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Everything posted by Johnsfolly
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Who doesn't go thru this process especially when the room is cold😅? Only thing missing would be the beer coefficient.
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You guys are using the wrong bait!
Johnsfolly replied to BilletHead's topic in General Angling Discussion
Darters and other micros love to bite split shot instead of the bait. Kind of annoying at times 🙄. -
My buddy and I caught one like that while jug fishing one of the branches of the Lake of the Ozarks. Weren't sure if it was channel or deformed flathead. Still an ugly sucker. Let it go instead of throwing it the cooler.
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You guys are using the wrong bait!
Johnsfolly replied to BilletHead's topic in General Angling Discussion
Wonder if a big brown would eat a feathered transducer🤔😅! -
Well I had a plan to be out in Missouri this week for some vacation, some business in Columbia, and definitely some fishing. My first concern was what the water levels were going to do with the snow melt. Apparently not much. But this trip really was cancelled (hopefully rescheduled) due to some issues that came up at work that needed to be addressed prior to EOB on Friday. some of which I could not deal with remotely. I have been watching a couple of party boats that have been going out this winter for tautog. Some have reported very successful trips. The local boat basically stopped going back in Jan. Only a couple were going out from marinas in NJ. On Monday I found that one was going to have a trip on Weds the 24th (aka yesterday). Already scheduled to be off I booked myself on the boat. Then decided to contact My Betterhalf to see if I should book all of us. Well we all got on the boat. We were heading out of Belmar Marina in NJ. It's about a 3 hour drive and we decided an overnight stay was better than leaving the house at 3 am to get to the marina to check in before the boat left. Now tautog are a finicky fish and many trips have few fish boated or even none. So I warned Sue and Livie for that contingency. The was also going to be a small craft advisory for after 2pm due to increased winds and waves. We were prepared for the worse. At the boat if was a beautiful morning. Lots of mergansers, buffleheads, scaup, mute swans, herring and black backed gulls, loons, and cormorants everywhere. The birds that got me excited were flocks of Brant geese which I have not seen since living in Ireland. Waters looked calm as we headed out of the harbor to the ocean and pretty much stayed that way for most of the day. Took almost two hours to get to the first spot. We were bottom fishing rock piles with single hook rigs and 6 to 8 oz of weight and using clams or live green crabs for bait. We were in 125 to 140 ft of water all day. Typically tog prefer the crabs, but I wanted to try for as many possible species and we all started with the clams. I caught the first fish of our group, a bergall or cunner. This is a wrasse species related to the togs. The captain stated several times that these "perch" though small were go eats. We started a collection for the captain and even referred to these fish as Captain's specials . The bites were light but they were fairly aggressive. I even managed to hook two on a single hook . Sue was the next in our group to catch a fish and it was a monster. Maybe not in size, but in everything else . You would not want to be smaller or even possibly the same size as this fish when you look at the size of it's mouth in proportion of its body. Originally thought this fish was a conger eel, but was mistaken. Turns out that this is an ocean pout, Zoarces americanus. Definitely the coolest fish of the day from a multispecies angling bent. There were four others landed and even one guy caught two, but I did not land one myself. These guys weren't the only species that gets little regard that we caught that day. Livie was struggling with feeling these light bites, but got on the board with a bergall or two before she hooked and landed her first lifer of the trip, a Little skate (and no it was not just small, that is actually its common name ). She ended up catching two of these guys to my big fat 0. Even Sue caught a Little skate (also a lifer for her), though her male skate did not want to be photographed (or handled). I had caught quite a few bergall while Livie and Sue were catching their lifers. I did end up with another species to the list, a black sea bass, which are so common that it is inevitable that I would catch one this year. We did move to a couple of new locations which gave us time to think contemplate our fishing thus far or check if we had cell service. Well as fun as these multispecies catching was, this was a tog trip after all. So someone had to catch one. Well unbeknownst to Sue, she took that challenge when she switched over to fishing a half of a green crab. Tog have a tendency to pick at a bait at first then mouth it and dive into any gaps or holes in the rocks in a hard pull. Sue got here first experience with that bite and was able to wrangle out her first ever tautog and a keeper male (see the white chin) as well (qualified her for the largest fish pool). I on the other hand got the worse end of a tog bite where I was over an over again hung in the rocks after getting bit . Sue followed that male tog with a female keeper tog. After the captain yelled that she got another one that got many folks headed up our way to the bow or fishing again with crabs (many switched over to clams because we were getting bites throughout the day). Livie moved over to Sue's side and she had some fishing luck and was able to pull one of her tog bites out to the rocks and onto the boat. That was Livie's first tog ever and it also was a keeper qualifying her for the pool. We caught a few more bergall, but not many. Sue did get one more lifer for the day, a red hake (ling) (another one that I have not or did not catch on this trip; also Sue did catch her first ever bergall as well making it five lifers for the day). In end of the day we only caught about 30 fish total, We didn't blank and had three out of the seven keeper togs boated on the trip. By 2:30 the winded picked up and so did the waves making the trip back to harbor one where many had to hold down their lunches. For the group family photo going into the captain's fishing report for trip, Sue allowed me to hold one of her togs . Oh both Sue and Livie lost out to a fish that was just over an inch larger than the biggest togs that they caught. I did broker a deal with a guy to buy Sue's hake.
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You'll love this movie if you haven't seen it.
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I like a little bolder flavor than Coors like this amber Christmas ale. I do find that I usually can only drink just one 🤣
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Livie 6) Tautog or Blackfish, Tautoga onitis, this one was a keeper male (see white chin) and we have it in the fridge . These guys are the largest wrasse species in the US and can get into double digits.
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6) Black Sea Bass, Centropristis striata, also caught in NJ. I was not expecting to catch any of these guys on this trip, since I probably will catch well over 50 this year going for them and for other species. Hoping for more exotic or less common species.
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5) Bergall or cunner, Tautogolabrus adspersus, a wrasse species closely related to Tautog or blackfish. Caught off shore of NJ
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So if a man makes a statement and a woman is not around to hear it, is he still Wrong?!?
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In PA pretty common to have to go through a drive through beer distributor to get a few cases of beer.
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Now this was so bad it was hilarious. Now one of my top 5 movies 🤣
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A nice surprise in 33.5 degree water
Johnsfolly replied to Hog Wally's topic in General Angling Discussion
@Hog Wally That would be awesome if it is a pure sauger. Good luck. -
A nice surprise in 33.5 degree water
Johnsfolly replied to Hog Wally's topic in General Angling Discussion
Congrats on that beast! That's a thick and healthy fish. -
I only recall yellow eyes for spots but don't routinely catch that many.
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What kinda birds are headed north now?
Johnsfolly replied to fishinwrench's topic in Migratory Birds
You never want to be smaller than a chicken (or turkey)! It's been said that a chicken will try to eat what ever doesn't eat them . -
@Orey10m Similar to @snagged in outlet 3 said above I go to the Activity tab and then typically go to All Activity or My Activity Streams instead of Unread content. If you follow members, you can access their content through the My Activity tab.
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Based upon the definition any jig with feathers, chenille, etc. can be fished with spin gear in those areas.
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Pete - Like these? I caught these two in the same river and the same day only about a 1/4 mile of river between them. I had thought that the eye color in smallmouth bass was a male/female deal though really had not looked into it much.
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Gave you a gimmie to round out the total .
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Did see that the Jacks Fork/Current River as well as the 11 pt and other south flowing rivers in the southeast portion of the state are within the distribution range for redspotted sunfish. A couple of redspotted caught in Black river watershed area near Poplar Bluff. A couple from a Texas trip with @Ham