Why Knot Fishing
It’s no secret that shing for Striped Bass is my favorite type of shing, and shing for them from a kayak may be my favorite way to target them. ere is nothing like hooking up to a big sh, and getting towed around while ghting the sh and trying to land it.
Continued on boston page 1
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By Capt. Michael Okruhlik
AN
GAME PLAN FOR
ARTIFICIALS INSHORE
October is one of my favorite months to fish, and the dwindling traffic on the bays is just a small reason why. September may have been a record hot month for a lot of us, but the transition of the seasons is more than just the temperature for wildlife. The length of the days play a big part in the fish transitions for the season. Although October opens several new opportunities for anglers, I am going to give you an insight as to how I plan to catch them.
The marsh should be full of life and hold an
abundant amount of the big three: trout, redfish and flounder. It will not be uncommon to find all three in the same location gorging themselves on last spring’s hatch of shrimp and finfish. I will predominantly throw smaller soft plastics in the 3.25-inch size. I like a durable lure because the action can be fast and furious, and I don’t want to waste time changing out lures after one or two fish and miss my opportunity for more. I lean toward paddletails because I can work them faster, cover more water, and the added
vibration will draw strikes since these fish will be aggressive. The cover type and water depth will determine if I rig them weedless or on a jig head. Either method is acceptable, just adapt to the structure.
I prefer to fish outgoing tides in these areas. Generally, an outgoing tide produces a better bite and concentrates fish in smaller areas where I can target them. These pinch points can be mouths of drains, bayous, pinch points within a bayou or a bend. Those are the more obvious ones, but don’t overlook points extending into a bay or cuts through a reef. The points of islands or reefs can also increase the flow of current congregating the fish in an area.
Here are some retrieves I like to use for each of these three species in October. Keep in mind none of the fish read this article, so you will catch others on these retrieves. In general, reds will hit a lure on a steady retrieve, trout like the erratic twitch-twitch, and flounder react well to my lure darting along the bottom. When darting my lure along the bottom, I hold my rod tip down or sideways to the water and give it firm twitches. I make sure to keep my lure on the bottom and not bouncing it up and down like I would for trout. I want to disturb the bottom to get their attention.
As we all know, all fish will eat any retrieve, but if you are not catching the species you want, try a different action before you change the lure. Enjoy the cooler weather and take a kid fishing, I know I will do both!
Capt. Michael Okruhlik is the inventor of Knockin Tail Lures®, and the owner of www.MyCoastOutdoors.com.
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Jetty Fishing:
TIPS ON BECOMING A ROCK JOCKEY
The presence of life was obvious long before we reached the jetty. On an outgoing tide, dingy water rushed through the channel cut from the bay to the ocean. It flushed with a brown plume that carried the detritus of marsh decay.
Diving birds were the first sign we were in the right place at the right time. As we got closer, other anglers came into view. There were a couple of boats jockeying for position off the end of the jetty, another trolled the rip farther offshore, and the beach brigade was set up fishing that corner pocket where current flowing down the shore piled up against the rocks.
Pods of pogies flickered and darted, harassed by gulls from above and by redfish, trout, small sharks and who knows what else from below. Blue crabs skittered around doing cleanup duty just outside a light surf.
With all this life, catching fish shouldn’t be a problem, right? Well, if you talk to any veteran of
By Nick Carter
the rocks, they’ll tell you putting in the time to learn a particular jetty is the key to success. Every jetty has its own peculiarities, its best times and tides, its hidden holes and mixing currents.
Here are a few tips to help flatten the learning curve at a new jetty.
1) Start in the Rocks: The food chain of a jetty is created by the stuff pushed against the rocks. The rocks also create current breaks and hidey holes where predators lay in ambush for baitfish, shrimp and crabs that feed on the buildup of organic matter. Start your search close to the rocks. Work quickly but meticulously to pick a jetty apart. You can’t see everything that’s going on under the surface, but with experience, the sweet spots will become evident.
2) Make Friends with the Old Guy: In the scenario above, it was our first time to this jetty, and we went straight in with a cast net to scoop up pogies. It seemed obvious to match the hatch, and we caught some fish… mostly stingrays
and catfish. As we clambered all over the jetty in search of the magic combination of factors to produce a more exciting catch, an old man posted up in a beach chair came tight with an enormous bull red. After helping him land the fish and jawing with him a while, he gave up a secret. He’d been fishing the jetty for years, and big reds and tarpon at this spot are suckers for half a fresh blue crab fished on the bottom. Because jetties draw anglers as well as fish, being friendly or just watching can lead to solid local knowledge.
