Fishing Reports And News

The strong temperature edge on the charts was really interesting. June Bug had the Hutchinson Gang out for their annual offshore adventure and we headed to where fish had been for well over a week. The charts predicted a 6 degree break and we found that in the dark 16 miles inshore of the Lindenkohl on the 40 line. The break was a 4 degree concentrated break in little more than 1/4 mile with a further 2 degree change over the next mile or so. There was not much of a weed line to speak of so we kept going to the drop.

The weather was not bad at all. Seas were 2 to 4 from the Northeast with a little Southeast swell mixed in. A nice ride out.

We worked the edge and after an hour or so decided to move back in to the temp break. We caught one 20 pound Yellowfin on the way and another once we got back to the break. Nothing much happened for several hours. No bait, no whales, no porpoise. Some boats on the radio were reporting whales and porpoise but we never saw any all day.

After about 4 hours with no action, we noticed one member of the charter group was sitting down in the main cabin eating a BANANA. Not only was he breaking with tradition, he was likely the cause of the four hours of no action. Further, he not only was eating one BANANA, he had two more of them. After a round of hazing from everyone on board, Paul came up to the bridge deck and threw the 3 BANANAS overboard behind the boat. Just as the 3 BANANAS hit the water, the long bait went off with a good strike. It was as if the BANANAS had hit the fish on the head. Dave Rinear got the rod and worked the catch to the boat. A plastic bag. At least we had had a good laugh out of the BANANA fracas.

We caught one Fat Albert later in the day and that was it.

The wind picked up a little mid-day but settled down the later it got.

The trip in was uneventful. Sea conditions were pretty good and we made a fast trip. For some reason, lots of people were calling us on the radio thinking we were in trouble. We never found out why they were all so excited since the sea conditions were fine especially for our boat.

June Bug hosted the Bell Family from near Cleveland, Ohio yesterday.  We fished Inshore and were able to finally find some fish.  There were plenty of Taylor Blues just outside the Bell Buoy so we caught them on Bud Miles Birds and Clark Spoons for a couple of hours.

After the Bells caught enough little Blues for dinner, we went to some spots just outside the LE Reef and found, yet again, huge quantities of Sea Bass.  We actually got a few nibbles from these.  None were caught though until the last few minutes of fishing when one angler caught a double header of shorts.  A few tiny Sea Robins were caught during the morning as well.

Call to check open dates.

Capt. Lindsay Fuller     Cell 609-685-2839    This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

Sea conditions were outstanding this past Tuesday.  June Bug fished Inshore with Dave Ferris and his 2 sons.  Once again, we found huge quantities of Sea Bass but the water temps were frigid at the bottom.

We ended up going in to 30' and snagging Bunker in pods that seemed to be very active.  Perhaps Bluefish were lurking underneath.  Nope.  No Bluefish but a Black Tip Shark made a good account of itself and created excitement for the boys.

Call to check into open dates. 

Capt Lindsay Fuller   609-685-2839   This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

The fish were reported to be in the Wilmington all week so that's where June Bug headed last Saturday with the Ray Hibbs/John Hancock party.  We were short one angler, Joe V, who we had planned to introduce to a certain attractive, smart young lady on the trip, initials KH.  An excellent angler, by the way.  Joe wimped out on short notice and whined to us later that "he didn't feel so good."  Hmmm.  A problem there meeting the ladies, Joey?

OK, we were Joe-less but we started fishing the Wilmington right on time at 4:30.  A sloppy ride out.  Lots of spray but the Scarborough softened the ride.  The sea conditions were decent but not great as we got the lines in.  Junior Mate Pat Coyne ran the cockpit with the able assistance of John Hancock who had 10 years as a mate some years ago in Pt. Pleasant.  John's a great fisherman and hopefully Pat learned something from his guidance.

We worked the edges and out into the deep from the East Wall.  Back and forth.  The water temps were steady at 72 and change.  The best they got all day was 73.  No temp edges at all.

Around 10 a.m. we had a pack of BigEyes climb on us.  Three lines went down and one stayed down.  John's friend Also John dove on the rod and worked the fish for about 10 minutes.  All of a sudden, the line went slack.  After the line came back, the end was clean so we figure that a fin or tail hit the taut line and cut it.  Stren does not nick easily but the line had been very tight.  Oh well.

Later in the day, a Marlin waved its bill for a few seconds over one bait and disappeared.  No strike.

We fished very late but nothing happened.  Hey, it's fishing, not catching, right?

We heard little positive on the radio either.  Not even bragging.  Oh, Joey missed out BIG time.

Capt. Lindsay Fuller    Cell 609-685-2839     This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

 

Last Friday had nice weather, calm seas, and COLD water.  We tried over a dozen different spots including many on Garden State North & South.  The Lifetime Concrete guys worked hard but ended up with one lousy keeper Sea Bass.  Lots of shorts.  Not one Fluke.  Even the Sea Robins were little guys.  Very frustrating.

Junior Mate Pat Coyne did a more than credible job in the cockpit.

We have an Inshore Charter tomorrow, Tuesday, and I think we will work off into deeper water looking for a little WARMTH!

Inshore fishing is tough right now!

We try but we can't guarantee.

Capt. Lindsay Fuller    Cell 609-685-2839     This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

 

 

 

More Articles...

Page 1 of 4

<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 Next > End >>

thought for the day

June Bug Tee Shirts

June Bug Tee Shirts

Double click location and put in 27959 and hit enter for Nags Head, NC weather

61°
16°
°F°C
Clear
Wind: SW at 9 mph
Wed
Mostly Sunny
46 | 55
7 | 12
Thu
Partly Sunny
46 | 55
7 | 12
Fri
Rain
37 | 57
2 | 13

NJ Saltwater Angler
Survey

saltwater angler survey

NJ Saltwater Angler
Registry

saltwater registry