All lanty hell, this is where a few bubbas are gonna do some talkin about some dang fishin!
Friday, December 29, 2006
New Reel for Christmas = fishing the day after Christmas
It seems like a no brainer, I get a new fishing reel for Christmas, I'm fishing the next day, right? Well there are always complications, such as having to leave Rochelle at my parents house while I fish, because she wants nothing to do with 15 mph winds from the SW, the dropping temperatures and a bit of drizzle here and there and especially... fishing. She does understand wanting to try out the new reel, but that means my fishing time is severely limited - Greg and I are determined to limit out, we have 3 hours or so to fish and we feel like WE HAVE TO CATCH FISH as the season will close this weekend while the whole crew (Blair, Wendy, Me, Rochelle, possibly Erin, and Greg) is snowboarding in Snowshoe. The pressure is on...
The ride there is beautiful, but choppy with the wind in our face and we have the skiff planed out perfectly, a great ride. It is sunset and we head to a familiar spot and fish the hard running current in a spot that is glassy and guarded from the wind. The lights on the docks cut on and we expect a ton of action. In an hour Greg lands five on soft plastic topwater lures, I miss a good follow with 3 short strikes but no takers - almost desparate to get something to work, I spy a large mullet subsurface plug in my tackle bag - tie it to my leader and cast it out - bam hard strike on the second cast, its only 17 inches, but fat - I return the fish - hmm, Greg has one in the box and a bunch brought to the boat, I'm feeling the pressure - we have little time to fish. We agree to hit our favorite night time (and sometimes day time) jigging spot.
We haul ass only to find another boat in the best location - CRAP - and the wind is howling with the current pushing the boat at trolling speed - its going to get tricky, being pushed toward the dock, we have to stem the current and fish the structure. It is choppy as hell greg looks nervous - the topwaters arent looking too possible in the wind and chop, but all of a sudden in front of us, we see huge splashes from a few breaking fish. I cast and start catching fish almost immedidately. I land one in the 19-20 inch range and toss him in the box. The topwater is tough with all of the huge chop and the wind continues to pick up.
We catch a few more fish and Blair calls asking how its going. He wants to know if we will make it to the Green Leafe by 9pm for our annual Christmas pint between buddies - I look at my watch, its 7 - I tell him we just got into the fish and yes we will make it by 9:30 - He tells me we are assholes and we suck because he's not on the boat.
Greg looks at me and says "You know we have to limit out and take a picture just to bug Blair right?" I say "Of course" - The fishing goes on, its really difficult to stem the tide and get accurate casts in because the wind is getting worse, but the fish as still there - I land a few more and catch up with Greg. We switch to our own bucktails and I caught a ton on my signature orange and white combo on a white head - but I keep catching schoolies just undersize. We got quite a few double hook-ups, with me taking Greg's fish off his line for him while he is trying to keep the boat off of the dock in the strong current and wind - the action is so crazy I even accidently throw out a keeper from gregs line and tried to keep the smaller one I caught because I got confused. We caught around 20 rockfish in just over 3 hours, all fat and we managed to limit out, I went to pick up Rochelle and we still got to the pub to meet up with Blair and rub his nose in the picture of us with our fish! Merry Christmas Blair!
Wednesday, December 27, 2006
Blairs Props
Blair - I thought I would honor you before I posted the next story - ladies and Gents -this is Blair's first season Rock fishing He just moved by the James River (He's a park ranger - very honorable dude), got married and bought a boat - His first two rock fishing trips ever, just going on advice from Greg and I over the phone - he caught a few fish like this, in a tough river he didn't know. This is extremely pretty damn good for a new boat and a new kind of fishing after being a complete hippie park ranger and not fishing for way too many years while living in New England. Quite frankly - he made a few of us carnivorous boys who have stayed true to VA quite jealous of his beginner's luck - and I will give him credit for it now, because soon, I will post a new blog entry, tearing him a new one, all in good fun, because he is my boy, and that’s how we show we care, by completely humiliating the other one, so Blair, grit your teeth and suck it up. I'll see you on the slopes bitch.
Rockfish veggiebake
Mmmm, my new creation from the fish caught last night, its great!(details of fishing will come later)
Rockfish Veggiebake
(serve on top of/side of couscous: add 1/4cup celery, 1/8 cup onion, garlic, salt and rosemary to taste all boiled into water before adding couscous)
Preheat oven to 350 f
1-1.5lbs rockfish filets (lightly oil and coat with OLD BAY Seasoning)
3 tbls olive oil
6-8oz fresh mushrooms sliced
4-6 stalks of celery chopped
1 small onion sliced
8-12 oz fresh baby carrots chopped into 1/2" pieces*
1/2 to 3/4 lb snowpeas*
Fresh or dried herbs such as basil, oregano and/or rosemary)
Salt and pepper to taste
*other fresh veggies such as squash, broccoli, green beans can be substituted - go with your garden or what available
Lightly oil lasagne pan with EVOO, add a layer of sliced onion and some celery, top with seasoned filets of rockfish. Put all veggies in bowl with oil and herbs and toss. Pile over fish filling pan evenly. Cover with foil, bake for 30-35 minutes. Test fish for flakiness, cool 2-3 minutes, serve over couscous. Enjoy that shit!
