Friday Night Blues

July 9th, 2010

The “Unofficial” Opening Report of the 2010 Season.

July 9, 2010: Were this the “official” report, or were I to say that I witnessed or in any way “participated” in the following events, it could be construed as a violation of my contract.

Therefore, I will simply pass along what others have reported, such as this Newsday newspaper article about marauding bluefish biting and chasing swimmers from the water and closing the Hither Hills beach for the afternoon. There was a similar eyewitness tale from Noreast.com and, finally, a fish call I received from Big Bob Wilsusen who got in on the action right in front of my house on Treasure Island beach in Amagansett between 330pm and 4pm.

Big Bob Wilsusen's Bad-Ass Bunker-Chomping Beach-Caught Bluefish. One of 2 eight-10 pounders. Treasure Island Beach, Amagansett, July 9, 2010; 4pm

Bob reached me on the “fish phone” as I was heading east for the weekend.  Two of his house guests had returned from the ocean beach dejected because “fish jumping everywhere in the water” ruined their afternoon by the shore.  Bob mobilized three rods, his brother-in-law and nephew from Florida, and was back at the beach in less than 30 minutes.  He called me on the way and I arrived to find his near 10-pounder breathing its last on the sand.  This was his second fish.  Earlier, Bob reported, he had “one cast, one fish”.  Bob’s wife Karen doesn’t cotton to bluefish so his quarry was my gain.  Filetted, seasoned and onto the grill within a few hours, it made a tasty dinner Friday night dinner. To wit:

RECIPE FOR GRILLED BLUEFISH FILETS

Rinse skinned filets and pat dry with paper towels.

In a shallow baking dish, mix up a tablespoon or so of olive oil, salt, pepper lemon and a little white wine.  For this dressing, less is more.  You only want to coat the fish not marinade it.

Spray some Pam on the grates of a hot grill or rub with olive or vegetable oil.  Lay down the filets and give them 3 to five minutes on the first side, depending upon the heat of your grill and the thickness of the fish.

With a wide metal spatula, carefully turn the fillets. Another two minutes on the second side and you should be good to go.

Variations: you can spice up the dressing with any seasonings or herbs you wish, including soy sauce, fresh ginger and/or garlic, tyhme, etc.  And for sandwiches, put these filets on the bread of your choice with a slice of tomato, onion, lettuce and/or basil, dress with a touch of olive oil or mayonnaise, or pesto, and you have a yummy Long Island BLT (Bluefish, Lettuce & Tomato).

A New Year’s Greeting

December 31st, 2009

DECEMBER 31, 2009

PeaceNewYear2010.001

Christmas Keepers At The Beach

December 25th, 2009

DECEMBER 25, 2009

It gets a tad freaky-deaky on the beach once fishing season ends


Christmas Striper? Not exactly More shenanigans from the funny Frenchman……………..

ChristmasAtTheBeachReindeer

……………….And this one is from one of Treasure Island Drive’s own:

ChristmasAtTheBeachSandMan

I hope it was a great Christmas for you all!

Merry Fishmas!

December 23rd, 2009

DECEMBER 23, 2009

A Fishmas Card for Surfcasters: Striper Blitz!

FishmasCardFINAL

The beginning of the holiday season is, alas, the official end of the striped bass fishing season. In years like this, when the bass are wont to hang around our beaches in the mild ocean waters right up until the very eve of Christmas, the two seasons meld together so as to make the passage a tough one for local surfcasters. In honor of this winter segway, my Big Brother Frank and I make a tradition of rewriting a classic holiday tune. The annual “Fishmas” song is a therapeutic way for us to smooth the transition from lure casters to stocking hangers.

Lyrics by Fred and Frank Abatemarco (with apologies to Silver Bells song writers Jay Livingston and Ray Evans), graphics by Chaweenie, photo by Jack Yee.

STRIPER BLITZ

(to the tune of Silver Bells)

Montauk beaches, busy beaches

Filled with Sharpies galore,

In the surf

There’s a big school

of stripers.

