anglers left before then because they were too tired to continue.  The old Gibbs pencial popper with no paint left on it that hadn’t raised a fish the previous day in Manasquan River proved its worth this morning, but all sorts of poppers and swimmers proved effective.

Checking the inlet later on I saw a strange sight — Miss Belmar Princess going out of Manasquan Inlet along with the Jamaica from Brielle as they had apparently gone well upriver with the blues.

Jim Louro got into lots of blues casting in the iinlet early. Tommy Cox boated one that weighed 17 pounds on the Boga Grip.

At Atlantic Highlands, Capt. Rob Semkewyc of the Sea Hunter said he had a second day of struggling with stripers that didn’t want to hit — though they caught a few and lost a few. Capt. Ron Santee had a similar slow morning, but waited out the change of tide with his Fishermen and ended up with a late hot bite in deeper waters where jigs did the job. Several fares caught multiple bass.

Tank Matraxia and his crew fron Lyndhurst went on a catch-and-release fluke trip to Jamaica Bay with Capt. Anthony on the Hard Bottom from Sewaren. They had a decent pick of fluke up to a 20-inch and a 23 which were tagged by Tank. Though the N,Y. season is open, those fluke could not be brought back to N.J. where the season opens on May 24 and runs to Sept. 21 with three fish at 18 inches minimum. Tank was proud of his two sea robins — a species I was shut out on last year. There was also an 11-pound skate boated. A try for stripers back in Raritan Bay was no good.

A couple of anglers who made the long walk to the tip of Sandy Hook this morning, after hearing about a Monday evening blitz of big blues there, ended up just missing the early morning bite.\

.Grumpy’s Tackle in Seaside Park reported more catches of big blues in the bay and from local docks on bunker chunks and poppers.

The Golden Eagle from Belmar is out of dry dock and starts striper fishing at 7:30 a.m. on Saturday.

The weather forecast for Tuesday is a mere northeast at 10 knots — going to east in the afternoon, –

Big bluefish invade

Big bluefish finally spread out today with reports from Barnegat Bay to Raritan Bay.

There had been a blitz of blues in the rain yesterday afternoon in Manasquan Inlet, and Nick Honachefsky said  they were there from mid-morning on as the Jamaica from Brielle returned from a trip that produced some keeper stripers to get into lots of jigging blues up to 12 pounds. Nick said he got arm weary catching blues  on metal jigs with tails fished with a slow retrieve.

I fished the Manasquan from shore late in the morning when there was a pick going on. I couldn’t raise a fish to my favorite lure, a big pencil popper, but a last minute switch to a 7-inch swimmer produced a 10-pound blue on the third cast. I had fished Point Pleasant Canal in the morning to catch a small blue and a larger striper on a Z Man paddletail, but was high hook with that little action.

Grumpy’s Tackle in Seaside Park reported more anglers getting into big blues on both poppers and cut bunker in the bay and from local docks.

Capt. Chris Di Stefano reported that Jimmy Herrick got into big blues in Raritan Bay — where they never showed at all last spring. He first clobbered stripers by trolling mo-jos, but that bite was over by 7:30. Those arriving later had to struggle for bass.

Capt. Rob Semkewyc of the Sea Hunter at Atlantic Highlands said it was a struggle as he marked bass and they even followed shads to the boat but wouldn’t hit.

Tom Fote of the JCAA had a charter with Capt. Fletcher Chayes on Two Rivers Charters from Highlands. His party managed four keepers on live bunkers and shads.

The hard northeast wind forecasted blew through very early the morning and left anglers with a nice day. Tuesday’s forecast is for south winds of just 5-10 knots early, but increasing to 10-15 with gusts to 20 in the afternoon.