Thursday, April 21, 2016

Why I Fish..........

Let's Start Thinking About Fishing..... 

Top Water Charters 

Big Fish on Light Tackle

I was a 260 lb Minnow in this picture, so.........

I didn't get many good pictures THAT DAY, but......

There Are Only TWO KINDS of People on Earth...... Those who caught a BLUE MARLIN and those who Have Not
SWORDFISH seemed like an Impossible Dream..... Thanks you Webb Brothers

I LOVE THESE NUCLEAR POMPANOS

My Constant Companion. I LOVE MY DOG. EMMA ROCKS

My Favorite Color and Thanks to the Feds..... I may never top these guys..... Legally.....

Many many many years ago, I told my now ex-wife, " If I ever catch all the NC Salt Water Citations, I'd quit fishing"

On June 24, 1988, I caught a 66 lb Amberjack inside Beaufort Inlet on a 00 sized Clark Spoon. Trolling for Spanish Mackerel. There had been a few earlier but I didn't know about the North Carolina Fishing Award Program. From that first Citation Amberjack I have pursued and collected Fishing Citations. On October 17th of 2015, I caught and released a 42" Red Drum off Shackleford Banks, just a 1/2 mile from where I caught the 66 lb Amberjack 27 damn years earlier! According to my records, it was the 849th Salt Water Fish that was Heavy Enough and/or Long Enough to earn a NC Salt Water Fishing Citation that I have landed according to the rules of the North Carolina Salt Water Fishing Tournament. Out of the 37 Species that North Carolina recognizes as  "Worthy of Citation Recognition", I have recieved Citations for 33 different Species of them.....

In addition, I have caught 102 Freshwater Fish of 17 species that have qualified for The North Carolina Freshwater Fishing Angler Recognition Program, or simply referred to as a NC Freshwater Fishing Citation.

Furthermore, I have recieved Salt Water and Fresh Water Fishing Awards from Florida, South Carolina, Texas, Ohio, New York, and Virginia. Most recently, I received a "Fish Pin" from New York State for a 16 lb Brown Trout.

Now, at age 50, I would still LOVE to collect Every NC Citation. But, I must admit, the prospects of a 3 lb Croaker are bleak at best! I will never forget the damn 19" Croaker that slurped my white 6" gulp jerk shad one day in Taylor's Creek while fishing for Puppy Drum. That Croaker weighed 2 pounds and 6 ounces. That was it. As close I got. The Dream died a little bit that day......

Other than that, I need to set aside a week in July and/or August to catch a North Carolina Tarpon...... I've caught 15 in Florida up to 140 pounds, but I just haven't stayed connected to one in The Tar Heel State. The past 16 years I've been too busy being a "Beaufort Inlet Fishing Guide" to pursue my own Angling Dreams..... Then there's the simple Bluefish. For years (Decades) the Citation Program Coordinator said a Bluefish had to be 17 pounds to worthy of an NC Citation. From the 1970's through about 2011, I caught a SHIT POT FULL of 12 pound Bluefish. I caught an occasional 15 pound Bluefish. But I couldn't crack the magical 17 pound mark.... Then, based on low numbers of Bluefish applications no doubt, the Rule Makers decided to lower the minimum weight for Bluefish from the old 17 lb standard down to a very manageable 15 lbs..... Thank goodness, now with a little luck the Bluefish Citation is very "doable".......

And the massive schools of Spring Time Choppers that we had been hammering in the "Pre-Cobia" weeks suddenly vanished...... And a Bluefish Citation is nearly as unlikely as a 3 lb Croaker....

And that leaves ONE. The Bigeye Tuna. And there is a ton of Bigeye Tuna Citations wrote in North Carolina every year... BUT..... BUT..... BUT..... BUT... You HAVE to be fishing up at Oregon Inlet. You HAVE to be on the Lucky Boat for that particular day. And you HAVE to be the Angler thats "up next"...... That's alot of LUCK. And that's definitely the ONE FISH that I can not DO-IT-MYSELF..... Even the mighty Blue Marlin was a Do-It- ALL- BY- MYSELF FISH. I was younger then. And stupider.... And a Better Fisherman. Today I might Know More, but as much as that helps, it also hurts... I know a 1000 things can go wrong. Every day we go offshore and make it back is a day that we survived. On May 20, 2001 I fished the Rock Pile out of Ocracoke Inlet and released a 350 lb Blue Marlin. On December 19, 2001 I caught and killed a 360 lb Bluefin Tuna by myself just west of the Cape Lookout Shoals. I actually had to sink that fish to the bottom with a poly ball float attached and run in and get help to "Boat" this fish. That was a $3000 fish....... To imagine me running 45 miles Offshore of Oregon Inlet in pursuit of a Bigeye Tuna by myself nowadays in absolutely laughable..... I WISH..... As a result, the pursuit of a Bigeye Tuna Citation pretty much comes down to a $1800 "roll of the dice".  Or whatever those guys up there charge for a day of Gulf Stream Fishing these days.....

In other words...... As hard as that freaking Sheepshead Citation seemed...... Or however lucky I was to stumble into my Porgy and my Spearfish Citations..... Those last 4, the Tarpon, the Bluefish, the Croaker, and the Bigeye Tuna seem impossible.... If that's the case, I will fish until I die. I will never quit! 

RANT OVER

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