Bass are splashing

Anglers casting

Throwing diamond-jig lures

And from ev’ry surfcaster you’ll hear

Striper blitz, striper blitz

It’s Fishmas time out in Montauk

Keeper bass, on ev’ry cast

Soon it will be Fishmas day.

Soon it will be Fishmas day.

Fish at first light

Even twi-light

Caught on lures red and green

With a teaser

That mimics a sand eel

Make your first stop

Harvey’s Tackle Shop

This is Jack Yee’s big scene

And in Paulie’s of Montauk

You’ll hear

Striper blitz, striper blitz

It’s Fishmas time out in Montauk

Keeper bass, on ev’ry cast

Soon it will be Fishmas day.

Fish or Fowl?

November 26th, 2009

Oh my gosh! It’s a surf turkey!

More fun with Photoshop from the Frenchman.

FredsSurfTurkey

Bonacker’s Thanksgiving

November 25th, 2009
ThanksgivingSlide1.001

End of season sharpshooting by surfcasters on Long Island’s East End

Hunting for wild turkey (the bird, not the Bourbon!) opened last week in East Hampton, a limited hunt and the first since before World War II. Turkeys were stocked in the area, starting about a decade ago, and now they are fairly common. A Bonacker’s Thanksgiving, however, didn’t always include turkey on the table.

Harvey Bennett of Amagansett's Tackle Shop bagged this wild turkey during the limited hunt before Thanksgiving

Harvey Bennett of Amagansett’s Tackle Shop bagged this wild turkey during the limited hunt before Thanksgiving

On the East End, Bonackers (short for the Indian word Accabonac, which roughly means land of ground nuts), are the descendants of the earliest working class English settlers of the hamlet known as Springs. Only a few such families remain of what used to be farmers, baymen and fishermen. The Bonacker family names most commonly include Miller, King, Bennett, Conklin, Havens, Strong and Lester.

These “bubs” lived low on the food chain. In the toughest of times, particularly during the Great Depression, Bonackers were known to eschew the traditional turkey on Thanksgiving and, instead, stuff a big meaty codfish with scallops, stale bread and whatever veggies their gardens would yield. Perhaps there would be some oyster stew or clam chowder, clam fritters or clam pie as well. The codfish, scallops, oysters and clams were plentiful and cheap, cheap, cheap back in the day. Not so any more.

So whether you are fortunate enough to have a fat fowl on your table this holiday, or you are giving a turkey a break by serving a ham, or perhaps a Bonacker’s turkey, here’s wishes for a Happy Thanksgiving from FishTales.

Such a Teaser!

November 24th, 2009

This season, getting your lure to mimic a sand eel on the sandbar was an angler’s best bet for hooking a striped bass in the surf

NOVEMBER 24, 2009

No keeper for me since Saturday. On Sunday, however, I did get 8 short stripers in a split session (630am to 830am; 3pm to 5pm). I even caught a fluke and also a dog fish–aka sand shark–which I got on a double header with a 10-inch striper! Biggest fish I had was 22 inches. The fish were taken at Truck Beach/Napeague State Park—the scene of Saturday’s “keeper” crime, if you will—and west of White Sands. Virtually all, except the micro-bass, hit the red tube teaser. At daybreak, small fish were porpoising right out of the water and there were swirls in the wash. A few birds worked over the gentle surf. It didn’t last long.

This red tube teaser did most of the damage on stripers caught on the ocean beach in Napeague and Amagansett

This red tube teaser did most of the damage on stripers caught on the ocean beach in Napeague and Amagansett

Some quality fish came up both in the morning and in the afternoon on Truck Beach and near Napeague Lane. But Sam Doughty, who had 20 bass for the day, said not one of his was a keeper. Overall, however, the fishing was stupid good the entire weekend from Georgica Beach to Hither Hills with the epicenter being Amagansett. No showly blitzes. Sometimes a few birds working in the early hours. Mostly, however, sharpshooting wherever a patch of water looked fishy or the structure showed a cut in the bar. Bucktailers will be bucktailers and fish were caught on white and chartreuse. But the deadliest lure was the  A27 diamond jig with a green tube–esssentially serving as a TDD (teaser delivery device). Teaser tubes, I learned, made all the difference.

