Be careful mentioning spots for inshore tuna, unless you want to share a school of tuna with 4 35ft pleasure cruisers, 8 giant center consoles who should really be offshore, 10 21 fooot CC's, 4 Zodiacs, 3 10ft tin boats, a canoe, and several kayaks, with everyone using a different approach to catching them and at best a 1/4 of them having permits. All this taking place in 2 to 4 foot seas.
If you think spot burning for stripers is bad, you haven't seen anything. Till you nearly hit some jackass in his kayak 3 miles out in dense fog who then proceeds to yell at you for moving in on "his" fish when he should really be thanking you for not running him over it's tough to realize what a inshore tuna report does to people. Nevermind the fact that the fish seem to get gun shy when they get a lot of pressure from the run and gun tactics.
Just wait till Friday when someone opens their mouth to the ProJo. Be careful out there, don't get too crazy over the tuna and end up on the rocks in the fog like someone always does every year.
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