Wednesday, September 17, 2025
09.17.25 Let the work, and the games, begin...
Monday, September 15, 2025
09.16.25 Just had to go....
I didn't look at the weather nor the tides and I just went. Of course I woke up at 1230 am after a few hours sleep. It's funny how bad those night sleeps are before a days fishing. But I fell back asleep and was down on the beach in Deal at 5 am. I went to some familiar parking areas and
they were now all different. The areas were either paved over or blocked off with all kinds of ropes and signage. I didn't want to get a ticket, so I just settled in on Roosevelt.
It was a low expectation and low effort kind of morning. The night before I went looking for my September fly selection and could only find one Snake Fly.
I really should have checked any fishes vaccine record in the water in front of me because if I hooked one it surely would have needed a tetanus shot due to the half rated hook. In the end it didn't matter. I arrived down there just about before dead low. There was still some water around the groins and Whitehall seemed a good place to start.
In the darkness I saw a man fishing while his dog ran around with his leash in his mouth. The mans name was Sammy, a regular in Deal regular for decades. He went on to tell me that
today was his Father's 99th birthday up in heaven. He told me that 40 years ago to the day he went fishing with his Dad, here in Deal, and he ( the son) landed a 26 pound bass. We both hoped for any fish this morning, even a 26 ouncer of something would have been good.
I took a short walk south down to Phillips to pay Ryan's Rock a visit. It's been a bit since I have been. While I enjoyed the solitude and thinking about Ryan I started to hear chatter in the background. It was then I turned and realized I was joined by the black coat mafia who would
stick around waiting until the sunrise. Several made their way out to me and I don't know how they didn't faceplate on those slippery rocks with those fake Florsheim's they were all sporting.
As I called it a morning and walked out I came upon the pump house. For those that are just getting into this they just don't know. I remember working my way around the building to get down to the snubby Roosevelt groin or to the sand where the winding Poplar Brook would empty
into the ocean. Or even how, at times, you'd have to take the wall down past Whitehall to a little series of stone steps just about before the wooden breaker before the beach club. It was only after the tide had ebbed could you walk back along the skinny beach in front of the rocks. And that was the same way below The Hump leading to Roseld. Oh, those were the days. I am so glad I caught a piece of it.
Of course I took Spier Avenue home and stopped dead in my tracks when I got in front of number 116 which was Al Walker's house. Like in typical Jersey Shore fashion the new owners
demolished the house and have started framing out for a new one. The house was sold in December of 2019 for $3 million dollars. At $1,087 a sq. foot it fetched far more than other homes in Allenhurst at that time which were selling for $445 a sq. foot. Crazy that buy/demolish/build cycle we see in these more affluent towns.
And since I was down there I just had to hit Bagel Talk. I was hoping since it was back to school now that they would have some ice cold white milk in the fridge, nope, forget it.
Do that many people drink chocolate or strawberry milk? C'mon man. So I settled on a scooped out and toasted everything bagel with egg and cheese with a coffee chaser.
Sunday, September 14, 2025
09.14.25 Nice to see Andy Mill get into the IGFA Hall of Fame...
A few weeks back Andy Mill joined a distinguished class of anglers inducted into the IGFA Hall of Fame. Since I found Andy's Millhouse podcast, HERE, a few years ago I have become a big fan. He has had himself quite a career from world class skiing, to broadcasting, to fly fishing. He fell in love and became obsessed with tarpon fishing and that has taken him to all corners of the world. He's involved heavily with Hardy and can be found doing the bigger shows on the circuit.
That's the text I woke up to after we talked about what I thought about those guys and all that is money and fly fishing. And with that text it all just left my brain. I'm not revisiting it here because Bobby's not around to protect me from myself, it's just because it fits here. But yes, it is hard to relate to fly anglers who can go and do it just about whenever and wherever they want to. Now to be fair, a lot of those people started out in very humble beginnings, something I always learn as Andy meticulously navigates through each
interviewees life history. But in the end the list is full of anglers who have chased records, fished in tournaments around the world, and are in a circle of people that I will never know. That's not to say they aren't great guys and gals and aren't approachable. They are. It's just how many people can they and do they want to touch. I'll never see these guys catching a tide on the Jersey Shore or Delaware River.
Saturday, September 13, 2025
09.13.25 I remember those days...
Friday, September 12, 2025
09.12.25 There's just too many moving parts these days...
God I like simple. I think that's why I liked, even just as a visitor, the wilds of Ireland. I'm sure they have their problems as well, but on the surface, I just free driving the small towns where the houses were modest, the fields green, and there just wasn't a lot of people around. Small towns with small town feelings with always a feeling of "Failte", or welcome.