The fish were sometimes right in the wash and mostly just in back of the breakers in the trough beyond the sandbar.  S-l-o-o-w retrieves worked best with an occasional jerk of the lure off the bottom. The sand eels invasion continued unabated. Sunday morning the beach at Napeague was littered with them and it was very common to snag one or two on a retrieve along the bottom.

Sand eels like this one have inundated the sandbars of East Hampton and Montauk and served as the primary bait for stripers and bluefish this fall surfcasting season

Sand eels like this one have inundated the sandbars of East Hampton and Montauk and served as the primary bait for stripers and bluefish this fall surfcasting season

Monday morning the weather turned. Overcast skies, a forecast of showers and winds out of the northeast. At first light, I made a last pre-Thanksgiving run on the beach. Gannets dove big time near White Sands. They moved in fairly  close—to the outer bar—but not close enough. I picked up one 12-inch striper at Napeague before quitting at 9am. Then it was up-island to reality, a birthday dinner with Tono and Le Nozzi di Figaro at the Met. Worse days, I have had.

Monday’s lightening round might have been my season ender (Tick tock!).  Future fish calls and the weather will determine that. In any case, I didn’t plan to return until after the holiday. So the question was, would the Fat Lady sing while I wolfed down Turkey and cranberry sauce?

Gobble Gobble.

Keep(er) The Faith!

November 21st, 2009

Just when I thought I was done, a keeper bass pulled me back in

NOVEMBER 21, 2009

November sunset on the ocean beach at Napeaque

November sunset on the ocean beach at Napeaque

You can get just so much from a good thing

You can linger too long in your dreams

Say goodbye to the “Oldies But Goodies”

Cause the good ole days weren’t always good

And tomorrow ain’t as bad as it seems

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, keeping the faith

–Billy Joel

I’d been fishing on my own for two days, ever since Big Bob Wilsusen and my son Daniel left the beach following a lightening round of surfcasting on Thursday. I had a few small fish and but I was starting to worry that we had reached the end of the 2009 surfcasting season. Fish were being caught, but mostly rats. The fish were  still feeding on sand eels. No sign of big bait. Very few blues were caught.  On Friday, I  saw lots of short bass and only one keeper come up at Atlantic Ave. in the late afternoon. I had two short stripers myself, one right in front of Treasure Island Drive. The one at dusk,  on Truck Beach, was close to keeper-size: maybe 26-1/2 inches. My rough estimate was that for every 10 fish caught, nine were shorts and only one was a 28-inch or larger keeper. Anglers were dragging their lures slowly along the sandbars, sometimes dredging up skates and even small fluke. What was going on, I wondered?

Saturday morning, I searched from Truck Beach east of Napeague Lane all the way west to Georgia. I saw zilch. I stopped to cast a bit here and there, but I couldn’t raise a fish.  Things were dull as dirt. The weather was fine–near perfect, in fact. Water temperatures had cooled to somewhere around 57 degrees F.  A chilly NNW breeze kept the sky clear and plenty of sunshine raised air temperatures to the mid-50s by midday. A blazing orange sunrise at 645am competed for the natural beauty crown with a killer pink-and-gray sunset at 5pm the night before. It was a great day to be on the beach fishing, except for one important detail: where were the fish? I was beginning to think they had all moved west.

Who’s Zoomin’ Who?

At Atlantic Ave. around 7am,  one surfcaster leaving the beach volunteered: “You missed them. It’s all over now. At dawn, fish were jumping and lots of quality fish were taken off the beach.” A few minutes later, another angler offered a different view: “I’ve been here all morning and I have yet to see a fish of any sort caught.” At Harvey’s Tackle Shop, I relayed both stories and asked: “who was lying?” Said Sam Doughty: “they both were”. Too weird. I was starting to loose faith.  It seemed like my Saturday afternoon run was likely to be my last of the season. Perhaps the Napeague Lane Massacre of 11/12/09 was the season climax. Tick Tock. I thought I heard the Fat Lady clearing her throat in the wings.

