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Bass season in full effect throughout area
My buddy Skolmann from Bayonne got a call from Capt. Frank from Fins on Feathers charter from Leonardo State Marina on Friday afternoon asking if he was available. When it comes to fishing, this guy is always available. Jason and Skolmann were joined by Capt. Frank Saturday afternoon and collected half a bucket of fiddler crabs and another quarter bucket of Asian crabs. Just in case they also netted several dozen peanut bunker and headed off. They first trolled Clark spoons for a while in hopes of repeating the action Capt. Frank had Saturday morning with over a dozen false albacore in the 10-12-pound class, but no luck this time. Moving out to some snags out between the channels, they had action with blackfish from the start. Fiddlers were the hot bait early before half a green crab became the bait of choice. First three blackfish over the rail were all easy keepers and went in the box. Took a while for Jason to catch his but he eventually did and we had our four-man limit to 6 pounds. In addition, Capt. Frank boxed one of the biggest inshore sea bass seen in a long time. Estimated to be easily between 5-6 pounds. Tide changed and they went inshore and had a pick of "toy" tog and short sea bass with the occasional porgy in the mix. Once the tide turned, they went back to the original spot and again had good action with tog. Green crabs, fiddlers and clam strips were all catching tog. Capt. Steve Purel, of Barnegat Light on Reel Fantasea charters, had regular Joe Franke with Sean Castle and Jan Lambert for an open boat trip. With a building east wind and a deteriorating sea condition, we hit the inlet early to slam the blues on a combination of poppers and plugs. They also enjoyed quality weakfish on plastics. In a local fishing tournament with his brotherin law Steve Amato and Jay Simmons, Capt. Steve had four short bass and loads of blues. Losing a keeper bass was lost when the hook pulled as the fish darted across the inlets jetty; they still managed to have fun enjoying the action and the weather. John Repko was on board with a slower day; the blues less than cooperative and with all the boat traffic any bass that may have been there were not responding, so off to a local wreck they went for some nonstop action that included sea bass, porgies, blackfish, snappers and grunts. Although the guys had some keepers, they were throwing them back faster than throwing them in the cooler. For Hot News and Hot Catches from the IGFA (International Game Fish Association) for the month of October, log on to IGFA.org for all world records and pending status. |
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