3) Find the Current Seams: Fish where fast and slack current meet. Predators hang in the slack and wait as a conveyer belt of food is swept past them. Conversely, baitfish also seek refuge and stack up where there is current shade. Either situation makes these areas high probability targets for anglers.
For more fishing tips, go to coastalanglermag.com.
PHOTO CREDIT: WAYNE CROSS
PHOTO CREDIT: DON SHETTERLY
PHOTO CREDIT: SHANE TROTTIER
GAR CAUGHT ON 6-LB. TEST!
A283-pound alligator gar caught at Sam Rayburn Lake in Texas is set to break a 72-year-old IGFA alltackle world record. Here’s the kicker: It was landed with 6-pound-test line!
Kentucky angler Art Weston teamed up with Texas Capt. Kirk Kirkland on Sept. 2, in search of lineclass records. Weston is an IGFA record breaker who already has numerous lineclass records for alligator gar and other species. It was the first day of a week-long booking aboard Capt. Kirkland’s The Garfish Enterprise, and they hooked and landed what Kirkland called “the Holy Grail of the fishing world.”
Sam Rayburn Lake is the largest reservoir in Texas at 114,000 acres. It’s an impoundment of the Angelina River near the Louisiana border north of Jasper, Texas. According to a report on FoxWeather.com, Kirkland told Weston of an area on the lake with a sandy, snag-free bottom that would suit light line tactics well. The guide also told Weston there might not be many fish in the area, but they were obviously going for quality over quantity.
Before the pending world record showed up on the scene, the pair caught two other monster alligator gar, including a 169-pounder. When they came tight with the
largest alligator gar caught in nearly three-quarters of a century, it took about three hours, remarkable skill and more than a little bit of luck to land the fish on such light line.
“Lots of blood, sweat and tears (and broken line) went into this achievement,” Kirkland wrote on Facebook. “Angler and world record Chaser Art Weston and I did what no other alligator gar angler has been able to accomplish in 72 years.... catch a fish bigger than the all-tackle world record set so many years ago on the bank of the Rio Grande River.”
The existing all-tackle world record weighed 279 pounds. It was caught by Bill Valverde from the Rio Grande in 1951.
“We both had a look of shock when the scale just kept going higher and higher,” Kirkland said. The gar weighed 283 pounds on camera. It measured 100 inches long, with a 48-inch girth. After taking measurements, the giant fish was released alive.
To read the entire FoxWeather report, go to https://www.foxweather.com/lifestyle/world-recordalligator-gar-texas-sam-rayburn-lake
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It’s no secret that fishing for Striped Bass is my favorite type of fishing, and fishing for them from a kayak may be my favorite way to target them. There is nothing like hooking up to a big fish, and getting towed around while fighting the fish and trying to land it.
When choosing a kayak for saltwater fishing I would only suggest getting a siton-top kayak. You don’t want to be in a situation out on the water where you flip your kayak, and not be able to get back into it. I would also suggest a longer kayak, and preferably one with a rudder, to help better stay on track through
Why Knot Fishing
By Joe Gugino
the wind and waves. And if you are really committing to saltwater kayak fishing, your only choice is a Hobie pedal-drive kayak. When spending as much time on the water as I do, pedal-drive is the only way to go. Not only is the pedal-drive faster, but it is also less tiring. And when trying to get spot to spot, or when actually fishing, you will catch more fish because your hands are free!
After choosing the kayak, you want to make sure you are rigged up and ready to go, and the most important thing is safety. ALWAYS wear a proper-fitting life jacket on the water. Even
though you may be a good swimmer, you won’t be able to swim if you fall out and hit your head. I also always have a dive knife, and pliers right on my life jacket in case I need to quickly access them. I also suggest having a flag at least three feet high behind your seat so you are visible. And if fishing at night, make sure you have a light on the flag, a head lamp, and reflective tape on your kayak. Other things I carry with me are a waterproof two-way radio, air horn, a first-aid kit, and water (always stay hydrated!)