This teen-sized November keeper fell to a green-feathered teaser in the wash at Napeague State Park

Faith, hope and keeper bass: This teen-sized November striper fell to a green-feathered teaser in the wash at Napeague State Park

After lunch, I rode the beach east to Napeague State Park where at least 40 surfcasters were into a slow but steady bite of small fish, punctuated every now and then by a keeper bass. I joined in, throwing an A17 Diamond jig with a green tube followed by  a green-feathered teaser. I got one small bass. Then I remembered the slightly heavier, A27 diamond jig that Sam Doughty recommended I buy at Harvey’s Tackle Shop a few hours earlier.

Faith-Based Fishing

Two casts after tieing on that lure, I got a no-nonsense hit a mere 2o yards beyond the sandbar where I stood. My rod bent more than any time in the last two weeks. Line tore off my reel as my drag protested. It was fairly certain I had a quality fish on and it didn’t take long to beach it. My fish was a 31-inch fatty that had been munching on sand eels.

The bite died shortly thereafter and I left the beach before dark to prep for dinner. The bass was oven roasted in white wine, lemon and olive oil, perfumed with basil, thyme and capers. Tono contributed risotto with chicory and carrots. I lit a fire and cranked up some Puccini. Natalie baked a few chocolate fudge cookies for dessert and the night was complete. I was ready to rise early and take one more shot in the morning.

My faith was restored.

Harvey Bennett’s Fish Call, Sam Doughty’s Teaser

November 20th, 2009

Beware the fate of those who ignore the fish call. And woe unto thee who forsake the teaser hook

NOVEMBER 19, 2009

Sunset at Napeague: Sam Doughty leans back on a sunset striper

November Sky at Napeague: Sam Doughty leans back on a sunset striper

Here is the message I picked up on my voice mail at 830am Wednesday morning.

“Hey Fred, you really need to get out to Amagansett, if you aren’t already here. Those fish are stacked up on the beach in front of your house and have been there since before daybreak. It’s about 730am now. Half or three-quarters of Montauk is there, if you want to get in the middle of all the fighting and yelling and screaming. The fish were there last night, too, a couple of 300 or 400 yards to the west of the Napeague Lane. There is an east wind driving bait up on the beach. I don’t know how much longer it will last. Worth a day trip at least. A couple of nice fish came up. Sam fished there last night. I had some smaller fish near Gurney’s.”

Harvey Bennett of The Tackle Shop in Amagansett says he would like to drive a Toyota Prius--but he wouldn't know where to mount the gun rack

Harvey Bennett says he would drive a Toyota Prius--but he doesn't know where to mount the gun rack

That was from Harvey Bennett, proprietor of The Tackle Shop and self proclaimed naked fisherman. I once asked him for a photo and he told me all he had was one of himself fishing in the buff. Heck, I didn’t even know he fished. A good day for Harvey, who Vanity Fair described as the East end’s beloved insult king, is the opportunity to make the most outrageous statement possible to the most unsuspecting, innocent victim.  “I told one tree-hugger,” he proudly recalled,  “that I would be happy to trade in my Chevy pick-up for a hybrid Prius, once I figure out where to mount the gun rack.”

As it turns out, when Harvey is not verbally abusing a friend, customer or random stranger, he does fish. His latest You Tube Video promotion claimed that he caught 50 stripers with his buddy Sam Doughty on a recent afternoon. So his  heads up fish call was all the prompting I required. I put the word out to a few stalwarts that I would be heading east to Amagansett after dinner and I got two takers: my son Daniel and Big Bob Wilsusen.

Big Bob Wilsusen answered the fish call and was rewarded with this chunky 32 inch teen size bass

Big Bob Wilsusen answered the fish call and was rewarded with this chunky teen size bass

We hit the beach at 645am Thursday morning and we didn’t have to travel far. There were already nine trucks in the Napeague Lane parking lot and an equal number on the beach to the west. This is where the action left off when storm Nor’Ida moved through last weekend, and it was where the action picked up again once the waters settled down early in the week.

