The Hudson River striped bass spawning stock appears to be in great shape. and everyone is getting their shots at them. All reports from private and charter boats have been positive even if some started off slowly.
It just seems to be a matter of keeping all options open. In most cases the bass will hit shads and flutter spoons, but at times they only want live bunkers. Topwater lures are often effective, but don’t count on them especially with a lot of boat traffic on weekends. No report so far has mentioned catching stripers in the ocean, but they should be out there by now.
Surfcasting has been picking up steadily. Betty & Nick’s in Seaside Park reports clams have been the best bait lately, but Joe Less used sand fleas to catch this 33-incher yesterday afternoon.
Though some drizzle and fog is forecast in the morning, the early wind prediction is for light southeast before increasing to 15-20 with gusts to 25 knots in the afternoon.
Northern N.J. surfcasters will be sorry to hear that Ernie Giglio passed away on April 12. Giglio’s Bait & Tackle was a Sea Bright magnet for many of the best anglers in the area, including Skip Smith of Smithy’s Lures who now lives in Florida. According to the little bit of info I’ve received so far, Ernie ran the shop from 1996 to 2004, and then worked there to 2017.
Blackfishing remains a good bet, even though shorts dominate most of the time. At Belmar, the Ocean Explorer reported Bob the Butcher managed a limit Thursday while releasing two dozen tog. The Big Mohawk had a 7-pound pool winner. Cod are a possibility every day.
At Brielle, the Jamaica will be striper fishing at 7:30 a.m. This morning’s action was good on shads and crocs, and the bass were often on the surface.
A study by the National Marine Fisheries Service of recreational pelagic species catches along the Atlantic coast has shown them to be arriving earlier and going further north as waters have warmed
“
“A new study by NOAA Fisheries has identified shifting distributions of Atlantic Highly Migratory Species catch, including tunas, billfish, and sharks, off the northeastern United States. The findings are part of efforts to better understand the effects of climate change on marine species and the fishing communities that rely on them.
“Shifts in the timing and location of Highly Migratory Species catch have important implications for recreational anglers, including seasonal fishing tournaments, and coastal communities that rely on these fisheries,” said lead author Dr. Dan Crear, Marine Spatial Ecologist, NOAA Fisheries HMS Management Division. “Fishermen may have to travel farther and/or fish earlier in the year to find certain target species. The species found at a favorite fishing spot may be changing over time, with species typically found further south becoming more common in northern waters earlier.”
“It was striking to see the extent of shifts in the catch for some of these species over the last 20 years,” said author Dr. Tobey Curtis, Fishery Management Specialist, NOAA Fisheries HMS Management Division. “Fishermen are observing these changes in fish distributions, and adapting to these shifts.”
The study used recreational fishery data collected as part of NOAA’s Large Pelagics Survey to explore the locations and timing of HMS recreational catches from 2002 through 2019. Recent studies are finding that HMS and other species in the region are generally shifting northward along the coast and arriving earlier in the year as ocean temperatures warm. These behavioral shifts are now reflected in HMS recreational catches, according to this current study. For example, catches of large and small bluefin tuna were found to be shifting northward at a rate of 4–10 kilometers (2.5–6.2 miles) per year.
The spatial shifts appeared to be related to the increasing water temperatures across the study region, which spanned from Maine through Virginia. Recreational catches of blue sharks and thresher sharks are shifting northward at rates of 30–40 km (19–25 miles) for each 1°C increase in water temperature.
The survey collects data from June through October each year when most offshore recreational fishing occurs. The study found that catches for most HMS have been occurring earlier in the season over time. For example, early bluefin tuna catches off Massachusetts in 2019 were estimated to have occurred 80 days earlier than in 2002. Similarly, early blue shark catches were estimated 66 days earlier off Connecticut, and early blue marlin catches were estimated 27 days earlier off New York. “
It’s interesting that NMFS hasn’t noted that their prediction that warmer waters would bring red drum to the north has not occurred even though (as my readers are aware) that species was the most important inshore game fish in central N.J. over 100 years ago when the Barnegat area was considered to be the channel bass capitol of the Atlantic coast.
