Wishin' I was fishin'. After a quick deluge of rain, and of course wind, this weekend, things are starting to look better then they did. Rain up north quickly had an effect on the water levels in the river. Since this morning we've seen a 20% increase in the cfs and there will be more coming over the next day or so. While the water will drain rather quickly a good push of water does wonders for the start of the run of American shad, river herring, and striped bass.
Monday, March 17, 2025
03.17.25 Well that helped....
Friday, March 14, 2025
03.14.25 Quick shakedown trip...
Took the opportunity with the warmer weather to give it a go for the first time this year. Did't expect much and got just what I expected. One thing I did learn is how resistant my hands are to the cold as I get older. I just can't take it anymore.
Incoming tide wouldn't be my choice especially at 630 am this time of year but you go when you can. Amazingly the waders and the stripping basket still fit from last year adjustments which is a good sign. Obviously there was nothing to see and the northwest wind kept things chilly and my hands raw even just after 30 minutes of casting and retrieving.
At least we've had some sun and warmer weather which causes a slight bump in the water temps but not enough to get things going. It's still early, and way early if you think of things 10-15 years ago. It's just the mild winters we've had in the last few years that have got things going earlier than normal. The earliest fish I've caught at the place I visited this week was March 9th, but it was much warmer than this year.
And in other news how's that for a result of hard work on the professor's side and the student's side as well. It's the trill of victory and the agony of defeat. Above is the class average from Exam 3 which has has my guts all turned inside out. For some it's a continuation of good or bad performance, a wake up call, or a nail in their coffin. As a teacher you pull for just about all of them, the ones you don't are those with a bad attitude or continued bad habits. It's a 27/7 job, literally, for 15 weeks in the fall and the spring. Nursing school is hard and there's no participation trophies given for just showing up.
Sunday, March 9, 2025
Friday, March 7, 2025
03.07.25 I hope these aren't new weather patterns...
Yesterday I stopped by local watering hole, no not a bar. I am amazed that with all the snow and rain we've had this late winter the river isn't really reflecting that. Waiting for water from the north is like waiting for those Long Island bass to show up on the Jersey beaches in the fall. You can wait and wait and they may come or not.
Thursday, March 6, 2025
03.06.25 She made it....
Sunday, March 2, 2025
03.02.25 I wasn't ready if I wanted to...
Good for those that went out yesterday and opened up the season. Yep, it was opening day with air temps in the 50's and wind blowing about 30 mph from the NW. I hope we don't have another spring like last year where it blew all spring, with monsoons in between.
Saturday, March 1, 2025
03.01.25 Ramadan Mubarek.....
Friday, February 28, 2025
02.28.25 Just a day away...
I stopped by the Delaware on my way to work this week. I was surprised to see how the river "looked" during the last week of February. With all the cold and the snow and some good rain mixed in I thought the river would be up, even on a lower tide.
While volume is good for striped bass spawning runs, and it'll come with the spring rains and the melt in the mountains, water temperatures play a big role as well. Luckily we've had some balmy weather this week which has brought up the water temperatures a bit.
Thursday, February 27, 2025
02.26.24 Good to see Henry on MOTF....
Got in from work late last night but just in time to catch ex- New Yorker now Georgian Henry Cowen on Master's of The Fly. He's known as being an expert on "sodium-free stripers". He moved down south in 1997 and has been there ever since and calls Lake Lanier his home waters.
Henry tied up some flies on MOTF and explained the how and why's of fishing for striped bass in lakes. For him tying on 60 degree jig hook is the way to go for his fishery. He likes the fly movement on these hooks and the high success rate in landing bigger fish on them. His fish are stocked by the Georgia DNR each year. In 2022 they stocked 3.4 million fingerlings which remain lake locked. He fishes this non-tidal water looking mostly for water temps and the fish movement patterns.
He wrote the book, "Fly Fishing for Freshwater Striped Bass" and is available on Amazon HERE. It's a solid book and is a good read for the striped bass fans out there.
It was really good to see and hear Henry as he's has been battled blood cancer the last few years. He was healthy enough to make it out to The Fly Fishing Show in Atlanta this year. Interestingly, today was my cancer lecture, which included leukemia, lymphoma, and multiple myeloma. He really had a road to travel down and I'm glad he's doing so well after fighting the hard fight.
Sunday, February 23, 2025
02.23.25 Tragedy in the channel...
Around noon today a boater called 911 stating their boat had capsized in the Ambrose Channel between Staten Island and Brooklyn. There were reportedly six souls on board, three have died, two are in the hospital, one is still missing.