We stepped into the water halfway between Napeague Lane and Treasure Island Drive. The tide was incoming and the pick was very slow. We threw the lure bag, but the offering of choice was a diamond jig with a green tube—the bigger and heavier the better for the distance required to cast it beyond the sandbar.

At 9am, Big Bob got a hit in the wash.  I was 100 yards down the beach but I could tell by the bend in his rod that he had a quality fish. The striper that came up was a fat and sassy 32-½ inch, teen-sized bass. It was stuffed, literally, to the gills with sand eels.

Not our best day: Daniel played hookey but got skunked and I'm shopping for a new rod

Not our best day: Daniel played hookey but got skunked and I'm shopping for a new rod (photo by Jack Yee)

That pretty much sealed the deal for our morning session. I then ran into a series of equipment snafus. I’ll spare you the details but suffice it to say my day was not improved when a 9 1/2-foot graphite rod broke in two on an ordinary cast. Unfortuately, it was a worse day for Daniel. His hookie-from-work escapade turned into a skunk session. Daniel hadn’t gotten into fish even once this season. And we were rapidly running out of season.

Sam Doughty makes catching quality keeper bass like this one seem like child's play

Sam Doughty makes catching quality keeper bass like this one seem like child's play

Bob filleted his fish and left the beach. Dan and I cast at a few other spots before he left for the LIRR and home. At 315pm, I headed back to the beach solo.  Near the Atlantic Ave. beach entrance, there was a flock of birds working so I humped out to the sandbar and began hurling towards them. Finally, a strike. I was hoping for a keeper bass but came up instead with a hyperactive bluefish. Considering my results to that point, I was thankful nonetheless. Then I moved along to the east where I encountered Harvey Bennett and his buddy Sam Doughty. Sam makes surf fishing–or more precisely, surf fish catching–look easy. He  was nailing stripers on nearly every cast. Harvey was fishing with a tiny rod and reel and wasn’t doing much worse. Their secret: rubber tube teasers tied a few inches above their diamond jigs. At one point, Sam pulled in two baby bass, a double header with one on the main lure and another on the teaser. “Put them in a line and you have a keeper,” Harvey quipped.

Sam took pity on me and showed me how to tie on a red tube teaser which he donated to my cause. I escaped total shame by  nailing a tiny striper in a diaper a few casts later. For a  sunset finale, I moved over to the beach entrance at Napeague Lane where I scored one more micro bass. Both fish were caught on the red teaser. Later, Harvey called to say he left a teaser rig for me at his shop. “Don’t forget to pick it up, you’ll need it in the morning.”

I made sure it was my last stop before home.

My only "keeper" of the day was this hyperactive bluefish

My only "keeper" of the day was this hyperactive bluefish

Nor’easter Ida & the Legend of Richie Bag Foot

November 15th, 2009

Tropical storm Ida went “coastal”  and the the stripers fed hungrily until the beaches and the bite eroded into the surging storm tides

VETERANS DAY WEEK, NOVEMBER 10-14, 2009

Tropical Storm Ida became Nor'Ida, a bruising nor'easter that gouged beaches and stirred up the bass

Tropical Storm Ida became Nor'Ida, a bruising nor'easter that gouged beaches and stirred up the bass

Ida began shaping into a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico right around Election Day. She slammed into the Bayou coast and, as a tropical storm, tore her way across the Florida Panhandle dumping flooding rains in Georgia, before swirling north in an assault on the Atlantic Ocean.

…..And the bass kept coming.

By Veteran’s Day, the barrier beaches of North Carolina, Virginia and eventually the Jersey shore and Long Island were in the clutches of an historic nor’easter. The storm became Nor’Ida and it gouged the local beaches with a vicious east-to-west sweep of the surf. Winds gusted off the ocean at more than 30 mph, and high tides reached well beyond the dune crests and into parking lots.

…..And the bass kept coming.

It was hard to believe that fish could swim in such washing machine chaos, let alone feed. But stripers have their prey at even greater mercy under storm conditions. As the barometer drops, and the weather turns sloppy, stripers feed like mad in the tumultuous white water. And when striped bass bite, surfcasting junkies react.