The best thing about fishing from a kayak is that you can access so much more water
that you can’t get to from land, and might not be able to access from a boat either. You are much quieter than a boat so you can truly sneak up on, and not spook, fish in shallow water. You can use all the typical strategies and lures like plugs, fly, or bait, but one of the most effective tactics is fishing a tube and worm. I don’t fish tube and worm as often as I did when I first started, but a simple 2-foot or 3-foot long tube, preferably in dark red, with a nice juicy seaworm on the back is hard for a Striped Bass to resist. Just cast the tube behind you and slowly troll the worm over shallow or deep structure.
COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM | OCTOBER 2023 | BOSTON 1
George K. Regan, Jr. Publisher Boston Edition
Julie Kahn President, Regan Marketing & Media
Looking for a great fishing getaway? Well, if you're a smallmouth bass maniac like me and you enjoy incredible scenery, you should plan a trip to the Penobscot River in Maine.
When I made the trek in early September, I had already fished a good portion of the 109-mile long Penobscot, and I’d never been disappointed. But what brought me back this time was an invitation from Jeff and Mary Arrants, owners of the Penobscot River Cabins in Howland, Maine. Jeff and Mary always get a booth each year at the New England Fishing & Outdoor Expo, and I wanted to return the favor by visiting their beautiful cabins and river setting.
The Penobscot River is the longest river in Maine that flows entirely within the state. Treasured for its natural beauty, challenging rapids and extraordinary fish populations,
Snatching Smallies on the Penobscot
By Go Fish Dan
the Penobscot is an angler’s paradise.
On this particular adventure, my first day up north just happened to be the same day that Hurricane Harvey blew through Maine. Although the torrential rains shut us down on day one, day two was a prolific one, as we were able to reel in a hundred smallies. A lot of people have commented online and in social media that the Penobscot is lacking in big monster smallies. While I would tend to agree with this assessment, I have reeled in three- and four-pound smallies, and even one that flirted with the five-pound mark. But, yes, on average you're going to find smallies in the range of one to three pounds.
So what’s the best way to fish for smallies on the Penobscot? It’s well known that they love a fly presentation, including poppers, streamers, buggers, clousers, topwaters,
but if you’re not comfortable with a fly rod and prefer spin fishing, smallmouth love tubes, no matter what body of water you’re on. I have a full arsenal of rocky ledge tackle spinnerbaits, and the smaller profile loaded for bass-crazy quarter ounce gauge spinnerbaits. These two New England companies make Spinnerbaits that are proven to be killer on the river. Another bait that is super productive is the blue fox vibrax spinners in Gold, Copper or Silver depending on the day.
One important note:
If you’re heading to the Penobscot, be aware that there are rocks and boulders by the tens of thousands. You’ll want to have an aluminum boat, a drift boat or a canoe or kayak setup—unless you have the ability to go out and drop $30K on a jet boat! The good news is that Jeff and Mary have the perfect boats for rent, including aluminum boats, kayaks and canoes,
Of course, when you’re staying at the Penobscot River Cabins, you can’t go wrong no matter what you do out on the water. The cabins are beautifully rustic and simple, and the rental price reflects that. If you do not need a king-size bed, jacuzzi or spa you'll be just fine at a GREAT price.
The Penobscot River
Cabins are an adventure awaiting your arrival. You’ll discover beautiful scenery and a waterway so stocked with fish that you really can’t miss. Plus, you just might have the chance to watch bald eagles glide down and scoop up fish 100 feet behind your boat! So if you’re looking for a great way to discover the amazing Penobscot River, grab your gear and your boat and get in touch with Jeff and Mary Arrants.
Until then, God Bless and Go Fish!
2 BOSTON | OCTOBER 2023 | COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM
EDITORIAL
COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM | OCTOBER 2023 | BOSTON 3 (Continued from Page 2) EDITORIAL
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Ok so “match the hatch” is a freshwater fly fishing term. So what is a saltwater fly guide doing talking about “the hatch”? Like most of us who grew up floating small dry flies on a clear flowing creek, we were always taught to match our fly patterns to what the fish are feeding on. Heck I’ve even seen guys siphon a trout’s stomach before release to see what they were eating! I always thought that was odd since they landed the fish on a certain pattern to begin with, but I digress. Like most of you who ventured onto larger bodies of water with much higher salinity levels in search of Striped Bass on the fly, I just assumed that mantra of matching what the prevalent bait is, was the way to land more fish. What I’ve learned over the years of slinging feathers on a string is a much different story.
