Striped Bass Public Hearing Old Saybrook 2025

Striped Bass Public Hearing  Old Saybrook, 2025

Last night the ASFMC held a public hearing in Old Saybrook on proposed regulation changes for 2026. The meeting kicked off at 6PM. Packed house, standing room only.  I’d venture there were about 60 people in attendance.  By the way, the man in the foreground with his hand up is legendary surfcaster Pat Abate. The first hour was a complete run down on the options being offered by the board. If you have been following this subject you know there is a good deal of complexity to these proposals. Many of which are likely unenforceable. The second hour was reserved for Q&A.

In Chesapeake Bay, there has been no meaningful striped bass reproduction success in 6 years. And 3 more years of failures in the Hudson as well. Damn! So the big bass we see right now, are all we have. Without them, there are no bass in the wings. Clearly striped bass are in dire straits, much like they were back in the early 198o’s, when all we have left was one year class…the 1982.  I remember that well. But we put aside our own self-interests and united behind saving striped bass from extinction.

And we did with Amendment 3 to the plan, which had only regulation north to south – a hook-and- release moratorium. Yes, we took the medicine and together became an unstoppable f0rce. Man we were High-Fiving at the docks and up and own the beach. Can’t tell you how proud I was to be part of it.  And best of all, it worked like black magic, sending the Spawning Stock Biomass soaring to over 250 million pounds.  Now we must do again, close ranks, put aside our self-interests, lock arms, and demand a moratorium. Striped bass are worth it! Striped bass deserve it!

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My Son Gets an Albie

My Son Gets an Albie

With the tuna in town, it didn’t take long for my son to nail a nice size ablie. Can you tell he is excited? Man oh man! Love that photo.

This a new boat for him. He got it in an online auction. Went to bed thinking he had lost, but the morning brought a different story. It’s an old 19-foot Seaway with a 9-foot beam. Needs cosmetic work, but overall it is in decent shape. And my kid is an excellent mechanic. As the story goes, this boat spent much of its life in Madaket Harbor over on Nantucket. The owner was likely a commercial fisherman, possibly working out around Tuckernuck and Nantucket Shoals. After he passed, the boat was returned to his native state of Connecticut and stored in a barn for a decade or more before it went up for sale.

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Hardtails in Town!

Hardtails in Town!

After three poor falls in my neck of Long Island Sound, the tide has turned. We have both albies and bonito and in fair numbers. In prior seasons, the action during the best part of the year stayed offshore, often a mile or more from the coastline. This time it’s right inside where light craft and kayaks can get a shot. And yes, even from shore.

This picture comes my way from one of the most hardcore anglers I have ever known. He and his friend caught a number of tuna on fly. Great going.  Let’s hope this action hangs around for while!

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Photos are a Time Machine

Photos are a Time Machine

Credit Dave Beall

Can photos transport you back in time? Absolutely, taking us across the days, the weeks, the years and even the decades. And that is exactly why we love pictures of ourselves holding fish. We want to capture and save special events. But I have to admit sometimes it’s the shots without a fish, shots of a dawn or dusk sky, waves rolling down a beach, stars or clouds that really spark emotion. Yes these images are introspective. And in that lies their power. They reawaken a mood, a moment, or deep thought. Remind us of our lives.

PS Here’s another one to chew on

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Flip Pallot Moves On

Flip Pallot Moves On

Famous Florida angler Flip Pallot died on Tuesday August 26th of this year. Details are slim at this point, but it appears he passed away in a Georgia hospital during an emergency operation. He was 82 years young.

His book entitled  Mangroves, Memories and Magic was well received, and Flip worked closely with many fly rod tackle manufacturers. But he is perhaps most known for starring in a very popular television series entitled the Walkers Cay Chronicles which ran from 1992 -2004. Flip had many noted guests on the series including Jose Wejebe, who had his own television series entitled Spanish Fly Fishing. Jose died in 2012 in a plane crash in the Everglades.

 

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