Wild Bill
07-20-2007, 08:51 PM
Terry and I spent the past week at the Cape slamming the bass. I fish fairly often and this was the best trip I can remember for the number and size of bass on flies. We did good last year but this year was better. Boat handling is 80% of catching fish in the rips and we are learning how to put the boat in the right spot and hold it there.
The weather turned out to be much better than predicted. It did not blow over ten kts all week. One thing you have to learn to deal with is the fog. It is prevalent every single day and may last the entire day long. We had Chuck and Bobby with us again this year in their 23 Parker with radar for much of the week. I am considering getting a small unit for next year.
We only used two flies and two fly lines. A large orange squid fly was hot. It is a fly that I put together from a number of features I had seen on various squid flies. The stripers just loved it. It uses a wide gap Gammy 6/0 hook which helps with the hook up ratio. This was fished on a 10 wt with a custom tip express line. The other fly was a large white slider fished on a 10 wt floating line.
The water is very clear and you can often see the fish with their mouths wide open cruising behind your fly in the curl of the rip. Seeing them take the fly is a big part of the thrill.
Terry did yeomen's work taking all the fish off because I did not want to grab them with my recovering hand. We landed nearly 400 fish for the six days from 10 to 30 pounds. About 10% of those were bluefish. All hooks were barbless and all fish released to swim another day. When the fog became thick, we stopped fly fishing and caught them on needle fish plugs, so we could be more attentive for what might be near us. We fished areas not populated with the commercial hook and line bass fishermen. Their aggressive behavior makes fly fishing difficult at times. Plenty of room up there to find your own fish. A great place to spend a week in July.
http://i174.photobucket.com/albums/w111/wildbill99/capet3.jpg
Terry with a Sqiud Eating Bass
http://i174.photobucket.com/albums/w111/wildbill99/cape25.jpg
Another Squid Eater
http://i174.photobucket.com/albums/w111/wildbill99/cape302.jpg
This Bass Took a Big White Slider on Top
http://i174.photobucket.com/albums/w111/wildbill99/radar.jpg
Chuck and Bobby's Radar Boat
The weather turned out to be much better than predicted. It did not blow over ten kts all week. One thing you have to learn to deal with is the fog. It is prevalent every single day and may last the entire day long. We had Chuck and Bobby with us again this year in their 23 Parker with radar for much of the week. I am considering getting a small unit for next year.
We only used two flies and two fly lines. A large orange squid fly was hot. It is a fly that I put together from a number of features I had seen on various squid flies. The stripers just loved it. It uses a wide gap Gammy 6/0 hook which helps with the hook up ratio. This was fished on a 10 wt with a custom tip express line. The other fly was a large white slider fished on a 10 wt floating line.
The water is very clear and you can often see the fish with their mouths wide open cruising behind your fly in the curl of the rip. Seeing them take the fly is a big part of the thrill.
Terry did yeomen's work taking all the fish off because I did not want to grab them with my recovering hand. We landed nearly 400 fish for the six days from 10 to 30 pounds. About 10% of those were bluefish. All hooks were barbless and all fish released to swim another day. When the fog became thick, we stopped fly fishing and caught them on needle fish plugs, so we could be more attentive for what might be near us. We fished areas not populated with the commercial hook and line bass fishermen. Their aggressive behavior makes fly fishing difficult at times. Plenty of room up there to find your own fish. A great place to spend a week in July.
http://i174.photobucket.com/albums/w111/wildbill99/capet3.jpg
Terry with a Sqiud Eating Bass
http://i174.photobucket.com/albums/w111/wildbill99/cape25.jpg
Another Squid Eater
http://i174.photobucket.com/albums/w111/wildbill99/cape302.jpg
This Bass Took a Big White Slider on Top
http://i174.photobucket.com/albums/w111/wildbill99/radar.jpg
Chuck and Bobby's Radar Boat