A FEW GREAT PICTURES FROM 2013
3,388 Total Fish Caught by Capt Marty, Clients, and Friends
66 Saltwater Species Represented
14 Freshwater Species Represented
53 NC Saltwater Citations for 10 different species
26 NC Freshwater Citations for 3 different species
Saltwater
Fish of the Year (Client)- Alan and his 130 lb Sandbar Shark
Fish of the Year (Capt Marty)- My career largest 9 lb Spanish Mackerel
Species of the Year- Amberjack. Incredible numbers and Top Water Action
Day of the Year- (Dec 16) Casting light tackle in the Hatteras Surf. Red Drum on every cast
Freshwater
Fish of the Year (Friend)- Jalen and his 4 lb Rainbow Trout on Fly
Fish of the Year (Capt Marty)- My career largest 5 lb American Shad
Species of the Year- Largemouth Bass. Many Bass on Fly and Spin. Lots of 3-5 lb Bass and I caught Bass in every month of the Year
Day of the Year- (Feb 26) Chris and I: 36 Largemouth Bass many 5-6 lbs each and a few huge Golden Shiners
Top 10 Great Days and/or Great Fish
Jan 29- Tuggy and I fished the
Shoals and to the
East. Pretty day, low expectations and we found a Gold Mine! We caught
14 Red Drum up to 28" on a
Wreck. Also
Bluefish, Black Sea Bass, etc
Feb 6- Brandon and I fished a
Private Pond that he has access to. We caught
110 White Perch and
7 landlocked
Red Drum. Many
Perch were
12" to 13". Big enough for
NC Freshwater Citations
Feb 26- Chris and I fished Amy's
Daddy's Pond and whacked the
Largemouth Bass. Between the 2 of us we released
36 Largemouth Bass up to 6 lbs. We each caught multiple
5 lb Bass. We also each caught a couple Giant
Golden Shiners! Probably the best
Freshwater Fishing Session of my Career
March 19- Tuggy and I fished
Pitch Kettle Creek and caught
52 Hickory Shad on
light spinning tackle. Average size was extremely large. My largest was a
2 lb 9oz Trophy Hickory Shad.
May 18- Joey Bell, Chris, and I on a Slow
Cobia Trip "settled" for
2 Red Drum over 40 lbs, 6 Gag Grouper up to 14 lbs, and
8 Amberjacks up to 28 lbs
May 21- Bob Becker and I went on our annual
Cobia Trip. We found lots of
Cobia on
Leatherback Turtles and finished up with
10 Cobia up to 57 lbs.
June 3- Larry and Anne try something different with me every year. This year it was
Cobia Fishing. Unfortunately, it was blowing and pouring rain. Terrible conditions. We anchored up at
Cape Lookout by default. Amazingly, we caught
7 Cobia up to 43 lbs. Larry even lost a
Monster on the motor. Ouch, but it didn't matter on this day!
June 27- Alan and his came a longs way to go fishing. From
Colorado. Unfortunately, it was Rough as Hell, so we had to stay inside. So after catching bait, we anchored up inside the
Bight at Cape Lookout in an attempt to get a "late season"
Cobia. Action was steady with
Stingrays, as expected. After a few "big bite" failures, Alan landed a
130 lb Sandbar Shark after a mile chase and 30 minute struggle. Awesome. We also caught a
16 lb Cobia right at the top of the tide for good measure!
July 15- Ryan, Chris, and I caught
21 Amberjacks up to 34 lbs. We caught them on
live bait at first as we were hoping for a
Grouper. We quickly went to
top water plugs and
spinning tackle. Great Action
July 25- Jim and Phil wanted to do something different. So we loaded the
Top Water Boat down with
Kayaks and hauled them offshore. Once we arrived at the
"spot", the boys launched their
Kayaks and caught and released
10 Amberjacks. Jim also lost a Big Mystery Fish but had a memorable pull from onboard his
Kayak
July 27- Bobby's crew started with me running aground hard. It looked bleak. We finally got underway and we found a ton of action.