Here are a few tips that I will share after 35 years of observing bait fish and the game fish that prey on them.
Don’t Match the Hatch!
By Captain John Curry
Think like a human and not a fish. So let’s say you have a few acres of sweet corn about to be harvested. At first you love all that steamed buttery goodness, but after a few weeks of all the corn you can eat your already giving bushels of it away to your neighbors. It’s the same principle with Stripers. When the first run of migrating fish show up they know that Cape Cod Bay will be full of Sand Eels. I start out the day in the early season with a typical clouser/sand eel colored pattern. Sure the fish will eat it, but try the same approach in mid-June and you will find they won’t hit as readily. I start to mix up my patterns very early in the season to see what is preferred. I’ve had great days tossing anything but Sand Eel patterns when that was the only bait around.
Know your Baitfish Calendar. Stripers have a variety of forage species to choose from on their migration and it’s important to know what types are more prevalent at certain times in the areas you
fish. I like to use patterns that mimic the bait that should be showing up prior to it actually being available for the fish to feed on. In Buzzards Bay we have a nice run of Grass Shrimp on the flats around the end of June. I use my redfish shrimp patterns before these shrimp show up. Stripers have an internal clock and it’s no coincidence why they are where they are. Over thousands of years of evolution they know where the next run of bait will be. I’ve seen stripers hanging around the Bourndale Herring Run weeks before the Herring show up.
Stand out in the crowd. If stripers are working a school of Silversides and there is thousands of baitfish in the water how will a fish single out your fly in the mix? Sometimes they will, often they won’t. So I mix it up with a fly that matches the size and shape,
but not the color. Last season the color of choice on the north side was the Electric Chicken. The pink-yellow-chartreuse color simply stood out in a crowd of bait and the fish really loved it. We also used a pattern that I tie for Snook when the flats were full of Sand Eels and man did the fish like that pattern. Its shape is nothing like a sand eel with grey and pink colors on a 2/0 hook.
Have a Go-To Fly. For me it’s a small Squid pattern. Small Squid are like candy to a Striper. I always have an assortment of these flies and when it’s a slow day it usually saves the charter with bent rods.
I hope this article gets you to mix things up this coming season. Learn your baitfish seasonal patterns and try and stay ahead of when you think they’ll show up. More importantly make sure you stand out in the crowd.
COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM | OCTOBER 2023 | BOSTON 5
EDITORIAL
6 BOSTON | OCTOBER 2023 | COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM CATCH OF THE MONTH
Sales Representative
Plum Island Surfcasters
Club Meeting: Plum Island Surfcasters club meeting on September 19, 2023: Michael Toole will present: Stripers from the Rocks: Different terrains call for different techniques.
Check our website (www.plumislandsurfcasters.org) for details on upcoming events
For more details contact: Ashley Boiardi aboiardi@regancomm.com 617-488-2842
Salisbury, MA Senior Center (behind the fire station), 43 Lafayette Rd (Route 1), Salisbury, MA 01952.
Meetings at 6:45 pm | Fishing seminar at 8:00 pm Free for all club members. $5 admission for Non-members
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COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM | OCTOBER 2023 | BOSTON 7
Coastal Angler Magazine, Boston JOB TYPE: PART-TIME REQUIRED EXPERIENCE: FISHING & SALES Coastal Angler Magazine, Boston, a company of Regan Communications Group, has an immediate opening for a Sales Representative for our Boston location. RESPONSIBILITIES: • Selling all advertising (both print and web) • Directing content development (for print, website and social media) • Procuring and editing copy from 5-8 writers monthly • Managing the layout and collaborating on graphic design • Creating concept and copy for print ads • Delivering and managing the distribution of 10,000 copies monthly • Maintaining all vendor/client relationships
• A keen knowledge of the fishing industry. • At least two years of sales experience. • Candidate must be able to work effectively in a demanding and fast-paced environment.
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8 BOSTON | OCTOBER 2023 | COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM
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COOK ISLANDS GRANDER CAUGHT SOLO FROM A 22-FOOT BOAT
Catching a grander is one of the most sought-after feats in sportfishing. Boats, crews and anglers enter rare air when they hook and land a 1,000-pound-plus marlin, and untold time and money are spent chasing the dream.
