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Old 07-17-2005, 06:46 AM   #1
Flaptail
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Question Beach vs. Boat

Drifting along in a coccoon of fog yesterday morning along the Elizabeth Islands in my skiff I noted to my friend Dave LaPorte ( who is the only one who has the balls to be in such a small boat in a complete fog with me as I sniff my way through a roaring Woods Hole pasage by "sniffing" my way to Nonamesset Island) That I don't know if I am becoming a better boat fisherman or a lousier surfcaster. For the last four years the beach, which has had it moments, has generally sucked. The only respite is taking to my skiff and chasing bass on the flats of Barnstable, Monomoy or sliding along Naushon, Pasque and the other E islands. My first love is surfcasting but how much self abuse of one occasional almost fair nights can you take after weeks of nothing and mung and so on. Now I hear the grand poobah of the surf on that NJ site claiming he would have rather had a sister in a whorehouse than a friend in a boat and I did it with my feet in the sand etc. and many of you espouse the smae sentiment. I console myself by noting I do not troll although I have wire rigs they haven't left the house in ten years maybe more. All the boat fishing I do is casting plugs, rubber and what have you. I think this boat versus shore attitude is just plain stupid. If you want to resign yourself to a future where the beach gets more and more dismal in prospect what with the exploding seal population, mung and bird closures help yourself. The bas are still here they just are smart enough to know when they are beaten so they move off to where the bait, which has a tinge of intelligence too, is. I guess it comes down to pride and denial. Too proud to accept the fact that the beach is changing and not for the better and denial of that fact that beach fishing will and is being relegated to fond memories. I know in my heart it's the seals and the people in charge know it too but they have a different outlook than the interest surfcasters have and a different goal. I will still pound the sand cuase in my heart I cannot and will not let that go but I accept the fact that to catch bass consistently I must take to the water in my skiff and sooner or later a bigger boat. Frank Woolner told me in a conversation at the counetr at Paul Kukonens shop when I was a teenager that to be a truly great Striper fisherman one must master all the techniques from shore or boat. You can still have a preference but the goal is hooking up and catching not wishing for bass.

(BTW we slid along the islands not being able to see more than a hundred feet and sometimes less than twenty and caught bass and some bluefish all day long totally alone most times till the fog burned off around noon. Nothing huge 15 to 17 pounds to dinks and Bernzy 's Howdys and white Creek Chub 2100 series tricked out poppers ruled the day. There are alot of bass along them islands if you got the stones to push off in a dense fog with nothing but experience to guide you)

Why even try.........
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Old 07-17-2005, 06:50 AM   #2
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flap, why not get out of the skiff and surfcast those islands??? Is that illegal in mass?? In RI you could.
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Old 07-17-2005, 07:00 AM   #3
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It is illegal. There are a couple of spots you can land on but they are sand beaches and provide little in the way of current or structure like the boulder fields do. I know some guys who get dropped off but the terrain is really tough and tiresome and they do get some fish but nothing like drifting a hundred feet off shore and casting to the rocks. The fish there tend to sit tight to the shore and are not shore shy at all as no one is there to disturb them. A good 75 % of your hits come in the first ten feet out and your plug must land within a foot or two of the dry rocks.

Why even try.........
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Old 07-17-2005, 07:12 AM   #4
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I grew up in Worcester MA. and no place in New England, maybe the northeast, had more influence on the development of striped bass fisng as we know it today. FW was our Rod and Gun editor of the local paper, and his circle of friends form the central mass area went out as prophets and spread the word.FW's brothers Jack and #^&#^&#^&#^&, Arnold Laine from Templeton, Charlie Whitney from Shrewsbury, the Kissel Bros and there sons from Worc and Millbury, Townsend, Gray, Kukonen, Leo Perry and his sons, Paul Tessier and it just went on and on. I consider Worcester the birthplace of the Striper nation, especially here on Cape Cod.

Why even try.........
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Old 07-17-2005, 06:56 AM   #5
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a boat is just another tool to catch fish. i must say that i enjoy both types of fishing and i particularly like to catch fish. gotta subcribe to frank woolners statement- makes sense. flap- you grew up knowing a lot of legends, lucky guy!

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Old 07-17-2005, 07:33 AM   #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by afterhours
a boat is just another tool to catch fish. i must say that i enjoy both types of fishing and i particularly like to catch fish.
Ditto.