My Dads Christmas Light display - as promised
Well here it is as promised earlier - A view of my Dad's Christmas light display - It is toned down and a bit smaller this year because he had to work every weekend since thanksgiving, but it still looks good (sorry there is no total package shot - it was cold and raining a little) Let me know what you guys think - I'll tel my Dad. Hopefully I'll post the latest update of my fishing adventures later tonight.
Thursday, December 21, 2006
Ok guys, tonight was -once again- insane. Went out at like 1800 to Amoco docks and picked up 15 rock! It was slow at first but once the tide started to come in the bite picked up and they tore up the sluggo. I also tied on that .5oz ultra minnow pictured below and pulled in my last three in like 15 minutes. All in all it was kick ass and the river was SO glassy.
Hope to C U guys over the holidayz
P.S. - that third rock pictured is for my pop and he caught it - guiding my cast over the cell phone...
Friday, December 15, 2006
Ultra minnow...
Thursday, December 14, 2006
Yorktown action...
Well guys, I headed out at like 4:30pm this afternoon after my work X-mas party and slayed em! I hooked into a fat 19" in less than 5 minutes and proceeded to pull in like 15 total! One keeper and the rest were in the 14-15" range. It was a blast though and the water was so calm that you could literally see the fishs' dorsal fins outta the water when they were chasing the bait at the surface. I saw like 10 rock skim and swim all over the surface at one point! It was pretty cool and was a cool way to end my dang day!
-Capt. G
Monday, December 11, 2006
It ain't over til' the fatty is caught...
Hey bubbas, remember that rock season is on up to the end of
March. Read below and here's the demarcation map line. I
fished pretty much right up to March of last year for Taug and
Rock right off of Cape Henry. Inshore fishing rocks cause you
don't know what kinds of fish you will run into trolling deep
lures (demarcation map).
Virginia Coastal Seasons
..................................................................
January 1 through March 31
May 16 through December 31
Minimum Size Limit............................................. 28 inches
Possession Limit............................................... 2 per person
Sunday, on the Rocks please...
Greg rocking it waterman style, where orange PVC is the right choice for any occasion.
We had a gentlemen's hours on Sunday, due to strong lunar tides and steady south winds keeping the tides 3-4 below normal. We waited about and hour and a half after a scheduled late start, and Greg looked like he needed all of that time, as apparently he had a late night in Williamsburg on Saturday, after limiting out with his friend Will on schoolies in a honey hole across the river (they did a repeat of our previous cbbt trip trolling for hogs to no avail).
With the low tides, we had to bank everything on one tide, deading out and back before the tide dropped so low, the Parker (soon to be officially named "Lawdy Be") would be sitting on the sand (the previous, day Greg had to jump out of the boat into 48 degree water in his jeans and pull the boat the last few yards, all one ton of her, notice he went to a bar instead of the hospital - this guy thinks he is hypothermia proof).
Our late start out to York spit reef and York spit light, but we saw no dive-bombing birds, no schoolie Hogs, so we high tailed it to a few honey holes and caught them up on topwater lures. Greg landed two on a bucktail I had tied and given to him. He was getting a ton of bites, and and fished with it for less than ten minutes before he had hooked into a nice chainlink fence, 10 feet up on a peir. Of course it was a prototype, so thanks Greg - back to the drawing board with that one. Brad caught his first topwater Rockfish, landing two, but they were under size, or too close to call, and since we didn't have a ruler just returned them to the current. I managed to catch five fishing slug-gos subsurface and topwater. All of the fish were fat and healthy, with a few in the maybe range. No ruler, no keeping fish that aren't clearly keepers using my forearm test.
We had a blast all day with an almost steady strem of laughter - it was great, but for better or for worse, no "hogs", no blitzing fish and birds. Perhaps that is reason, myself and a few of my friends will most likely find ourselves on the very same boat in the last days of this year, freezing our asses off in 25 degreeg weather with 10-15 mile and hour winds, laughing our asses off, having a great time, and for a few minutes out of the day, catching rocks.
Greg and Will's Rockfish from Saturday, the Captain was nice enough to let Brad and I spit these porker schoolies, since we didn't keep any of the 10 we caught between us.
