I’ve been busy this winter and now I have a bunch of new bucktail jigs tied up and ready to go.I went through my flies and cleaned out the old and beat up ones Added a few new ones and will add more on rainy days this Spring. The powerhead made it to Florida only to find out that the block was cracked. We got really lucky and Gary found a complete powerhead straight from the factory. so now we will have brand new instead of rebuilt. its on its way up from Atlanta so we should be good to go shortly. I’ll keep you posted
Happy New Year
Well we made it through the holidays in pretty good shape. last season was frustrating with motor issues and a lack of co-operating fish.Luckily the bass bite was pretty consistent. This year I’m removing the eight hour trips. If the fishing and weather holds up we can extend a six hr one. i found out that Rhode Island is raising their charterboat licenses from $12.50 to $300 per year. I guess they needed the money. Right now the boat is at the mechanics and the power head will be shipped out for a rebuild. It will be as good as new for the start of the season. it wont be long now
Frustration
Sunday Dr Jeff came back to finish out his season. It was a bit breezy and the fish weren’t interested in flies so we switched over to Albie Snax. The bass liked them as well as a 10 lb. Bluefish. We finished up with a scrappy Albie to get the trifecta.
Monday Dr. Jon came from California to hunt for the elusive Albie. Still the wind was blowing and we found a bit of a lee and caught a couple of Atlantic Mackerel. A first for him. We found some bass in close and as we got closer the sound of the motor changed. I didn’t like it and decided to call it a day and make our way back to the dock. We pulled the boat and hauled it to our mechanic in Rhode Island. A compression test proved our fear that we had a dead cylinder. That was a kiss of death for this season. We will be sending the power head down to Florida after the first of the year for a complete rebuild. We should be back in action by the beginning of May. Have a safe winter and we hope to see you in the spring.
Summer in October
David brought is Buddy Tim out for his first trip out on the Sound. We beat the sun out and made our third trip over this week. Pretty flat calm water all three days. We started looking where they were yesterday but apparently the albies decided to sleep late today. They eventually came around and we got some to eat. The highlight was a double in the middle of the fleet when no one else was hooked up. Very few bass and no blues today. They have been run over pretty hard lately. We did find some fish closer to home this afternoon. There is a bit of weather coming in for the next few days. We’re going to have to see what that does for us.
They ate today
Doc C came out of central Connecticut today to try and get an albie to eat a fly. We headed out and found some bass and blues. Put a bass in the boat and donated a couple flies to the bluefish. There weren’t as many bass as there were yesterday so we decided to do some exploring. We found the albies and they were hungry. We picked away and had a pretty good day on the water.
Looking good
We have had a few pretty good days lately. Lots of bass around. Today we took a long ride to find bass to 14 lbs and blues to 10. The albies were pretty fussy though. The weather is going to be the determining factor where we will be fishing.
I hate computers
the site has been down for the last month so that’s why there have been no new reports. If you can read this than it’s fixed. We had a group of people all the way from Michigan come out to fish with the three of us. That was a lot of fun and they already booked a week for next year. We had some nagging issues with the boat and now that’s taken care of. The water temps are warmer than normal so it looks like an extended year for us. The fishing everywhere has been inconsistent. From Montauk to Point Judith to Orient Point. We don’t know from one day to the next if it’s going to be our best or worst day of the year. The only constant is that we try our best everyday to get it done. I’m out for the next four days so stay tuned.
We are still here
Its been an unusual season this year. The albies showed early and then the storm drove them out. The huge amount of bait moved into the coves and rivers. The weather and lack of fish has caused me to postpone several trips lately. The water temps are slowly starting to drop and that should get the ball rolling. It looks like the season will go a bit later than normal as long as the weather cooperates. I have quite a few trips coming up so stay tuned.
Yesterday and today
Monday Gail and I took a ride out to see what was new in t6he Sound. We found a bunch of bass and some albie scouts were arriving. The albies were just running around having fun and not really interested in playing. We did well with the bass and left with sopre backs.
Today brought Bob out of the deep woods of Patchaug and it was an adventure. We started with finicky bass and they were joined by the elusive albies, who were still running around. Moving along we found schools of halfbeake that appeared to be chased by some Bluefin Tuna. Before you get too excited the Bluefin are harder to get than the albies. The bait and tuna were in such a heated race we didn’t bother to try to get on them. There were only a handful and they were really scattered. We kept moving and came upon the largest school of bass that I have ever seen. We did manage to get a few to eat our flies. We had three species of fish eating four different types of bait. I ended up with a full handful of used flies on the console when we called it a day. It was a frustrating but fun day. I forgot tomention that we were fishing with about 50 of my closest friends. I must say that they were pretty well behaved except fot the two guys that were trying to snag the bass.
Pretty good day off
I had today off so Gail and I got up in time to catch the start of the ebb tide. The first stop had more boats than fish. I think that everyone took this week off. A timely call from another guide had us on the move. This place had a few less boats and more fish than the first stop. Baby squid and peanut bunker were on today’s menu. We did well for a few hours with singles and a few doubles adding to the fun. These fish were considerably larger than the ones that have been around lately. Nothing like putting a good bend in our 10 wts. We moved on to search for the hopefully soon to arrive bonito. Unfortunately they are still missing. We did find lots of bait and big swarms of bass and mackerel. It should be a pretty good fall season.