Tough start to the season, but NICE fish Captain Mike!
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Hmmmm........................
Jones inlet is beyond bad this morning ...all breakers no clear path out..and they were tight & tall all white water ...
AM inlet was 5' breakers from the east jetty to the end of the west bar..even in the channel ...once you were out it was 3' with a tight 2' chop till 1030 ish & than lay down to nothing my 1130 ish..I dont wear a watch so guessing on the time..
I run a 32' sportfish at 11+ tons & the breakers washed over the boat ,,just no way to avoid them...I was doing 18kts but once out just a swell & a chop for a few hours...
running in, south swell inlet was nice 22kts on auto pilot ..
High more water less wave height ... than why does it lay down as soon as you pass the low spots ? as it did yesterday end of outgoing ..and every other time
Nice fish there Capt! What's your take on the lack of fluke entering the Peconic system. It's beginning to look like last year when fluke catches were great in Montauk and along the entire south shore for that matter. And the Peconic and sound have been pretty barren? It almost seems like the fluke are passing us right by. Buy why? I know it's too early to tell, but I've been seeing this same pattern in the sound for 3-4 years now, with each year getting tougher.Took the “Busman’s Holiday” today to enjoy the fabulous weather and see if the warmer weather had improved the Fluke bite in the Peconics.
I spent the last 3/12 hours of ebb just east of Greenport with a light NW breeze and pretty steady drift on the drops that produced about a dozen Fluke, but only 3 small keepers over the weekend. The never-ending supply of birds made things a bit frustrating but I persevered. Although the Sea Bass and Blues were still present the Fluke virtually disappeared with one exception. After striking out on the typically productive drops I moved a little west to the area where we actually had a 20-minute flurry on Sunday taking 6 Fluke and one keeper near slack water. On my second drift here, I get a solid hit on my 6” Gulp grub and following a spirited, drag stripping battle, the first quality Fluke of the season finds the deck. Right to the scale where it records 7.1# and quickly into the box as I am filled with hope.
Despite this bright spot, the rest of the day finished the way it started, Birds, Blues, Sea Bass, Porgies, but not even one more short Fluke. Made drops all they way from Greenport to the Greenlawns but very quiet on the Fluke front. While I am not even close to giving up on the local Fluke scene, I must say I can’t wait for next week’s full moon when keeper sized Stripers will be making an appearance at the Gut.
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if you say so ..I must of been dreaming..
so I said it was the end of the outgoing dead low ...and at mid to high it was much better on the outgoing ..
Can you get your big boat thru by transiting next to the jetty? Maybe not enough water up front when less than 1/2 tide?
Sorry for the tardy reply George but I have been trying to really think hard about what could be causing this shift in the Fluke action. I am mot a fisheries biologist but feel as though I have pretty good powers of observation and accurate records.Nice fish there Capt! What's your take on the lack of fluke entering the Peconic system. It's beginning to look like last year when fluke catches were great in Montauk and along the entire south shore for that matter. And the Peconic and sound have been pretty barren? It almost seems like the fluke are passing us right by. Buy why? I know it's too early to tell, but I've been seeing this same pattern in the sound for 3-4 years now, with each year getting tougher.
Plenty of bait, but little action on both fluke and birds. If you're not fishing porgies or striped bass you're just not catching.
A well thought out reply.Sorry for the tardy reply George but I have been trying to really think hard about what could be causing this shift in the Fluke action. I am mot a fisheries biologist but feel as though I have pretty good powers of observation and accurate records.
Like we have all speculated for some time now, reductions this dramatic are usually the result of many factors. Most of us have noted changes in water temperature, more pollution, increases in species that may be consuming Fluke fry as part of their diet. What about changes in salinity or pH? Has anybody studied this seriously or long enough to make any reasonable predictions?
For a while many of us thought it was a lack of bait. I do recall back in the early to mid 80"s there was so much squid in the Peconic Bay system that the Prime Time would actually run night Squid Trips for the customer s to load up both for bait and human consumption purposes. That hasn't happened in decades. This year myself and many others have noted a pretty large uptick in the amount of squid we are marking on our machines plus seeing some of the Fluke spit up. And still the early bite has been slow. It looks like it may have picked up a bit these last few days with the warm spell but it could also be an anomaly. I hope not as I have several local Fluke trips booked in the coming weeks.
Several have commented that the overall Biomass is depressed. I kind of feel there is a lot of truth to that belief. Although we had a good Fluke season off Montauk last summer it was not as strong as the 2-4 years prior to that. Plus the steady bite didn't really take off there until mid July about 2 weeks later than usual. And heaven knows what has happened to the Gardiners' Island bite that used to be so steady from mid June through late July. That fishery has been all but dead for at least the past 3 years.
I know a lot of folks would like to take the easy route and just blame the commercials. I also know, as you have stated, that the daily quotas, at least for NY vessels, is pretty small. However, I do not know what the limits are for other vessels form adjacent states and those who target the species on the continental shelf over the winter.
So, yes it is complex problem and I sure hope we can figure it out while there are still enough Fluke around to rebuild the stock throughout our region.