….And so the bass fisherman kept coming, too.

One Fish, Two Fish, He Gave Away My Bluefish

Blues Brothers: We filled our cooler with these tasty cocktail blues caught in a blitz at Dead Man's Cove

Blues Brothers: We filled our cooler with these tasty cocktail blues caught in a blitz at Dead Man's Cove

I made it out to the beach and hooked up with big Brother Frank on Tuesday morning. The following three days would be Frank’s surfcasting swan song for 2009. His plane ride home to Los Angel-eeze would sky up on Friday the 13th. Tick tock. Time was running out to score a keeper bass. The mild weather held, and we had favorable conditions at first light when we saw a very encouraging sign: a quality fish being walked off the beach at White Sands just as we arrived. We cast for a while with some other anglers but no one raised a fish, so we moved further east. Mid morning, just about at the bottom of the tide, we nailed cocktail blues in a blitz at Dead Man’s Cove. We had these fish all to ourselves for about an hour. When the action subsided, Frank made a gift of two fish to a local Chinese take-out restaurant in Amagansett. Frank trades part of his catch for dishes the restaurant prepares for him using his fresh caught fish. The idea this day was to thank the restaurant for past services–and set the stage for future meals. I was looking forward to mine; Preferably stir-fried in black bean, or sweet-and-sour sauce, or with garlic, ginger and scallions. But Frank said that would have to wait for another day. More like another season. And the reason we gave up two fish from my cooler ……?

Harvey Bennett’s Fish Call and a Visit to Humiliation Beach

Early in the afternoon, we got a fish call from Harvey Bennett of The Tackle Shop and we scoured the East Hampton and Amagansett beaches for signs of life. When we determined that we were too late on that tip, we returned to Montauk town beach, which may as well been called Humiliation Beach for us. For the rest of the day, sharpies left and right of us nailed bluefish after bluefish–and the occassional striper–while Frank and I got none. Perplexed, embarrassed and feeling as low as a couple of googans, we moved to a new spot further east–where we experienced more of the same. Finally, I got two little guys. That was our clue to head home. Mumbling under our breath, we drank scotch and dined on bluefish Mediterranean style (broiled with lemon, olive oil, white wine, capers and fresh basil), spicy roasted sweet potato chips, and mixed salad washed down with a crisp chilled Orvieto. It took a while, but that revived our spirits.

On Veteran’s Day, based on Harvey Bennett’s fish call the day before, we went straight to Atlantic Beach in Amagansett at sunrise. Bullseye. Gulls worked furiously over the wildly pounding surf and gannets dove into bait beyond the white water on the outer bar. Even with the wind-whipped surf, we could see fish tails splashing. Stripers were porpoising in the wash and Frank and I jumped from his Bronco and cast to them, shouting a whup-whup-whup cry of victory. Here is where we get well for sure, we thought. A bit premature as it turned out.

The punishing northeast wind stung our faces, but the fish were within our reach. The only problem, is they wouldn’t bite. Here we came upon our first bona fide bass blitz of the season and the fish turned out to be picky eaters.  At first, Frank and I concluded: “we really suck”. But we saw that most sharpies had the same bad luck. Not a lot anyone can do if the fish choose to fast.

Humiliation Beach, Part II

The birds headed east, following the fish that chased the bait and we did the same. Eventually, the winged mayhem  subsided near Napeague Lane. A few bluefish were raised but we didn’t see any bass taken at first. Then, suddenly, it was “Welcome to Humiliation Beach II”. A bucktailer started getting a bent rod on every cast. Meanwhile, we couldn’t buy a bump.  We gradually worked our way out to Montauk where we me up with a quorum of locals sharpies so we didn’t even bother to check Montauk Point. We hopeds for a repeat of the Dead Man’s Cove action that sustained us so many times in the last week. For sure, there were birds working over bait—gulls and gannets—but they didn’t come inside the bar. With the early afternoon’s rising tide, however, we got into a slow pick of bluefish on Montauk town beach. When this died out, we moved over to Hither Hills where the wind and tide drove water up onto a four foot high ridge line that the storm was beginning to carve from a formerly sloping sandy beach.  There was hardly a bird or other natural sign to recommend this spot.  However, at least a dozen of Montauk’s surfcasting Murderers’ Row were lined up like fence posts pulling in fish. Hurling Kastmasters, bucktails and diamond jigs, Frank and I filled our cooler with a half dozen decent sized blues, but no bass. But our jaws dropped more than once as we watched a couple of cow bass come up right next to us–one at least 30 pounds.

