We thought this would be the day. Everything was going to line up between the weather, the bait, the fish, and our skills, and we would be on them good and bring a bunch to hand. In the morning while I worked on the final exam the two boys hit OB again where we found good bait the day before. Before they got back I was already on my way back to the flats. I had my feet in the water and on the sand by 10 AM.
It was the end of the incoming New Moon tide so there was plenty of water in the tub. The sun was out but so was the wind which wasn't bad, but it made your eyes hurt as you searched for shadows and signs of marauding bass. Quickly I had seen nine fish, and had three refusals on Flatwing's "Fighting Crab", a crab that landed him the pool winner for the trip last year. But this year they seem to want smaller crab flies, so I made the switch and went on the hunt.
Of course I had the ladder in tow and I can't reiterate how a must have that is for me. When you're sight fishing on grade, like not from an elevated beach or you don't have a white bottom, the cone of visibility that increases with the added height is invaluable. It no doubt doubles or triples the amount of fish I see. And the more fish you see, the more shots you get.
I had some skiffs with sight fishing anglers for company but they worked the channels. The Two Joe's joined me about an hour or so into the day. With each hour the numbers of fish seen increased. And it's funny how those numbers add up. You see three in short order, then it jumps to a dozen, then it slows, then you're at twenty, and in the end yesterday my eyes saw thirty three bass, and I probably made casts to twenty of them. Follows and refusals were in effect, and I just love the frustration that sight fishing brings.
The three of us looked like those mating horseshoe crabs that frustrate the hell out of you when you're trying to sight fish. There were definitely more in Menemsha Pond but we all fell for, and made casts to, the pairs traversing the bottom. If you tracked the steps of the three of us we criss-crossed each other and set up in spots where the sun was working with us. The shimmer on the surface made things difficult, but manageable. At one point we were kind of working in the same area, the two guys on one edge of a flat, with me kind of inside them. As I walked I saw a nice fish moving from right to left and at a perfect angle. I made a nice leading cast, two strips, and I was tight.
Now of course everything we me has a story. So I'm in and having my fun with the initial run of the fish and that's when I noticed a huge wind knot in my fly line. It was go back and forth, through the guides, and onto the reel, and then back out, as I fought the fish. Well on one point when it made a run the knot caught the tip section and it was over. There went the tip section, anchored my the wind knot, heading down the line, and for the water.
So I had a fish on and had to either hand reel the fish in or get the tip section back on. I thought for sure I was going to lose it, and I didn't want to, why? Because I wanted a nice picture of me and it was one time where one of my buds was nearby. So I played it gingerly.
The fish had inhaled the crab fly and it easily popped out of the roof of it's mouth. It was an ocean fish who came in on the tide to sniff around for a snack. And while low water is best to see them I think on the incoming tides, when the water floods, is when the fish move in and up and start snooping around.
You know I do this blog and I've taken a million photos to accompany the story for the day. There's some places that I can't post images about, otherwise the risk of the spot burn would increase, and other times I can't get a picture of myself with a fish, especially if I'm out in the water. So when I get that chance, like when a friend is near, I'll take it all day. It's not the fish that I need the picture of, it's me and one day having the opportunity to look back and remember how much I love striped bass, sight fishing, and Martha's Vineyard.
And the question you may have is, why would you sight fish without a hat on? Well, that brings us to the hat I've been wearing this week. I've gotten some heat over it so I removed it for the quick photo session. The other evening Joe took a picture of me just to show me how
ridiculous I look. But, I have to say, that hat covers my rear neck fat, the tops of my ears, and even the acts like horse blinders that protect my cheeks from the sun. So I may look like a goof, but I'm better off for it, until someone snaps a picture of me.
We couldn't figure out if I looked more like The Flying Nun, for you tots that was a TV show from the late 1960's and early 1970'S, which starred Sally Fields. Or maybe look more like the
cartoon character Rocky from the early mid-century carton Rocky and Bullwinkle. Rocky, above, was a flying squirrel, and my hat kinda looks like I could take off in flight at any time. But we all know I don't photograph well, in fact I hate to see pictures of myself all double-chinned up with sagging jowels and a receding hairline, coupled with a dirty shirt that's past it's fishing life, glasses all wrapped around my sling pack, and a profile where I could double as Alfred Hitchcock. You know him, "Good evening...." But hey, Theresa loves me.
And as of late the wind seemed to die with the tide but not yesterday. As the water receded the winds picked up, easily to 20 NW which just sucked. I ran out front and saw a few boats on Middle Ground and they must have been getting tossed around pretty good out there.
So for a day when I thought everything would have lined up for the three of us God was especially good to me. Yes, it was only one but it was a fine fish that I caught just how I love to catch them. The other boys saw fish, had a few shots, and put the time in between morning and mid-day sessions. But to just illustrate how things are, three guys fishing for four days, four fish in total. Flatwing is determined to shake off the skunk and he just might do that as I write this blog at 345 AM.
Last night as we ate kinda heathy. I was hankering for a salad so I ran down to Stop & Shop and picked up what I needed and it went along with some calzones that Custom picked up in New Hampshire. It was then they talked about their next fishing plan. "We're getting up and outta here at 145 AM to go and fish the inlet at Menemsha". These boys are fishy, let me tell you. But back to the picture above, you know what I see outside of the zero nutritional value iceberg lettuce covered in blue cheese and bacon, the plastic pill boxes. That shows you you're traveling with old guys. Each of us have one and say everyday, "I've gotta take my pills".
So right on point the boys woke me up at 145 AM and asked me to move my truck so they could get out. I hope they hit it good out there. I hope it's bass in the dark on the incoming and then bones, or Atlantic bonito, at first light. If they score tonight then they'll be tucked in for a long days nap when they get back. If not, they'll sleep for a bit and then get back out there somewhere like two buds on a mission. These two are buds, and they're fishy, and they like to catch fish.