Though there have been incredible catches of tautog off Maryland this year, tog anglers in NY/NJ Bight rarely see such specimens. Yet, two were reported on Belmar party boats this week,
One roe-laden female was released Wednesday on the Ocean Explorer by Davy and estimated in the upper teens tough there was no weight given or even the measurements with which to compute a widely-accepted weight by formula. A great move by Davy, but Ocean Explorer customers should take up a collection for a scale and tape on that boat;
The other outsize tog was an 11-pound. 14-ounce black on the Big Mohawk by “Dave”.
The forecast is for east winds at just 5-10 knots before increasing to 10-15 in the afternoon.
Chuck Many is in Hilton Head, where he and Greg waited out the cobia before spotting one under a manta ray.
Even marginable weather days usually haven’t slowed striper fishing in Raritan Bay this spring. Charter boat reports remained very good today, and the forecast is for east winds at just 5-10 knots.
The N.J. surf is slowly coming to life. Mike Monte cast a white Bomber in the Monmouth County surf and broke the ice this season with a schoolie.
Absecon Bay Sportsman Center reported an unusual catch of a legal bass right in Absecon Creek rather than the backwaters. That 31-incher hit a Berkley paddle tail.
Vinny D’Anton has been working hard to catch a few fish by wading in the Sarasota area, but came up with a beauty yesterday on a DOA Shrimp – a 24.5-inch spotted sea trout.
Fish were a lot easier to come by this morning when Vinny joined a guided boat trip. The guide castnetted small greenbacks which were gobbled up by snook and other species as Vinny said he must have released about 40 fish!
Mike Monte had no luck again this morning with stripers in the Monmouth County surf on lures,, but he did see one caught on sand fleas by an angler using that bait earlier than I’ve ever heard of it being tried in the northern surf. Furthermore, that angler also lost another bass.
Sand fleas are a logical bait as waters warm up and live bait gets scarcer since bass can always root through the sand to fill up. Fishermen who have picked up that skill have often scored well while others can’t raise a thing on lures.
Every report from charter and private boats fishing in Raritan Bay was positive. It just seemed to be how long it took to catch what they wanted in various sizes.
The Jamaica from Brielle reported a very good Saturday striper trip with almost a boat limit on shads and crocs. They are sailing daily at 7:30 from Tuesday through Sunday.
A small craft warning is up through 8 p.m. The forecast for tomorrow is for southeast winds at 5-10 knots.
You’ve probably seen enough striper photos lately, so here’s something completely different – a bluefin trevally caught by Bob Malloy during Chuck Many’s trip to Pesca Panama. When I first went to Panama’ Pacific coast decades ago we called that abundant species cobalt jack.
It’s hard to believe the following April 15 article by Scott Lenox:
There was a pretty thick fog bank over Ocean City’s back bay for a good part of the day, but other than that it was absolutely beautiful and not what the weatherman predicted. Forecasts earlier in the week called for a good chance of rain today, but that changed yesterday and today was really quite nice. Warm temps, sunny skies and light winds had lots of folks out on the water looking to bend a rod.
Captain Chase Eberle of Chasin’ Tides had his “best tog trip ever” today with 19….yes 19 double digit tautog coming over the rail. Captain Chase had some seasoned tautog anglers on board today, but I expect that even they haven’t seen anything like they witnessed on today’s trip. Anglers on board Chasin’ Tides caught this list of tautog today……three 10 pounders, two 11 pounders, four 12 pounders, three 13 pounders, three 14 pounders, one 15 pounder, one 19 pounder, a 20 pounder and a 21 pounder. Bill Decosta had the third largest fish at 19.5 pounds which he caught on the jig and tog fisherman extraordinaire, Joe Mole caught both the 20 pound fish and the largest 21 pound fish. All of the fish caught on today’s trip except the 21 pounder were released. Congratulations to Captain Chase, the crew and to Joe for 20 pounders on one trip!!