Cold, wet, tired and hungry, we quit before dark to clean our catch and prepare dinner: Bluefish ragu over linguine, and oven-baked bluefish marinara.

The Thursday Morning Massacre at Napeague Lane

One way or another, Thursday would be our last fishing day. Frank had honey-do chores and the storm was getting intense, likely to shut down the bite in the next tide or two. We hoped for a repeat of the prior day, only with fish more receptive to our offerings. At first light it was evident that the day would be all about Ida, the tropical storm turned ferocious nor’easter. The wind howled along the shoreline like a freight train and white water was piled up everywhere.  But Amagansett still had a sliver of beach to naviagate on the descending tide. Birds hovered in the wind above the breakers and we chased a flock of them east from Atlantic Avenue to Mako Lane. There, in the waters just a few hundred yards west of the Napeague Lane parking lot, the fish were schooled up picking on four-inch sand eels and Murderer’s Row was on them but good.

It took a yeoman’s cast to get a lure past the white water breaking on the sand bar and into a patch of green water beyond. But for those who managed, the results that morning were as fine as all season; Keeper bass after keeper bass succumbed to 4 1/2-ounce diamond jigs with green tubes attached,, or weighty 4-oz bucktails of white or chartreuse. I saw 20’s, 30’s and one possible 40 pounder hauled in. This was the most amount of quality fish I have ever seen taken in one session and it may have been the most riotous surfcasting I have ever witnessed. The fish were slipping thorugh a narrow cut in the sandbar so that only a 100 foot long honey hole was producing hits. This tight sweetspot was monopolized by a handful of local sharpies who were content to fish on top of each other, despite the wicked sweep of the current from east to west. To avoid tangled lines and worse, Frank and I fished the periphery but we did not have the distance to get in on the action. We hung around, in and out of the water, until the bite died at 11am.  From then on, the water was unfishable and the bite stayed off through the rest of the weekend.

The Legend of Richie Bag Foot

Richie Bag Foot arguably caught the biggest fish at Hither Hills on Veteran’s Day and in the Napeague Lane massacre. His striper on Thursday morning was a bait-saturated, pot-bellied 39-pounder that fell to a white bucktail lure. Bag Foot strolled along the surf line with his fish, ducking under the cast lines of at least a dozen anglers until he finally beached this Moby striper and shouted “Montana!”  Then he hauled it to his truck parked on the sand.

The meaning of Richie’s “Montana” war cry is as follows: when he fished commercially, the best fish were called “beauts”. Over time, a beut became Butte, and eventually, the state name Montana was also code for a really good fish. Hey, remember, these guys are fishermen. Okay?

Camera-shy Richie Bag Foot took 20-plus and 30-plus pound stripers from the stormy ocean surf during the Veteran's Day nor'easter

Camera-shy Richie Bag Foot took 20-plus and 30-plus pound stripers from the stormy ocean surf during the Veteran's Day nor'easter (photo by Jack Yee)

How Richie got his nickname, is far more direct. About five years ago, Richie had a broken leg. It was fishing season and a good bite was on at the beach. So into the surf went Richie with a shorty white boot on his left leg, and his right leg encased in a plaster cast. Richie had the cast wrapped in a plastic garbage bag. From that day forward, he was evermore Richie Bag Foot.

Big brother Frank left on schedule Friday afternoon with a couple of bluefish fillets tucked safely in his travel cooler. No bass this year. I hung around in the rain and wind as Ida petered out over the weekend but the bite was shut down tight. And yet, the sharpies returned to Napeague Lane every morning through Sunday with their tongues hanging like labrador retrievers, hoping the bass would come again.

As did I.

Because I know they will.