17th September 2007

A Womans Touch

Janet Gertz, of South Portland landed a 34 inch striper over the weekend. 

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Janet apparently had a few hours down time and decided to go out and brave the wet weather. This “get her done” attitude paid dividends when the fish smashed a rubber shad Janet was fishing. She said, “I retrieved the lure right to my feet, when out of no where, this huge fish grabbed my lure. The water flew and my rod doubled over… Wow what an awesome experience”!

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Congratulations! A very nice fish.

posted in Angler Testimonials, Tournament News | 0 Comments

16th September 2007

Mini-Epic

Over the summer, I took some of my ex-colleagues striper fishing on the Kennebec River. It was hot and bright when we launched at 4:00 PM, but the promise of cooler evening air was close at hand and the breeze was quickly diminishing. It looked like a perfect night to go out around Seguin Island. These guys were from NY and Denver, so the scenery and setting would be memorable. It turned out to be a bit more memorable than I had planned.

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We left the landing and motored down river. We were rewarded with much cooler air as we got off Georgetown and promptly spotted a school of stripers busting it up. When lures hit the water, rods doubled up and fish after fish were welcomed on-board for a visit.

The school shifted and came up in a different location. Time to reposition the boat. Turning the helm, I felt the steering cable let go… %$^#*&%@! Typical.

So, an opportunity to bond presented itself and I took this opportunity to mess with the guy from Denver. He’d only been on the ocean a few times. I suggested one of us should swim to shore. “It would be tough swimming against the current, with water in 50 degree range and so many sharks”. I let that one sink in, then mentioned “how cold it would get at night”. I noted, “we had no anchor and no marine radio”. Also, ”the mosquitoes would be pretty bad without bug spray”.

We had some good laughs, but in the end, they were the ones laughing. It was a long twelve miles back to the landing having to manually steer the boat without the benefit of a tiller arm. As a result, my right arm is a couple inches longer.

posted in Angler Testimonials | 0 Comments

16th September 2007

Fishing - A Reason To Get With Friends & Family

Did you know, in the US more people fish than play golf? According to the Association of Sports Apparel Manufactures that is a fact! And why wouldn’t that be true? We have an abundance of fishing habitat in the US and the cost of entry is relatively cheap, especially so when compared to the expense of eighteen holes of golf, a cart and lunch.

Fishing represents a great recreational resource that puts people in touch with nature, it’s good exercise and offers the opportunity for individuals to share meaningful experiences with friends and family.

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Getting out for an afternoons fishing with some of your colleagues from work can be a great opportunity to form close friendships outside the office environment. And it’s always fun to share the adventure.

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Getting the kid’s out fishing is another opportunity for family fun. With younger children, the experience can be a trial and exercise in personal control. Some things that really help engage the kids are to give them responsibilities and teach them things like how to tie off the boat, change lures, pull the anchor, and once engaged, the kid’s typically have a great time. These activities are very meaningful and represent good clean fun.

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Their’s also the opportunity for dad to show the boys how it’s done. Nice fish!

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posted in Youth, Angler Testimonials | 0 Comments

14th September 2007

Submerged Shoals & Bait

A few years ago we were in Boston on a business trip and as a team building activity a bunch of the boys went striper fishing. The 32 foot lobster boat picked us up in Boston Harbor and we steamed over an hour to get to the outer islands.

The Captain jockeyed the boat into a very specific position, which to me looked like the middle of the ocean. I was skeptical, knowing what I thought I knew… “Way out here, in the middle of the bay”? But, I kept my mouth shut and went along for the ride.

The tide was starting to drop and their was clearly good water movement. The crew started cutting herring and pitching chunks over the side. The chunks drifted away off the stern and sunk from site. We were handed rods with 40 lb mono, trebble hooks and a large piece of herring. We were told to “let the herring drift from the stern and allow the line to free spool until a fish picks up the bait. Give the fish a chance to swallow it, then set the hook”. The Captain and crew stated this with absolute certainty, and we wanted to believe.

The first of our baits went over the side, slowly they drifted from view and the line spooled off the reels; 30 seconds, 45 seconds… tug, tug… fish on! For a couple hours we caught 32′ - 39″ striper one after another. By the end of the morning, we were some happy sports!

So here’s what was happening. The Captain was familiar with these waters, and on a going tide, he knew the flow across this particular submerged shoal created the perfect conditions for stripers to take up a feeding position. He also knew their were some big fish working these waters. What he did was position the boat up-current from the shoal so the chunked herring would drift down current and across the shoal. The stripers worked up-current, moving from deeper water onto the shoal to feed. All the angler needed to do was put their bait in with the chum and a fish would pick it up.

