T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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506.1 | ... | LEXSS1::JOHNHC | | Thu Jul 11 1996 09:45 | 23 |
| In my younger days, I made it a practice to hit the water as soon as
possible after a major storm. The time this practice nearly killed me
put a real damper on my exploratory spirit, though, so my observations
are a couple years old.
Anyway, the fish (and everything else that can move, including mussels)
vacate the shallow water (<100 feet) until things settle back down,
which can take more than a week of calm weather. Even then, the rocks
are scoured of sessile creatures, and there is very little semblance of
"normality" for a long time, sometimes as long as a whole seasonal
cycle.
This, of course, relates specifically to rocky sections of the coast.
Sandbars (beaches) are a completely different story, and I've never
bothered to look them over underwater. I would assume that they return
to their former state rather quickly, having been relatively barren
from the beginning. If you're interested in cheap and easy chowder
fodder, go to a beach immediately after a major storm, especially a
beach with rocks nearby. You'll find all manner of mussel, clam,
lobster, and crab stranded on shore, just waiting to feed either you or
the sea gulls.
John H-C
|
506.2 | Go Shark Fishing | NETCAD::BIRO | | Thu Jul 11 1996 14:27 | 10 |
| If you were in West Palm Beach Florida area you simple strap yourself
to one of the post on the Boynton Beach Inlet Jetty pier and go
fishing for sharks and Bluefish.
There is a sea wall in front of you that will break most of the force
of the waves, the sharks are driven very close to the shore line and
you can have a great day fishing.
|
506.3 | Blow, Blow, Blow the man down... | USCTR1::HAMELIN | | Fri Jul 12 1996 09:17 | 9 |
| Today's newspaper (Worc.T&G seeemed to indicate that fishing had slowed
down this week, despite the great pre-storm weather we're having. The
only fish that seemed to be improving we're that sightings of bluefin
tuna have substantially increased....
So has anyone in the Southeast tried that method (.2?) of straping
yourself to the pier, etc. lately ? I enjoy fishing but that certainly
seems to add a new dimension of excitement to the catch...How do you
get 'em of the hook ? or out of the water ? Think I'll stick to fair
weather fishing - I'm getting too old for "sport" fishing ;^)
|
506.4 | Fish in front of fronts - sleep after | BRAT::MONBLEAU | | Fri Jul 12 1996 13:53 | 25 |
| Rule of thumb for fresh water at least is that fishing activity peaks
at the front edge of a storm and then deteriorates badly afterwards.
Water turbidity seems to be the culprit.
Last spring on Champlain towards the end of a so-so day, a storm
appeared on the horizon. We motored into a cove that looked good, but
so far had produced only one or two fish. All of a sudden all hell
broke loose. Both of us were catching fish on every single cast - pike,
pickeral. and LM Bass. The strikes were fast, hard and vicious. This
went on for exactly one hour to the minute. Then the skies opened for a
wind whipped penetrating rain - fishing stopped cold - nothing - nada -
. The next day dawned clear, quiet and warm. We hit the water at
7:00AM - didn't land our first fish until after 5PM - that evening was
OK, but it was at the end of one long loooooooooong day.
Later in the summer I beat a cold front down to my pond; bagged a
pickeral and four bass in the 45 minutes leading up to the rains -
again, the fish stopped.
What I've taken from this experience is that working the water ahead of
fronts is exciting; next day, sleep in - there's no hurry to launch.
BTW - that hour on Champlain is an hour I'll never forget - it was wild
and tremendous fun.
|
506.5 | Fishing the Fronts........ | MSBCS::MERCIER | | Fri Jul 12 1996 14:38 | 23 |
| I'll second that. It's something I learned a long time ago and it works
even better if your a hunter. If you happen to be in Pennsylvania or
New York or anywere there happens to be a large deer population and you
know there is a front coming in just take a ride around the fields and
watch. Animals and fish feed heavily before storms. There internal
barometers are telling them that a storm front is a coming and its
time to eat Now!!!
I especially use fronts for Small Mouths. I had a day last year that
I will never duplicate. I was out another guy and we were each in
seperate boats. We knew there was a storm approaching and we met to
talk about what to do. While talking we were chucking some Pop R's when
all hell broke loose. We were wacking Smallie after smallie they had
turned on and were ravenous. It lasted until it started to rain and
then died out.
Please remember.......Use your common sense. Bertha is no small storm
and the Merrimack is no babbling stream. No fish is worth drowning or
getting barbecued by lighting for!!! A large storm like this can out
of the blue reenergize back into a full blown hurricane.
FWIW
Bob M�
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506.6 | not exactly fishing related... | NEWVAX::WHITMAN | gun control = 5% gun + 95% control | Fri Jul 12 1996 16:06 | 10 |
| < Please remember.......Use your common sense. Bertha is no small storm
< and the Merrimack is no babbling stream. No fish is worth drowning or
< getting barbecued by lighting for!!! A large storm like this can out
< of the blue reenergize back into a full blown hurricane.
Bertha looks a whole lot better from the south side than she did from the
west (if you catch my drift...)
Al Whitman
Ft. Myers, FL
|
506.7 | Storm | CHEFS::MCFADDENP | | Mon Jul 15 1996 11:34 | 16 |
|
Hi,
The only thing i can add to this is during a stay in Florida down on
the keys, we got caught in one hell of a storm. We had a boat on hire
for a week, the first two days being the best fishing I have ever had.
The storm hit on the 3rd day so we could not fish, back out on the 4th
day and we never got a bite and the rest of the week was not much
better. I never realy thought as to why untill reading these replys.
This was back in 90.
I would like to return to the States this year and would like to try
your coarse fishing, any ideas for the best areas and times. Im from
scotland and my particular favorite is Pike fishing.
Pat
|
506.8 | ??? | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Jul 15 1996 13:10 | 4 |
| Maybe it loses something in the translation, but what does "coarse
fishing" mean ?
Ray
|
506.9 | | ESB02::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Mon Jul 15 1996 15:11 | 3 |
| It means "fishing for coarse fish" - meaning "non-traditional game
fish". The latter include the likes of salmonids, the former include
the likes of carp, etc...
|
506.10 | coarse fishing | CHEFS::MCFADDENP | | Tue Jul 16 1996 08:50 | 4 |
|
It actually means, river and lake fishing here. Trout, salmon, pike
etc.
|
506.11 | some New Englan & MA locations | USCTR1::HAMELIN | | Wed Jul 17 1996 13:48 | 8 |
| Depends on where you want/have to visit. Highly recommend Lake Ontario
and/or Lake Champlain both are in upstate New York. Or Lake Winnepesake
(sp?) in New Hampshire. All are big lakes offering a wide variety of
fishing with or without guides. In Massachusetts, there are many ponds
not far from Digital sites (ex. Chauncy, South Pond, Lake
Quinsigamond,Webster lake, Brimfield Reservoir,Comet Pond, Quabog
(North Pond) which have variety, including pike, lakers and salmon.
Good luck!
|