I wasn’t able to download any photos, but this one is of an earlier 17-pounder by Chris Cullen on the same boat.
After enjoying “insane” striper fishing yesterday, it was exactly the opposite today on Miss Belmar Princess. The readings were there, and birds were working — but the bass wouldn’t bite. Only about a dozen keepers were caught after everyone scored yesterday. A small craft warning is up, and that boat won’t sail tomorrow due to the weather. West winds at 15-20 knots will gust to 25.
There was also a sudden change in the Monmouth County surf where Mike Monte had seen decent school stripers being caught on white surface plugs the previous morning. He made his first try at dawn, but found no action at all as no bass were caught.
Blackfish anglers have been generally finding lots of shorts while working for a few keepers — but have also enjoyed a fairly common bonus of keeper cod such as this 28-incher caught by Dave Rubek while fishing yesterday with Capt. Joe Massa on My Three Sons out of Morgan Marina.
Surprisingly, that cod had an adult bunker in its stomach — the first time I’ve ever heard of cod feeding on them.
At Belmar, Capt. Michael Ardolino said striper jigging on Miss Belmar Princess started slow this morning — but then turned “insane” for keepers primarily on shads.
The Golden Eagle is shifting over to stripers in the morning at 7:30.
Antonio Salvatore used his birthday present Tsunami outfit from Charlie’s Bait & Tackle in Normandy Beach to not only catch his first legal striper but also to release it.
There’s also some hot surf fishing going on at Fortescue beach, where Higbee’s Bait & Tackle reports bloodworms have been producing four to six big bass a day from 28 inches to that 55-incher shown earlier in the week. The action has been on early morning and late afternoon tides.
The forecast is for southeast winds at 10 knots before going southwest up to 20 knots in the afternoon. Showers are possible along with areas of fog.
Some caught best early, and others later — and some did best on shads while others used live bunkers and some had the most fun with top water plugs — but everyone seemed to get into a striper bite in Raritan Bay today despite the weekend mob.
Miss Belmar Princess reported a good catch of keeper bass, but didn’t indicate where that action was — in the nearby ocean or after a trip to the bay.
Nick Honachefsky said he’s caught over 200 bass from shore this spring, but the first one from the surf is always special.
The forecast remains favorable with east winds at just 5-10 knots and a slight chance of showers plus fog.
At Belmar, the Golden Eagle and Big Mohawk both reported lots of short tautog Friday while cod also remain in the picture.
The Fish Bound from Ocean City, Md. continues to hook trophy tautog. with 15 double didget tog, such as this one by Dennis Muhlenforth, released in a four-day period.
The Jamaica from Brielle got into stripers on Friday, and will continue in that quest.
One of the all-time great party boat skippers has passed on to heavenly fishing grounds. as Capt. Al Lindroth died on April 10 at 93.VII
That news was especially disturbing to me as my early party boat fishing out of Freeport, Long Island was primarily with Al on the Viking VII – and later on his own Capt. Al which eventually moved to Pt. Lookout. Primarily a wreck fisherman in the days before electronics, Al became best known for pioneering winter offshore wreck trips for big cod which provided the rare opportunity for the average angler to catch a really big fish at just the price of a party boat trip.
During those early days of Cow Country Codfishing, there was a rush to get to wrecks with loran numbers bought from draggers who hung up nets on them. Capt. Richie Kissinger was Al’s primary competitor on Starstream II from Freeport, but they later became good friends who I’d see at fishery management meetings after the 200-mile limit was passed.
Join the Hudson River Fisherman’s Assn. in fishing the Fred Rung Memorial Striped Bass at Alpine Boat Basin from 3 p.m. until dark. That tag-and0release contest is free to HRFA members, while others make a $10 donation which can even include bait and tackle. Call Peter Musse at 201 233-3119 for details.