7 Amberjacks up to 33 lbs, 2 Barracuda over 50", Almaco Jack, Dolphin, Bass, Shark, Porgy, etc etc etc
Aug 24 and 25- Capt Marty was 'boatless" and apparently none of my friends have boats either... Funny, I see boats in there driveways??? Anyway,
shorebound and bored to death and took my
3wt fly rod over to the
Mung Holes and actually fishing in one that we gave up on 5 years ago, I caught a
5 lb Largemouth Bass and
2 other Bass that weighed
4 lbs each. All on
tiny popping bugs and the
small fly rod. I loved it!
Sept 4 and 5- Orrin's crew and Johnboy and I. Similar days. Great Great Great Action on
light spinning tackle casting
metal lures to hordes of gamefish on the
Cape Lookout Shoals. Combined:
110 Bluefish, 14 Spanish Mackerel, 7 Albacore, 4 Red Drum. Plus
Blue Runners, Crevalle Jacks, and
Ladyfish
Sept 6- Capt Marty fishing by himself caught a
37 lb King Mackerel, 7 lb Spanish Mackerel, and a
40 lb Scalloped Hammerhead Shark
Sept 10- Capt Marty fishing by myself caught a New Career Best
9 lb Spanish Mackerel
Sept 21- Parker and Linus and crew had a very good day. Early in the morning we were held up by thunderstorms. While waiting out the bad weather, Parker caught a
36 lb King Mackerel. Later the crew caught
Bluefish, Spanish Mackerel, and
Crevalle Jacks. A couple of the
Mackerel were Citations.
Oct 2- Tom's crew always has a great catch. This year was no exception. They caught
6 Amberjacks up to 50 lbs and
8 Red Drum from 6 to 8 lbs each. They also caught
Albacores, Barracuda, and
Bluefish
Oct 17- George, Antonio, and I had a very interesting trip. We caught
27 Dolphin from 2-5 lbs, 15 Vermilion Snapper from 3-5 lbs, and
12 Triggerfish from 4-6 lbs each. We also caught
Jacks and a
150 lb Bignose Shark
Nov 25- Jalen and I fished the
Tuckasegee River. Between the two of us, we released
45 Rainbow Trout, 15 Brook Trout, and
1 Brown Trout. I got a
Grand Slam and Jalen released a
4 lb Trophy Rainbow Trout
Dec 16- Capt Marty fishing in the
Surf on
Hatteras Island got in an "every cast" school of
Red Drum. That afternoon I caught
24 Red Drum from 23" to 27" on
light spinning tackle.
Top 5 Great Failures and/or Fish Lost
May 29- Probably my
Worst Charter Fishing Day ever. Dan's charter. Dan was a great repeat customer and unfortunately, I'll probably never hear from again. That hurts. So here goes
"Bad Day Part 1"... Honestly, Dan's friends were poorly prepared to catch "big fish". As a Captain, I did a poor job dealing with that fact. Anyway, first thing in the morning, I hooked a
40 lb+ Cobia from the
Tower and passed the rod down to an angler other than Dan. As I climbed down, I'm not sure what happened but out of the corner of my eye, I could see an Angler that had never fought a Big Fish. By the time my feet were on the deck of my boat, the
Cobia was Gone! Then came
"Bad Day Part 2". Not much we could do about this but....... Right out of nowhere, a fully lit up
Sailfish swims right up to the Boat. Okay, we are
inshore and
sight casting Cobia in 74 degree water. We are probably 50 miles from where I'd expect too see a
Sailfish in May! Regardless, there HE WAS and just dying to be hooked... Of course, every rod was fitted with a
bucktail! Not exactly the ideal
"Sailfish Bait". Anyway, I had the
Sailfish flirt with MY
Bucktail for 90 seconds and I COULD NOT get him hooked up.... Epic Failure..... Finally
"Bad Day Part 3", we have now run 75 miles and have nothing to show for it. Running Back towards
Cape Lookout there he is.... A stud
75 lb Cobia cruising on top.