Fishing solo from a 22-foot boat, angler Arnold Pauro achieved his lifelong dream Aug. 25 when he hauled in a 1,128-pound blue marlin that is a new record for the Cook Islands. According to the Cook Island News, Pauro came tight with the huge blue fishing just 3 miles off the southern end of the island Rarotonga.
Rarotonga is the most populated of the Cook Islands, which is an archipelago nation out in the middle of the South Pacific northeast of New Zealand. Rarotonga is renowned for excellent flats fishing, especially for bonefish, and like many volcanic islands, the water drops into thousandfoot depths just a few miles offshore. This creates a situation where bluewater fishing is very accessible, even for anglers in smaller boats.
According to the Cook Island News, Pauro managed to subdue the giant fish solo in his small boat, Haurua, by keeping a short line. He first brought the fish boat-side after just 3 minutes, and then all hell broke loose. Arnold told the news outlet that the fish jumped 40 or 50 times and ran out of steam after about an hour and a half.
“I kept it to 50 metres of line, kept it short, I don’t like letting my marlin go,” he told the Cook Island News.
Arnold’s fish topped the Cook Island weight record of 1,045 pounds, which was set by angler Paku Poila in November 2020. The IGFA all-tackle world record for blue marlin was caught off Brazil in 1992. It weighed 1,402 pounds.
To read the original report, go to www.cookislandsnews.com.
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For the third time in the last 13 years, serious flaws have been revealed in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) data collection programs for recreational fisheries. A recent pilot study conducted by NOAA itself and published in August found that estimates on angler effort might be overestimated by 30 to 40 percent.
These inflated estimates are important because they are part of the equation used to manage our fisheries. The data is used in stock assessments, and to estimate harvest numbers and recreational discard. By overestimating angler effort, catch data is also inflated, which means the data erroneously reflects a larger harvest by recreational anglers than actually exists.
In a nutshell, the pilot study found that the Marine Recreational Information Program’s Fishing Effort Survey is confusing to respondents, which led to “reporting errors” and “illogical responses.” NOAA said this survey, which is mailed to licensed saltwater anglers, “remains the best and sometimes the only available science for tracking relative year-to-year and long-term effort trends.”
The immediate reaction to this revelation from some outlets was a call to reduce restrictions on recreational anglers. The estimate means fewer fish were actually caught, which means there are more fish still in the water, right? Not so fast. This catch and effort data also figures into stock assessments. The inflated effort numbers translate to an overestimation in fish populations.
“The news of this significant overestimation has serious implications for all of our fisheries. Since every species is managed differently, the ramifications of this information cannot be quantified under a singular umbrella,” reads a
report from the American Saltwater Guides Association (ASGA). “It does not mean that because fishing effort is less than originally expected, there must be more fish to harvest. In fact, it will mean there needs to be a major re-calibration because effort is used to help determine stock size. If we have overestimated effort, we also overestimated the stock. We must go species by species to understand the best path for management moving forward. Now more than ever, we need to be precautionary in our management approach.”
NOAA has indicated it will initiate further studies into the findings of its pilot study, according to the ASGA report. Meanwhile, a group of marine conservation and recreational fishing organizations has ramped up its call to wrest control of recreational data collection from the federal government and turn it over to state agencies.
“Yet another major revision to the federal recreational data collection system is upon us, and it should bring a realization that NOAA is just not capable of doing this job,” said Ted Venker, conservation director of the Coastal Conservation Association. “At best we are looking at several more years of questionable revisions, recalculations, and recalibrations based on a suspect data system that has never proven it can produce accurate information. This is no way to manage a public resource. It would be irresponsible to continue down this road rather than exploring and supporting state-based options to better manage the recreational sector wherever feasible.”
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Read NOAA’s report on its pilot study at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/ recreational-fishing-data/fishing-effort-survey-research-and-improvements. NOAA REVEALS SERIOUS FLAW IN ANGLER DATA
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31-INCH LIMIT ON ATLANTIC STRIPER EXTENDED
New Management Plan Delayed Until at Least January
Recreational anglers in Chesapeake Bay and along the Atlantic Coast must continue to release all striped bass longer than 31 inches after fisheries managers extended an emergency regulation that was set to expire on Oct. 28. The extension’s new expiration date is Oct. 28, 2024, which gives the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) more than a full year to grapple with a complex management plan intended to rebuild the coastwide striper population by 2029.
