That fish was fighting weird so we werent sure what he had. Glad all went well and we landed it! It's strange how you could have an off day, loose what seemed like 10 pounds of tackle, yet that one fish carries the day!
Nice job BucktailLate report from Saturday 9-9-23
Spent the day bouncing around the ocean hitting some old and new soft bottom locations looking for those fish that had moved off the hard stuff from the week and a half of swells. Found the kindergarten grounds to the east in 64' of water. Constantly had 2-3 fish on all 12-14".....nothing bigger. Checked another location in 72' of water for just a couple of robins and no bait in the area. Tried some gravel bottom south of my favorite off shore location with plenty of bait and a steady bite of fish to almost 27" boxing 5 for the day. We'll see what happens with this next set of swells and how long they last.
Beautiful fish!!Late report from Saturday 9-9-23
Spent the day bouncing around the ocean hitting some old and new soft bottom locations looking for those fish that had moved off the hard stuff from the week and a half of swells. Found the kindergarten grounds to the east in 64' of water. Constantly had 2-3 fish on all 12-14".....nothing bigger. Checked another location in 72' of water for just a couple of robins and no bait in the area. Tried some gravel bottom south of my favorite off shore location with plenty of bait and a steady bite of fish to almost 27" boxing 5 for the day. We'll see what happens with this next set of swells and how long they last.
You had a good run! Now time to get ready for the Tog!Acting on some excellent intel, Mike and Kevin joined up to give the deep fluke another shot. Word was that big schools of squid had moved into the area we fish and that certainly proved correct. In fact my buddy put a 9.2 in his boat Saturday, along with a bunch of other quality, so we went straight to the numbers he was kind enough to provide. Got there early to a very slow drift and had fish immediately, as long as we stayed tight to the squid. Put three in the box, with a keeper ratio of approx. 13:1 during the mid/late outgoing, and we looked forward to really whaling them when the tide turned. But it was not to be.
As the storm action approached with some truly impressive cloud action and the Wx report got increasingly worse, we looked around and saw we were the last boat out there. Because there were repeated warnings to watch for lightning strikes, and being we were the highest point for miles, I made the call, time to go. Had we taken a strike that fried my electronics and/or ignition system, there was no one to come to our aid. I really doubt the 6-gauge-wired "earth ground" system I put in the boat would be capable of handling THAT kind of electrical surge. Very dubious, indeed. Not to mention, having nearly 100 gallons of high-test gas in the tanks, was another consideration that came to mind.
Watching the storm cells forming on radar and advance directly over us, the winds swung S to NW at a solid 20-25mph with bands of very heavy rain, and some truly rotten 4' confused wave action. So we steamed back to JI at a stately 13mph thru the nasty stuff - arriving safely just as the all-clear was given. I would have considered shooting back out to the HR had the weather improved just a bit more, but enough is enough, the 2023 fluke season is now over for us.
I would have preferred staying out there today, as the fish were certainly snapping, but yeah, um, no - as Kevin said at the time, "Safety first." Anyway, on to the East End monster biscuit fishing with Capt. Mike next weekend. Looking forward to it, actually.
Always looking on the bright sideYou had a good run! Now time to get ready for the Tog!