Fish Report 6/13/2010

Sea Bass In Flurries

Bare Rock

Eco-System

 

Hi All,

Some very fine fishing of late. Working for 'em, shuffling around, changing bait, trying gulps. It's not 'catch a limit' sea bassing, but with high-hook pushing upper teens on a 12 1/2 inch size limit; Someone's heating a skillet.

Works.

Still just the one keeper flounder last week; that'll come.

An odd tog and, amazingly, we're still tagging undersized cod; two on Saturday.

Those cod speak to the slow change of the water this year. I often see white-bellied bass in spring, the sea bass that have been traveling across sandy bottom and have taken on that coloration for camouflage. After what may only be a very short time on reef they'll darken considerably. Perhaps we still have cbass coming in from offshore.

 

Bottom temperature codfish-chilly, there's no doubt topside's coming warm. Almost all the gannets -our winter dive-bombers- have left; Sooty terns have come and gone in their rapid northerly migration; Wilsons storm petrels & common shearwaters--what we call sailor gulls--are increasing in abundance.

Smaller than a robin, Wilsons nest in Antarctica and spend the rest of the year at sea feeding on oils plucked from the surface of the water; their darting, wave-top dancing flight familiar to many fishers, especially shark chummers.

Mola-mola, AKA ocean sunfish, drift along fin-up: "Shark!" But no.. To think of these marine oddities as 'sunnies' would miss nearly half a ton of difference and a shape that really defies explanation..

 

All these untold generations of birds, fish, turtle, mammal; they all depend on an ecosystem that is as it should be, that is whole & wholesome, that is doing what it has always done during their migration or spawning season; their development in the earliest days of life.. a system with parts missing or parts poisoned does not work.

Tried to fish a spot this week that I used to sneak away to now and again even into the early 2000s. Was a time I could fish it with 75 people and move around on it. Now -- This Week -- I could only see some rock on the sounder: No Fish, No Growth, No Sea Whip Meadow.. 

Rock so barren I didn't even bother to try it, to anchor, to fish.

From 75 people pulling steady for an hour or more and throwing back many to 7 anglers not even bothering to wet a line..

If we could see our region's natural reefs as we see that vile oil spill, managers would be far more engaged.

I know what happened to that reef. We lost it to a box or two of flounder; A trawl-net towed across the rock mowed the whip down: That reef is gone.

For now. 

As Wilsons storm-petrels dip, swoop; spoon up a bill-full of Louisiana crude and Ocean sunfish find patches of fake jellyfish tar-balls on which they will feed and in doing so die: Evidence of sudden change in an ecosystem is created.

 

Ocean waves roll ashore just as they ever did.

Have to look a little deeper to see resolution to the reef fisheries rebuilding dilemma..

 

Some research this week and then a comparison of red snapper and sea bass management; that closure looms ugly..

 

And fishing.

Perhaps some of it quite good.

Regards,

Monty

 

Capt. Monty Hawkins
mhawkins@siteone.net
Party Boat "Morning Star"
Reservation Line 410 520 2076
http://www.morningstarfishing.com/

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Fish Report 6/6/2010