The emergency measure was first implemented in May, after estimates showed recreational harvest nearly doubled in 2022 over 2021’s figures. At the time, projections plummeted from a 97 percent chance the stock would be rebuilt by 2029 to just a 15 percent.
NOAA’s Fisheries Effort Survey, which was found recently to have overestimated angler effort by 30 to 40 percent, is an important part of recreational harvest estimates. It also plays into stock assessments for the striped bass fishery.
However, scientists still believe striped bass reproduction has been down since 2015. The 2015 age class was strong, and those fish are now the larger fish in the population that contribute most to reproduction. The emergency measure was implemented to protect the larger breeding fish.
The Chesapeake Bay “Trophy” season, which has historically been an important fishery for bay anglers, is exempt from this emergency regulation. The short early May season in Maryland has allowed anglers to keep one fish longer than 35 inches per person. A press release from ASMFC warned anglers that this special season might change once the emergency measure is replaced by a management plan that is supposed to come from ASMFC’s Addendum II of the Atlantic Striped Bass Fishery Management Plan.
Addendum II is a complex document with a range of management options intended to rebuild the striped bass stock by the end of the decade. It was hoped Addendum II would be ready for implementation in October. After five hours of back and forth at an August commission meeting, the decision was made to delay action. Now, the earliest a new management plan can be implemented is January 2024.
“Moving the emergency action forward was an important stop-gap measure to balance fishing mortality in the recreational fishery,” said David Sikorski, a Maryland delegate to the ASMFC. “Unfortunately, the delay in advancing draft Addendum II leaves uncertainty in our ability to meet our rebuilding goals and reduce overall fishing mortality ahead of the 2024 fishing year. Between now and the October 2023 meeting, draft Addendum II will be updated and provided to the board and posted online.”
The 31-inch maximum emergency rule will remain in place until Oct. 28, 2024, or until it is replaced by restrictions in Addendum II.
For more information, go to http://www.asmfc.org/
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COURTESY
SNELLING A HOOK
Snelling a hook is an age-old way of attaching it to your line. It is a technique that pre-dates the invention of hook eyes, when hooks only had flattened tops and snelling the hook was required to create a good connection to the line.
Thanks to hook eyes, this is no longer necessary, but a snell knot remains one of the best connections out there for simple line-to-hook connections. The knot’s ability to orient the point of the hook in the right direction for octopus and circle hooks makes it a go-to knot for live and cut bait fishing. You’ll get more solid hook sets when you snell circle hooks.
A snell knot is quick and easy to tie and it provides a strong connection. The only real disadvantage is the knot is on the shank of the hook, where it is vulnerable to the teeth of toothy critters. It’s probably not the best choice if you’re fishing for muskie or barracuda.
For more information, go to usangler.com.
HAVE
YOU CAUGHT A LENGTH-RECORD SMALLIE?
This gorgeous Colorado River smallmouth bass is a new IGFA alltackle world length record for the species.
The chunky smallmouth measured 53 centimeters (20 inches) on an official IGFA measuring device, which tied the fish for the length record with two other officially recognized smallies. Sarah Harris landed her big fish while night fishing on the Colorado River in Arizona. It slammed a topwater lure and was boated after a short fight. After snapping some photos, Harris released it safely.
Harris’s bass tied a smallmouth caught by William Brent Evans from Alabama’s Lake Guntersville in 2014 as well as one caught from Washington’s Osoyoos Lake by Shane Hoelzle in 2020.
The IGFA all-tackle world record smallmouth by weight is a longstanding 11-pound, 15-ounce mark that was set in 1955 by David Hayes at Dale Hollow Lake in Tennessee.
Hayes’s Dale Hollow fish is a record that might stand forever, but those length records can be beaten. While a 20-inch smallmouth is definitely a trophy fish, 20-plus inchers are caught pretty regularly. It’s a matter of time before someone with an official IGFA measuring device puts one in the boat. For more, go to IGFA.org.
