This has surely shaped up to be one of the most unpredictable seasons I can recall. We are headed into August, and there are few, if any, fluke being caught in the traditional grounds—Montauk, North Fork, offshore of Long Island, and just about every offshore piece that anglers hunt. Yet, the bays and the sound are producing this year? That's after several years of very poor inshore fishing.
Is it bait holding the fish in these shallow bays? Maybe they didn't have to leave yet? Or is it water temps? Or is this a sign of things to come?
There's something going on that will take a lot more than a size and bag limit on recreational anglers to fix. Sadly, in the eyes of fisheries managers, it is a commercial fish first, and we will be the first ones totally shut out of it. Don't doubt it, folks.
I recall the days we heard, "We need to raise the size limit to 14 inches..." Here we are decades later, and what was once the number one targeted species in New York for recreational anglers has been taken from us. We will continue to be regulated out of the fishery, and there's not a damn thing we can do about it.
But that's for another thread...
What do you think is causing this shift in fluke behavior, and how do you think it will impact future regulations and the recreational fishing community?
Is it bait holding the fish in these shallow bays? Maybe they didn't have to leave yet? Or is it water temps? Or is this a sign of things to come?
There's something going on that will take a lot more than a size and bag limit on recreational anglers to fix. Sadly, in the eyes of fisheries managers, it is a commercial fish first, and we will be the first ones totally shut out of it. Don't doubt it, folks.
I recall the days we heard, "We need to raise the size limit to 14 inches..." Here we are decades later, and what was once the number one targeted species in New York for recreational anglers has been taken from us. We will continue to be regulated out of the fishery, and there's not a damn thing we can do about it.
But that's for another thread...
What do you think is causing this shift in fluke behavior, and how do you think it will impact future regulations and the recreational fishing community?