Two points to make… 1.) Professional guides acquire a knowledge base that can really help their sports get on fish. 2.) Different techniques, althought new and different from what is local tradition or the local standard can be highly effective. So keep your mind open to new and different approaches to fishing as it might provide insight that results in success.

 

posted in Fishing Guide Profiles, Angler Testimonials | 0 Comments

14th September 2007

Tournament Update 9/14/07 - Press Release

Guth & Soule Lead The Tournament Registering Monster Stripers

(Phippsburg, ME - September 14, 2007) 

The 17 Rivers Striper Tournament is well underway and some really big stripers have been landed. Two BIW employees, Tom Guth and Dan Soule, are leading the tournament having registered several stripers each, measuring from 34 inches to 41 inches in length. These are some really huge stripers! Interested persons can view photos posted on the tournament website.

The fall weather pattern, recently produced the first fall rains and now alewives are beginning to drop out of the rivers on their migration to the ocean. This bait, along with eels, green crabs and peanut bunker, all in abundance, is creating some hot fishing action. Many anglers are reporting multiple fish catches and increasing surface action as we transition into the middle of September.

With the fall striper migration just beginning the fishing action will only improve throughout the month of September. Anglers should take this opportunity to test their tackle over the next couple weeks.

Traditionally, September is the time of year is when anglers catch the biggest stripers of the season and for those participating in the tournament, that could result in big prizes! Anglers not yet participating in the tournament may still register, but the tourney ends September 30th, 2007. Angler Registration Forms are available online at the tournament website or at an Official Registration Site

Photos available upon request. Contact Robert Fernald - Event Organizer.  

###

posted in Press Releases | 0 Comments

14th September 2007

The People You Meet

For this angler, fishing has been a big part of my life since I was a tike. At the age of eleven I caught my first Atlantic salmon, which really got me hooked on fly fishing. Around that same time, I took a trip to the Mirimachi with my father. On that trip I experienced camp life and met some fine people.

On one trip to Canada, I even met Ted Williams, who dropped by the camp to say hello and watch the action. For a boy of fourteen, this was quite an experience. We even reciprocated by visiting Ted at his log cabin and his cook was kind enough to make homemade donuts for me. How cool is that.

Here in Maine, I’ve been fishing for stripers for 25 plus years and have made a great number of acquaintances. Often they are hardcore fishermen, some local and some who travel to the area to fish for a week or two every year. It’s great to get a phone call or an e-mail from one of these friends inquiring about the fishing and letting me know when they’ll be up to fish. It’s much like the changing of the seasons, I know it’s coming and I look forward to it!

It’s funny, when you are off the beaten path and run into someone else who has taken the time to explore and find one of those seldom visited spots, an almost instant bond can be formed. Sharing of knowledge and a few good laughs often solidifies a friendship born from mutual experience. And it’s even more funny to see another fisherman from a half mile away and by their casting technique or body language, know exactly who that person is even when it’s someone you haven’t seen in years.

For me, fishing has provided many unique opportunities to meet some really great people and share in those momentary experiences of life. Fishing can be a very personal and solitary experience, but at times it can offer the opportunity for new and great friendship. These are things to value.

 

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13th September 2007

Fishing Structure

Often anglers are told to “fish structure, that’s where you’ll catch fish”, but what does this mean?

Typically structure is often thought of as rocky outcroppings, but it’s important to recognize that structure is highly dependent on the overall habitat found in the area you’re fishing.

As we’ve stated in earlier posts, stripers are lazy and they prefer to take up feeding locations where food will get swept to them and this is important. So, let’s consider a few scenarios.

Beaches are often productive locations where anglers fish for stripers, but not all spots along a beach are productive. When you look at a beach, the level of the tide, the swell and the amount of sun light will certainly influence where you’ll find stripers. Often, a swell exists that creates wash and such wave action and tidal flow will set up rip currents. Look for such wash and rip currents as they often represent water movement and create natural funnels. Stripers move into these flows to feed and targeting such flows, even when the waters only 2-3 ft deep, will produce results. These flows are dynamic too. A rip tide can make up in one location quickly and fish will move in to take up feeding positions in these flows. But things can change quickly and when these flows subside subside the fish will go elsewhere. Anglers need to remain observant and adjust to these changing conditions.