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SEARCH WITH A BLADED JIG
TYLER WOOLCOTT
This time of year, when bass are feeding up ahead of winter, it’s tough to beat a bladed jig—or Chatterbait—to find hungry fish.
In most cases, the Chatterbait is in my arsenal as a search bait to cover a ton of water. There isn’t a piece of cover that I can think of that I haven’t thrown it around with success. Docks, wood, grass, rocks, anywhere a bass might live and feed is a good place to throw it. Most of the time you can locate fish with this bait and then go back through the same area with something else and pick up some more bites. If there are hungry bass around and you present this bait in the right way, you will get a bite.
A lot of times I am trying to duplicate an injured baitfish with a Chatterbait, whether they be shad, shiners or bluegill. Whites, golds and green pumpkin colors are my go to baitfish imitators and are what I have tied on most of the time. If the water is dirty or when fish are feeding on crayfish, I’ll switch to a black and blue or even an orange or red color. Match a trailer bait of your choice on the back like a swimbait or a craw trailer, and you’ll be good to go.
Chatterbait bites are usually reaction strikes, so I vary the retrieve to create erratic action while keeping the lure in the strike zone. I do this by speeding up my retrieval speed and then pausing for a very short period of time and then resuming a normal retrieval rate. Believe it or not, there are way more fish that follow your bait and don’t commit than you think. A very small adjustment in the speed can make the difference and convince these fish to eat. A 3/8-oz. and a ½-oz. are pretty much the only two sizes I throw. This covers all different depth ranges from a foot of water down to 10 feet. Cover as much water as possible until you pin point a healthy population of feeding bass then slow down with a different bait that you can work slower.
Chatterbait Gear
A moderate-action rod makes a huge difference when it comes to keeping fish hooked up. The 13 Fishing Omen Black 7’4mhm is absolutely perfect for fishing a Chatterbait. I pair a 7:5:1 gear ratio Concept A 13 Fishing reel with this and spool it with 17-lb. Seaguar Abraz X. I throw some bigger line with this, as you are usually around some type of cover and are working the bait fairly fast, so they won’t get a chance to see your line anyway.
Hope this fishing tip will give you some confidence to try this technique, if you haven’t already. It flat out catches them. Good luck out there and tight lines!
Tyler Woolcott is a professional tournament angler and guide. Check out his website at www.tylerwoolcottfishing.com.
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TIPS FROM A PRO
RECORD MAHI CAUGHT OFF WASHINGTON STATE
A20-pound mahi might not be surprising off the coasts of Florida or Mexico, but this 21-pound, 48-inch-long dolphinfish is a super rare catch off the coast of Washington State. It’s the largest one anyone’s ever caught there.
Angler Wade La Fontaine caught his state record mahi 42 miles out in the Pacific off the Washington coast on Aug. 25. He was on a charter trip with Capt. Keith Johnson aboard the Tunacious. They were trolling for tuna with plastic squid lures behind a spreader when the mahi hit.
Upon landing at the dock in Westport, Washington, the dolphinfish was checked by a Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife biologist, then weighed on a certified scale. After review, the record was certified on Aug. 30.
Dolphinfish are sporadically caught by recreational and commercial fishers targeting albacore tuna and other species off the Washington and Oregon coasts, including a handful recorded last year at the ports of Westport and Ilwaco and at least two this summer.
“Most mahi mahi caught off our coast are smaller fish in the 6- to 12-pound range,” read a WDFW press release. “La Fontaine’s fish — which was 48 inches long and 40 inches to the inside fork of the tail — was more reminiscent of large
dolphinfish caught in warmer waters off southern California, Mexico and Hawaii.”
The previous Washington state record weighed 16.27 pounds. It was caught by Albert DaSilva in 2013.
The charter reported 70-degree water temperature in the area where the fish was caught, which is warm, even for the warmer offshore currents, though not unprecedented especially during El Nino years, explained the release.
The Return of a
“I’m blessed beyond comprehension,” La Fontaine said. “I’ll be getting another tattoo of a mahi!”
Albacore tuna are the primary target for Pacific Northwest offshore anglers, with large schools of these “longfin tuna” abundant off the coast of northern California, Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia in the summer and early fall. Albacore are found in the blue water, a mass of warmer Sea Surface Temperature water typically found off the West Coast of North America during summer and fall, and off Southern California yearround.
For more information, go to https://wdfw.wa.gov/
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