What a long, long time it's been :-)
Hours turn into days, days turn into weeks, weeks turn into months...wow.
It's almost the end of July and the one thing that can be said about
the Spring of 2003 in New Jersey is that there was an unprecedented
run of LARGE stripers. They made the mistake of being part of an anomaly
the like of which no one can remember! There were 25# to nearly 60#
stripers in our waters for over 3 weeks. Everyone has a theory as to
why they showed up like they did - some say it was water temp, others
say it was the large schools of bunker and still others write it off
as one of those things that just happens. You gotta wonder, were the
LARGE bass inshore because there were large schools of bunker every
day...or were the large schools of bunker inshore because the LARGE
bass pushed them and kept them inshore? To the many guys who had phenomenal
spring fishing, I don't think they really care which it was!
Regardless of what the cause was, they were here...they stayed here...and
they were caught primarily by the hundreds of boats that followed those
bunker schools like a puppy dog and his chew toy. There were, to the
best of my knowledge, no 50 pound bass caught on anything other than
bait - either bunker or live eels. Between May 11th and June 19th, there
were 6 confirmed surf caught 50 pound stripers - 1 from Maryland and
5 from NJ. Of those 6 confirmed shore caught 50's, 3 were landed by
SOL members
These extraordinary fish moved slowly
through NJ - it's impossible to estimate how many thousands of 20# -
40# stripers were killed, but it's probably not a stretch to say that
it's more than the past 15 springs combined. As rare and wonderful as
20# - 40# stripers are in these parts in the spring, it's a shame so
many guys felt the need to kill 2 each day per person while fishing
3 to 7 days a week. Next year when these beasts don't come back, they'll
wonder what happened to those giant bunker eating bass they caught hand
over fist for three weeks - and filleted as many as they could. I think
it's wonderful that so many people had the opportunity to experience
the thrill of landing such LARGE fish in NJ - and it's equally wonderful
that so many could bring home some fish for the table and the freezer.
These are all important parts of what makes up striper fishing. It just
brakes my heart to hear about the same guys weighing in 2 fish over
30# day after day....or hearing about boats landing way over their limit
of all LARGE fish. This anomaly of enormous stripers on the Jersey shore
was a welcomed change after years of slow and miserable spring runs
- lets hope either the fish or the anglers wise up before we do some
serious damage to the fragile older end of the striper stocks. Kill
what you are gonna eat, let the rest go - and please stop using treble
hooks for livelining - they do nothing but destroy the insides of every
fish you release...I've heard too many stories of precious LARGE bass
being gut hooked with treble hooks. The internal injuries from that
kinda "sport" fishing border on irresponsible angling. OK,
the preaching is over ;-) It's hard for guys fishing a whopping 2 or
3 seasons to truly appreciate how rare an occurrence this spring was,
but we all need to be diligent in taking care of all the fish we plan
on releasing - a dead LARGE striper in your cooler is one thing...a
bunch of dead LARGE stripers floating around cause some chucklehead
felt the need to gut hook them with treble hooks is entirely another.
Hopefully, this fall will see the return
of these beasts...only much fatter. And hopefully, they won't eat during
the day and they'll only take plugs and jigs and flies and teasers :-)
Hey, a guy can hope, can't he?
Tim Surgent