Fun beach day!
July 13, 2023 Stone Harbor 7 photos
Bluefish
Bluefish
Whiting
Whiting

Trip Summary

Hit the beach with John and Henry this morning. It was a perfect morning; pretty sunrise, flat seas, soft breeze, and the fish were biting. I no sooner set the first surf rod into the sand spike when it got rattled. We had our first kingfish on the beach. He volunteered for big hook duty. So early on we landed a good number of kingies and spot. I went to send a spot out on another large hook, but on the cast the spot flew off. Normally they stay on better. As I was reeling the now empty hook back in, a chopper bluefish decided to try and eat the hook. I guess it flashed in the sunlight. The blue also volunteered for hook duty. It didn't take long for the fresh bluefish head to be discovered. The rod went over hard peeling drag. Henry grabbed the rod while John and I cleared the other rods. We weren't positive on what we had on the business end of the rig until after about fifteen minutes into the battle it boiled on the surface. It was a monster ray. Henry was feeling the fight in his arms and shoulders and passed the rod to dad to take over. They took turns back and forth for a good forty minutes as the big ray cruised up and down the beach. Finally the ray settled onto the sand and glommed on tight. John listened and did everything I told him to do as I tried to coach him on to victory. Then, as he was walking back trying to get the ray up on the surface, just before the leader was within reach, the line parted. Not the fairytale ending we wanted, but it made life a bit easier. We saw the beast, and it was very large. We regrouped back at our spot and reset the rods. We picked at fish for the rest of the morning, but it was far from fast and furious. A got a few more kingies, spot, and another blue. I guess in total we landed twenty or so fish and lost or missed as many. No other big rays or sharks wanted to play unfortunately. The ospreys came in and put on a show, diving down and coming up with fish after fish. Pelicans cruised past. Dolphins were tearing some poor fish up about two hundred yards out. And there was a large bird play a bit beyond that. So, lots of life and potential action along the beach. Hopefully next time they move in closer and bite! Tight Lines!
Frank Breakell
Stone-harbor, New Jersey, United States
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Other reports from this captain

Windy fun!
Windy fun!
September 17, 2024
Decided to get out and fight the wind tonight. For whatever reason, I enjoy fishing on stormy nights. The water is rough, casting is hard, retrieves are difficult, and the fish usually bite. I enjoy the challenge. So, I went to a sod bank and battled the northeast wind. The flood tide was a bit much, making the current run even harder than the nearly full Moon already was. And of course it pulled every bit of grass off the sod banks and I to my casting lanes. Regardless, I managed to catch a nice weakie. Of course it popped off the hook as I lifted it. But, it was all good. I would've released it anyway. It would've been nice to get a photo though, it was a nice weakie. A few casts later I got another weakie that spit the hook as I reached for the leader. Just not my night it seemed. The bite died out and the grass got thicker, so I took a walk. I found a crazy Eddie that was swirling and rough. As luck would have it, a striper popped right in the middle of the maelstrom. I cast a bunch of times trying to present the bait just right. After about twenty casts I must have got the presentation correct. I got hammered by a nice striper that peeled off drag in the heavy current. We battled back and forth, both giving and taking line. I finally got it close and grabbed the leader. She measured out at 31 inches. Snapped a quick photo and released her back I to the churning water. No other takers. I took a ride and tried a new area. It seemed quiet at first, but then a school of bait erupted in the surface. I cast and something swirled on my jig. A few casts later I came tight to another striper that put up a fantastic fight. This one measured out at 27 inches and was fat. Another quick photo and release. And again, the action died. Took another ride to search another area for any willing brawlers. Found loads of bait, even had it exploding on the surface, but no willing predators. On the plus side, I got to watch a pair of otters chase each other around. Cuteness overload. But no fish. I tried one final spot, but it too was devoid of any willing takers of the scaled persuasion. So, I called it a night. And it was a good night. The windy conditions did not disappoint. Tight Lines!
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Fun in the back, due to the wind.
Fun in the back, due to the wind.
September 16, 2024
Ran a fun trip in the back yesterday with Justin onboard for the ride. We poked around a favorite bridge to see if anything fun might be hanging around. As we cruised through we noticed a pigeon sitting on the cross beams of the ice breakers. Seemed to be an odd place, but, to each his own. We cast around with a variety of lures, and soaked some baits. Little fish were the catch of the day for the outgoing tide. Sea bass and pinfish were destroying our baits. Tried for tog and sheeps, but no takers. While fishing we heard some awkward splashing. Then we saw the source. The pigeon we passed earlier had fallen into the water. At Justin's insistence we rescued the flopping, sputtering pigeon. He became our mascot for the day, hanging out on the bow watching us fish. Once the tide turned and began flooding the little fish bite dropped off. We began drifting for flounder. Justing landed the first keeper of 18.5 inches. We missed or dropped quite a few other bites. We had schools of mullet swimming past us now and again. And up on the flats there were peanuts being harassed by snappers. There were quite a few big boils and splashes here and there too. It was quite the show. When the bite slowed we made a move and drifted some deeper water. The wind made things interesting. Suffice to say, the motor was used quite a bit for positioning. We made a few drifts along a sod bank getting sporadic hits. On what was supposed to be our final drift I got hammered by a 20 inch flounder. So, it wasn't our final drift. We tried another area, but the boat traffic and wind with the tide made the drift unfavorable. We made another move and worked over a normally productive area, but only got short flounder and pestered by little sea bass. While drifting along near so.e houses our pigeon feiend decided he had overstayed his welcome. He flew off to the nearby docks and never even said goodbye. Justin was crestfallen. He had hoped to take his featherwd feiend home to his beloved, as she so loves birds (kidding). So, with the wind continuing to increase, the bite dropping off, and our feathered mascot gone, we called it a day. Had a great time, as always. Given the amount of bait showing in the back waters, the Fall bite should be solid. Looking forward to it. Tight Lines!
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