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Wednesday, June 13, 2018

Flats Fishing on My Birthday: Stripers on Crabs

What would I want to do on my 21st birthday? The answer was easy. I didn't want to cut loose, to get drunk, to party it up. 

I wanted to do the thing that makes me most happy and then celebrate it with steak, pie, and just the right amount of whiskey. 

Stripers were the target. My preference was to sight fish for them in shallow water, and though other possibilities were explored it was the sight fishing that was fortunately most fruitful. I am more and more obsessed with pursuing big stripers, but when the query can be seen in shallow clear water, stripers of any size are challenging. Big fish are possible. But it they are also likely the most difficult targets on the eastern seaboard. 


Stripers feeding on the flat are the most neurotic fish I've ever seen. They are the furthest thing from reckless. They examine everything. They move quick. There is no room for error here. Sight, stalking, casting, presentation, fly, hookset, and fight, all have to be on point. If you aren't so good at just one of those things, that's going to be the one thing that leads to you not catching fish consistently. It's tricky stuff, and it takes practice. I'm still learning but I'm definitely adequate.



After a slow morning I found some fish willing to eat sand eels around a bridge. They were testy, most of them would dart back and forth as they examined flies, unsure whether to attack it or to run away, but when they ate it they ate it hard. Then, later in the day, when the tide was right, I was able to access water where crab eaters live. the conditions were great. Tide, wind, lighting... I could have asked for better. I could walk down wind and search for tailing and cruising fish see them from 50 feet away, and make quick cast to them with fast sinking crabs.



It was spectacular. The fish were about as easy as they could be on this day, practically biting their own tails in their haste to grab my tan Merkin. I caught some of my best crab fish yet, including on over 28 inches. She wasn't one for the camera though, popping off and gently swimming away as I leadered her. I followed her for two minutes, taking in every detail of that special little fish.





 The fishing was good. The best it has been for me in the salt this spring so far. Some things are just slowing down. Others are about to pop. I'm excited to see what happens next.

To wrap this all up, I'll share the first fish I caught in the morning. It's a new species for me. #77. Oyster toadfish, Opsanus tau. An objectively ugly fish, but when I look really, really closely... I see those striking color patterns, the resemblance to an algea covered rock, the evolutionary perfection... I see beauty.



Most importantly though, I have to thank my mother, for taking time off to spend a beautiful but tiring day on the water with me.

12 comments:

  1. That's the ideal way to celebrate Rowan. Happy birthday!

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    1. Thanks Howard, I wouldn't have it any other way.

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  2. The oyster toad fish. That's a remarkable catch! In all my years of diving and fishing i have never seen one. Thanks for the pics

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    1. In all likelihood you've had them right in front of you and just didn't know it. In a pile of algae and weed covered rock, the undulate with the wave action and blend in to a degree that is incredible. I've been lucky to encounter 3 of them in my time on the water, though this is the first I've caught on an artificial fly.

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  3. Wow, you weren’t kidding about that toadfish. It was a favorite day for me, getting to see you do what you love to do and do so well. Thank you for letting me tag along!

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    1. All I can say is, thank you. I was just doing what I would do any other day, you made it possible.

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  4. Happy B-day man! Here you go making me homesick for New England again. Great stuff.

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    1. New England has its charms, but...
      Trade places for a month? Hehe.

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