Sunday, December 17, 2006

Last Two Trips of the Season

Well we had our last two trips of the season. It was a tough call but I decided to pull the boat next week. With all the warm weather and lack of threat from freezing temps it was a tough call. After getting some house work done if it is still warm I will put her back in early (end of January) if there are good reports of fish hanging around similar to earlier this year.

Saturday we fished from the bathing beach up to Lavalette. The entire ride down from Manasquan to the bathing beach there was absolutely no bird action. We marked a lot of bait and some fish. Trolled south from Lavalette to the bathing beach, picking up and running to our usual spots along the way. Our total for the day was 13 fish to just about or just over 28". Since they were so close and our recent visit from a conservation officer we decided not keep any. Most fish were caught trolling from North to South or West to East and all fish were on blue and white shads. We tried chartreuse as well as pearl and neither got touched except by a few blues.

Sunday we had Bob out (a fell BFH'er) and decided to run North to the rocks after hearing great reports on Saturday about the action up there. If only we had decided to run up their for the afternoon bite instead of having lunch and hanging out down South for it. But, let me tell you...it was worth taking a slight beating on the ride home with that stiff south wind. We had a rough total of around 75 fish. Yes most were school fish of around 20 to 24 inches with a lot of 26 inch fish thrown in. It was typical December jigging action with tons of bird action. The fish were so thick you could feel the jig bouncing off them. Bob had some great top-water action with small poppers (wish I could have gotten a photo of the boils and blow ups) there was mid water column jigging, bottom bouncing. The fish were everywhere. There were so many boats it made it hard to troll which was producing many larger fish. We saw 1 30 pounder landed and heard reports of several in that range as well as one that was estimated around 50# and according to the captain the largest bass he had ever seen. The bigger fish were reported to be on spoons and plugs. Once we got on the troll again with only the blue and white shads seeing action it took less than 10 minutes to boat the only keeper of the day...a 10lb 13oz 31.5" fish. Not long after that the bite died off. Due to commitments on Monday morning we had to cut the day short otherwise I think we could have put a few more keepers in the box trolling with the fleet thinned out once the tide changed. After cleaning the fish back at the dock it was loaded with blueback herring, and they were 8-10".

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