The weather looks good again except for possible showers. Southeast winds will be just 5-10 knots.
The Mimi VI from Pt. Pleasant has set up some limited tautog trips. Call 732 370-8019 for details.
A recent blog about my April 7, 1989 trip aboard the Fishermen out of Atlantic Highlands over to the Staten Island clam beds to catch 29 winter flounders resulted in a couple of readers who remembered not having to go that far, as the Miss Take II and other party boats anchored in Shrewsbury River off The Quay to catch lots of flounders as long as the tide was running. I used to kid Capt. Stan Zagleski Sr. of Elaine B. II about that being his most profitable trip of the year since he barely had to turn on his engines at Bahrs Landing before dropping the anchor on the other side.
Before the month was out, I was gathering up kids on my block in Wall to make a run on my Sheri Berri out to Southeast Lump to jig mackerel. I didn’t record how many we jigged that day, but my personal figures were 80 mackerel and one herring.
When I was a kid growing up on Long Island there were always mackerel every spring. It was just a question of when they would arrive on a spawning migration from Virginia — and how abundant and easy to reach they’d be. However, the foreign fleets virtually wiped out what had been the most abundant species of the Mid-Atlantic and New England coasts. Fortunately, mackerel made a big comeback after the 200-mile limit went into effect. That lasted until NOAA Fisheries gave into pressure from the State Department and ignored the advice of both the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council and allowed excessive Soviet mackerel fishing to continue. I originally thought that the migratory population may have shifted further offshore, but that wasn’t the case. Despite their historical abundance, the Atlantic mackerel remains a rarity in the Mid-Atlantic and a monument to NOAA Fisheries mismanagement.
Capt. Frank Massaria said striper fishing in Raritan Bay was great this morning on both shads and live bunkers. He had his grandson Frank along on Vitamin Sea from Keyport, and was proud that he released the two largest bass at 36 and 37 inches.
There’s another fine forecast for the morning with west winds at 5-10 knots before increasing to10-15 plus gusts to 20 in the afternoon.
Following is an unusual quote by a west coast woman who became a commercial fisherman over half a century ago and was quoted in a Salty Tales article on Facebook:
“An old salt after her first trip out, Sarah recalls the night a storm tossed their 56-foot boat around ‘like a surfboard riding the waves.’ She admits, however, her first two hours at sea were not nearly as exciting. ‘I had to talk myself out of being seasick.’ she said. ‘I’d never been on a boat before. We don’t have too many fishing boats in Ohio. After a while, I learned that the trick is to make your body a part of the boat and move with it, not against it.’
That seasickness solution was as good as any a half century ago as there were no medications available when I was a kid growing up on Long Island. I got sick on my first two trips and was afraid I’d never be able to pursue my sport at sea. The only solution I could think of was not eating at all. That’s exactly what I did — not eating any breakfast, and not touching my sandwich until the boat was inside Jones Inlet that afternoon. By then I didn’t know if my stomach pains were from hunger or the sickness I’d avoided. I then started taking a chance on dry toast in the morning before taking any other risks,
I couldn’t have imagined then that a couple of decades later I’d be the only officer eating lunch in the wardroom of a rocking and rolling destroyer in 20-foot hurricane-driven seas off Bermuda! Fortunately, there are medications now that can solve the seasickness problem without going through what I had to endure before developing an “iron” stomach.
That won’t be a problem for anglers fishing for stripers in Raritan Bay, where the usual lack of swell prevents seasickness. If the forecast holds, even the ocean may be easy on the stomach as only 10-15-knot southwest winds are predicted for Thursday. The Golden Eagle from Belmar reported good blackfishing Tuesday after the dogfish backed off a bit.
Tony Arcabascio sent this photo of Gen Wong using his Tony Maja Flutter Spoons to catch those bay stripers.