Bottom contours should be thought of as structure too and anglers need to think three dimensionally. Beaches are always changing and at low tide you can clearly see how current and wave action build up sediments in some locations and erods it elsewhere. When anglers consider where fish will take up feeding locations, the bottom contour, visible at low tide, can often provide indicators of potential hot spots as the tide comes in. Often one will note high spots along the sandy flats close to the low water mark, then closer to the shore a deeper pocket. At high tide, such pockets are quite areas, where the waves break over the shallow shoals and food gets deposited. At certain points in the tide, the stripers will move into these deeper pockets to feed and keying in on such spots can be very productive.

Points or sand bars often effect the flow of water too. At different times in a tide, a sand bar can constrict a flow and accelerate the waters movement. Such changes in flow which are tide and structure dependent, create momentary opportunity for the observant angler.

Fishing waters at low tide can help an angler understand the contours which will impact water flow. In rivers, often their is obvious structure, a grassy island, a sandy point, a shallow sand bar, a rocky outcropping or the edge of a channel, where water transitions from shallow to deep; all represent structure that will influence water movement. Keying in on such structure, whether it’s obvious or subtle, will help improve your odds of catching fish.

In bays and along the exposed coast where current is less obvious, weed lines and protruding ledge create natural habitat for bait fish, eels, crabs, etc. Working this type of structure definitely produces results. Waves often wash onto or across such structure and this water movement can create mini-funnels where striper feed too. Fishing the slosh in combination with working a weed line or ledge can be very productive.

Now take all these illustrative concepts about structure and think about it in the aggregate. Suddenly fishing seems a lot more complicated, but don’t make it so, just enjoy it and have fun.

posted in Angler Testimonials | 0 Comments

11th September 2007

The Observant Fisherman

The act of fishing is easy, catching fish harder yet, consistently catching fish and big fish a real challenge. So, what separates the average fishermen from really good fishermen?

Certainly, experience plays a significant role for an angler, but something every angler can do that will quickly pay dividends, is to open their eyes and observe what’s going on around them. Being observant covers a broad range of possibilities, but here are few things to consider.

Those of us who have tried fly fishing for trout know of the “match the hatch” approach. It’s often common for trout fishermen to carry a fine mess net which they use to sieve the water to determine the larva which trout are feeding on. A similar approach for stripers can be useful. It never hurts to know what the key food source is and honestly, it changes almost daily. As an exercise, walk slowly through the shallows and see how many minnows, shrimp or green crab you see. Move the seaweed away from around rocks and see what crawls or swims away. As you wade, are you noticing any bait fish? Identifying the available bait which stripers are keying on goes a long way towards catching fish.

Often fishermen experience a number of follows, with few actual takes. Ever wonder why this occurs? Observing the bait stripers are keying on can provide clues to why you’re not getting strikes. Try different lures or flies; size, shape, color and weight all play a critical role. My experience has shown, when stripers are following, but not striking, a simple change in size, a slight variation in color or a differing color eye on a fly that mimicks what the fish are feeding on often produces dramatic results.

Observing the waters flow is another key indicator to pay attention to. Stripers are grazers and they don’t like to work for their food. Water movement and in particular funneling water, flushes bait to awaiting stripers. In our tidal bays and estuaries, water is almost constantly moving and the dynamic nature of these flows result in the stripers dynamic feeding patterns. When the flows are slow, feeding often slows or becomes highly localized to those few areas where flow is occurring. Anglers will often experience a pod of stripers moving into a flow and the action gets hot, then it shuts off. The observant fisherman will notice the flow has changed and as a result the stripers have shifted their feeding position. A subtle move by the angler and bang, they’re back into fish.

Light is another variable worth mentioning. Striper feed most aggressively during low light hours. Early morning and late evenings are prime times to fish for stripers. On very bright days, the bite is best during these low light hours, but it doesn’t preclude good fishing at other times. What is important to note, is observing the fishing activity at that moment. Often, as the sun gets high in the sky, anglers notice a slowing in action. This is common and typically indicates the bite window is over. On other days, the action stays hot and never shuts off. What anglers need to recognize is, when the action stays hot, the angler needs to stay fishing. These bites can last for hours, but more frequently they only last for minutes. When the actions hot, keep the fly in the water and work hard to stay on the fish. This active strategy will yield fish.

The observant angler will over time acquire an intuitive feel for what the stripers are going to do, where and when they’ll be feeding and what they will be feeding on. This intuition is really an educated guess based on years of accumulated knowledge, a result of observation. So make note of what’s going on today, as these small pearls of wisdom will yield insight tomorrow and for years to come.

posted in Angler Testimonials | 0 Comments

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