A Day Saver. I ask Dan to move the Bow to make a cast to this
Cobia..... Too bad, Dan's cast sails off target. So I cast. Of course, I hook the
Cobia. I need to get the rod on Deck because the
Big Cobia is swimming right at the Boat. Dan, of course, is still reeling in his "bad cast". Somehow, the HOT ROD ends up in the wrong hands again. The angler with the Rod freezes and allows the
big Cobia to pass under the boat while also angling towards the stern (and motor) I am screaming to PUT YOUR ROD-TIP IN THE WATER AND WALK TO THE STERN. Feet frozen. Angler on Port side, The
Cobia lunges out of the water on the Starboard side. Line breaks. It's over. I cuss. I lost a great client. Late that day we released
7 Cobia off
Turtles but the damage was done...........
May 31- Bad karma lingers. On another
Cobia charter, we fail to find any
Cobia. We did find a
12 lb Dolphin very much
inshore.
A Day Saver on a slow day! We are ready this time. I actually have a
live menhaden rigged up. And I swear to God, that
Dolphin cannot catch that damn
Shad. It chases it all over the
Ocean, finally pinning it to the side of my Boat and it still can't eat this
menhaden. As we scramble for a back up bait, the
Dolphin finally spooks and disappears into the green water. Unbelievable. Later that day, I found a pod of cruising
100 lb+ Tarpon cruising in 4 ft of water. I make perfect cast after perfect cast.
Live bait, fresh dead bait, top water plugs, bucktails. Nothing worked. I was not surprised that the
Tarpon didn't bite, but it would've been nice if they had!
June 2- Just a continuation of bad luck. But this marked the end of it... Didn't help my client John though... So we ran to the
massive baitballs off
Emerald Isle where the "monster catches" were coming from. of course, when we arrived the
Bogue Inlet Boats had already cleaned up the morning action. So we wandered back to the west. Just west of
Beaufort Inlet I saw a
Baitball with
2 Cobia on it. I eased the Boat into place. I instructed John to cast.... Naturally his cast was way off base. He cast again. Another poorly aimed cast. I wondered if he even saw what I saw. So, just to make me feel even worse! I cast from the
Tower and naturally a
60-65 lb Cobia peeled off the
Baitball and followed my
bucktail. Not a "bull rush striker", so I hestitated and let my
bucktail sink. The
big Cobia did a headstand on my
bucktail. Experience tells me this is a good thing. One twitch of the rodtip and
Ka-Boom. Fish On! I set the hook over and over. Like Sammy Sosa swinging for the fence. Line peeled off my
reel. I handed the bucking rod down to John and quickly climbed down from the
Tower. When I arrived at
Deck Level the fish was GONE. I don't know what to say, Then or Now....
Sept 16- Capt Marty broke off an estimated
16 lb Sheepshead that ate a
Sea Urchin in "plain sight", right off the surface, right in front of me! This happened in between Ferry Runs in the middle of the day at
South Dock, which is at the north end of
Ocracoke Island. This
Giant Sheepshead pulled line off the reel at ease despite a locked down drag and
80 lb PowerPro. Wrapped around a
40 piling cluster and cut me off on a barnacle. Ouch!
Oct 18- Capt Marty's haste to land a
Spanish Mackerel quickly cost long time client Brent a
Real Trophy and a
Spanish Mackerel of a Lifetime. My decision to net
Brent's
Mackerel as opposed to gaff him was based on: #1 The
Net is In Hand #2
Spanish Mackerel are traditionally hard to gaff because the
3" gaff hooks commonly "stradle" the
Mackerel's flanks and flip them over without gaffing him.... Anyone that spends lots of time
King Mackerel Fishing knows what I'm referring too. It happens with
Snake Kings and
Jumbo Spanish.... Anyhow, in hindsight, I also underestimated the size of Brent's
Spanish Mackerel. Absolutely a
Top Water Charter's Boat Record and a
10+ pounder! The urgency that I felt was because we were directly over a
Wreck and we had a doubleheader of
Big Fish hooked up on the
live bait rods and the
reels were screaming. So when I tried to "net" the
big Spanish, his head jammed in the net. Then he flipped powerfully upward. This action ripped the hook out of the fish's mouth and left in hopelessly tangled in the
net. Of course, the
Mackerel flipped out of the
Net and disappeared in a
Flash and a Splash...... I suspect long time client and highly skilled angler Brent will be "looking for a new Fishing Guide" next year.....