It's unknown the type of boat it was but early reports state it was smaller in size, not a large shipping container ship that navigates the channel heading to ports in Newark, Elizabeth and Bayonne. While the water is freezing there are still hardcore anglers that fish, I would guess for blackfish, during the water.
I also have the utmost respect for water, and for other boats that are out there. Almost to the point of not feeling comfortable as there's a ton of things that could go wrong. I've seen it first hand, as my friends know, being out there in that same channel when a friend got into a spot. They all survived but were shaken, as I was along with the two sports I had fishing with me that day.
RIP to those that lost their lives and to the families of those involved.
02.23.25 Thank God it's not time to fish....
Thursday, February 20, 2025
02.20.25 And she's off....
Bon Yoyage! Well the SS United States cleared all the US Coast Guard hurdles and on Wednesday she left her berth in Philadelphia and started the journey to Mobile, Alabama. It's a feat since she has sat in the much and mire of the Delaware River since 1996.
By this writing at 330 am on Thursday she has cleared the mouth of the Delaware Bay and is heading out into the Atlantic Ocean for a parallel trip along the coast down and around
around the tip of Florida to inside the Gulf of America before settling in for prep work in Alabama. Sorry, I'm one of those who likes it called the Gold of America. It's a body of water that sits between North and South America, well actually, not really. You can see where North ends and South begins below.
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
02.19.25 Looks like some weather's coming....
In the next few days it looks like Virginia and and parts of Maryland are going to get hit some big snow. I hope it doesn't touch us as I am so done with the cold. I'm also done with paying for oil to feed the 100 year old converter coal furnace which keeps our house a balmy 60 degrees.
But there might be some good with the weather for the striped bass. Horse winters and a nice spring can mean a solid spawn, which the striped bass are in desperate need of. As we look at the striped bus numbers we have plenty, well a good amount of SSB out there, it's the younger ones that we don't see.
The question is the location of the snow. We see down near the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay are the highest totals, near 20 inches. That snow pack will melt and just head ou to sea in the spring. The James, York, Rappahannock Rivers may fare better as the snow totals are up in their headwaters region. The Potomac, a spawning powerhouse of a river, well depending on who you talk to, is seeing it's greatest accumulations below Washington D.C, so that melt won't get down and deep in the earth and feed the river like if the heaviest snow was above D.C.
Who know's what it all means for the striped bass. Here on the Delaware River it' running about 7,800 cfs, which is good, but that only after the deluge of rain we had over last weekend. We need things to be steady, not extreme, for the fish, and the fishing, to be good.
Tuesday, February 18, 2025
02.18.25 Be careful what you wish for...
It was last July when Don Vaccaro purchased a home on Nantucket's Sheep Pond Road for $200,000 which was pennies off of the $1.9 million dollar market value price. While the home and views are amazing, Mother Nature and the receding shoreline are not, at least to people who own homes in paradise just steps from the beach. I first wrote about this in an August 2024 blog titled, "Oh, the sand just keeps moving... everywhere", HERE.

Sunday, February 16, 2025
02.15.25 You can blame this one on NJ.com....
This past week during one of my internet surfing breaks I scrolled through the NJ.com website. This site is, or was, the digital version of the once printed, The Star Ledger (TSL), New Jersey's largest newspaper. If you go on the site now you don't see any mention of TSL but more of NJ Advance Media, the parent marketing company for several "newspapers" in and around New Jersey.
During my 20 years in and around Newark The Star Ledger was the first thing you went to buy in the morning, especially on the way to the firehouse. It was during a time when newspapers and television, not cable, were THE source of local, national, and international news. If you wanted to keep up on the news around New Jersey, and the hotbed of things in Newark and Trenton this was the source. Not only was I a reader, but I also worked for TSL as a freelance photographer starting around 2005.
Let's just say over the years TSL has morphed from an independent middle of the round, well kinda, publication to a more left-leaning liberal source of news, or what some would call, a rag. Media and journalism have become so biased and leaning, either way, that it's hard to find, and be comfortable with, a news source that just gives you the facts, and not the opinions and skewed reporting we see today.
- 2014-2015- $4.5 million
- 2016-2017- $5.6 million
- 2017-2018- $8.5 million
- 2018-2019- $28.1 million
- 2019-2020- $36.0 million
- 2020-2021- $54.5 million
- 2022-2023- $24 million
- 2023-2024- $50 million
- 2024-2025- $65 million ($104 requested)