Ok - I'm hard core - after barely getting the boat in - we all split, and as I drove across the bridge with the sun setting, I just had to stop. I parked under the bridge, grabbed my rod and headed for the rocks, but there was nothing biting or breaking the surface, so instead, I got the obligatory sunset-lit (sometimes, sun-rise) shot. Greg and blair - I know you will laugh at me for stopping off - but really - it just shows how hardore I am. Fish on.
Saturday, December 9, 2006
John can't keep the days straight
Fishing Sunday
Wednesday, December 6, 2006
New Years is on and I'm fishing this weekend
I am excited about rockfishing this weekend - did you catch anything Blair?
Tuesday, December 5, 2006
new years in the air - striper in the water...
On the bright side, I am going to do my best to be in Gloucester in time to hit the night-time run at Amaco Saturday night with Captain Greg in the skiff. topwater, topwater, topwater... We are planning on being out in the parker before sun-up Sunday patroling the bay for birds and a rockfish blitz... wish us luck - plenty of photos to follow....
Snowshoe for New Years
Monday, December 4, 2006
Deer kill...
attached for bucktail tying?? Oh man, also, I'll trade you some
rock for some deer meat??!!
-G
Trout fishing with a GLOCK
The Vegetarian Deer Slayer
On Saturday, the park hosted the annual Southern Heritage Deer Hunt. I sprung out of bed at 3am to start a 16 plus hour work day. Shortly after we got all of the hunters to their stands Chippokes Plantation State Park began to sound like Iraq, gun shots everywhere. Hearing these shots made me think two things. One, these hunters can't shoot. Or two, we are going to have to process a lot of deer. Well against my wishes and hopes, Wendy's warning to all the deer in the park to leave before the deer hunt, did not work. We began to bring out deer after deer to be processed. By 11 am 16 deer were killed, and by the end of the day at 5:30 25 deer were harvested from the park. Since this hunt is a special hunt, we also butcher the deer for the hunters. Having to Butcher 25 deer takes a long time and requires team work. At first I refused to butcher the deer, it's just plain disgusting! By the end of the day I was soo tired and wanted to go home I sucked it up and skinned 5 deer. Covered in blood and hair, I turned into another person. The sound of ripping skin, strange sucking noises and cutting these deer did not affect me at all. I rallied and got the job done, I was able to go home sometime close to hour 17.
Although Saturday had some pretty disgusting events, it was also a pretty awesome day. It made me realize how much I love my job. As a Park Ranger you never know how your day is going to be. Canoing up the creek to find a half alive deer stuck in the mud (needed to be shot by my gun when I arrive), being covered by deer parts, squeezing Doe nipples to see if they are milking or just drinking coffee by the fire.
I hope to go fishing later this week........
Sunday, December 3, 2006
Help a brother out
Wednesday, November 29, 2006
Powder paint!
Here's what I ordered in the hopes that it all will arrive before Dec 31st:
Item Ref. Price ea. Qty. Description
516-15-001 $4.99 1 Pro Tec Pro Flake - 1-1/2 oz.
Bottle - Silver Hologram
520-02-008 $4.99 1 Standard Powder Paint - 2 oz.
Bottle - Silver
520-02-030 $4.99 1 Standard Powder Paint - 2 oz.
Bottle - Pearl White
545-01-008 $1.90 1 3-D Molded Lure Eyes - Size 1
- Shimmer Silver - 20 Pack
With this I should be able to supply us all with bucktails for the
rest of our fishing careers!
Rockfish Thanksgiving
Tuesday, November 28, 2006
permissions...
-Capt G
Rockfish Salad
1 lb grilled or broiled rockfish (cold, set aside, add last)
1/3 to 1/2 cup light mayo
3 to 5 chopped green onions (bulbs and greens)
1/2 cup chopped celery
1 clove garlic
1 tablespoon sweet hot mustard
1/2 tablespoon dried dill
Salt to taste
Pepper to taste
1/2 red pepper chopped (optional)
Set aside Rockfish. Combine all other ingredients in a non-metal bowl, stir well. Carefully flake Rockfish into mixture and fold gently into mixture (you wan to have big flakes of fish in there, don't shred it to pieces). IMPORTANT: Refridgerate salad for at least one hour prior to serving to let all the flavors meld, otherwise, it will just taste like mayo. Leaving it overnight is great! If your are ina hurry, mix the other ingredients in advance while cooking fish, let it cool then add it and eat up. Its great on toast or slices of bagette, makes a killer sandwich and can be a fancy dip for your next shindig.
Monday, November 27, 2006
That's the law...
Conservation Officer C. B. Evans