I find fishing from a boat to be a treat as rarely get to do it.Sometimes its nice not have take your waders off after fishing or having to worry about sand getting into everything or taking a digger on a slippery rock.

Don't get me wrong nothing will ever replace those quiet late nights on the shore.Like this morning for example.Up at 3am to fish the 4:15am hightide. Absolutely still,quiet and no other humans.Just myself my pole,plugs and waders.
I did manage a 30" bass at 1st light too.
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Old 07-17-2005, 08:08 AM   #7
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Don't tell anybody, but I'm going fishing on a boat on Wednesday.

seals + plovers =
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Old 07-17-2005, 08:15 AM   #8
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I love fishing from the beach.....but when and if I can afford a boat....I am buying one.....it's all good....but boat fish still don't count
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Old 07-17-2005, 08:19 AM   #9
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well said Flap. Yup sling its all good
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Old 07-17-2005, 07:31 AM   #10
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I've never taken the boat vs surf comments seriously here. I was lucky enough to acquire my uncle's 65 whaler late last season. I like both types of fishing but still also prefer surf for several reasons. This season has been below average for larger fish regardless of method I employ (could be me) although I will say I've landed many more in a boat. The ease to be able to cover more ground in a quicker fashion is a huge plus. I've even learned a few methods on the boat that I could employ in the surf and vice versa.. To me, as long as I'm enjoying myself and learning something new, I'm a happy man.

--Mike Malone
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Old 07-17-2005, 08:45 AM   #11
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On The Money Steve

Right on Steve. I don't know if it is pride, stupidity, or mental illness but I still can not give the beach up. Glad you are catching fish and having fun. Hope your wife is well too.
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Old 07-17-2005, 09:19 AM   #12
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how the F @#$% can you say he,s the only one who has the ball,s

ENJOY WHAT YOU HAVE !!!

MIKE
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Old 07-17-2005, 09:37 AM   #13
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Sorry Mike, I know you got 'em too. I would only have to worry with you when we went by the house on Nonamesset that has the nudists living there, especially the young well endowed blond chick!

Why even try.........
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Old 07-17-2005, 09:45 AM   #14
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nudists, steve? cool. never ran into one in my life.

i like boat and shore. i enjoy catching fish. catching the fish from surf is rewarding for me. i plan to buy a boat for inshore, flats, and offshore fishing someday.
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Old 07-17-2005, 09:45 AM   #15
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welp, i had boat in 80s and 90s
and always did both , sold grady as sand was way good
got skiff?

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Old 07-17-2005, 10:10 AM   #16
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for what its worth, i would happily boatfish if i could afford a boat. my catch rates would go up and i could cover 1000000 times more water than from shore. However, I will always respect a surf caught fish more than a boat fish.. to me a 50 from a boat is a 30 from shore.. and a 6o from a boat would equal a 50 from shore.. You just cant compare the two animals. Yes you are a better fisherman for mastering all tools, but you can not say the glory deserved by catching a bass from a boat should equal that of a shore caught fish of the same weight.

If I had the coin i would have some sort of fishingboat.. but alas i am a starving artist
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Old 07-17-2005, 10:10 AM   #17
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Bought a boat this spring notin special 19' center console.
i usta spend my time trying to cast from the surf as far as i could now I have a boat I cast to the shore.???
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Old 07-17-2005, 10:14 AM   #18
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Right on the money Flap.

Even the one who made the "sister in the whorehouse" quote, has and still does fish from and owns boat(s). You are right about the Worcester gang, and surcasting, and you were lucky to grow up in that backyard, but, the NY crew was just as important in the cape surcasting scene, Bentsen, Samms, Chuck Liegh, little Paulie (the NYFD guy) and countless others from NY were key in the glory days of the outercape backside. And they all fished boat, and beach. Look at Krispys(I think) new avatar, a nice beach shot of Arnold Laine, and #^&#^&#^&#^&ie Samms, in front of a skiff, with a huge bass ). The locals were less notable out there on the sand, some were never known, or heard of, as they preferred it that way.. but I know this, a lot of native cape codders who went for big bass in them days, headed straight to a boat, they figgered if you want big bass, you go to where they are, you don't wait for them to come to you.
Boat fish, Beach fish, lot of talk as to what "counts". Back then, for commercials, they all counted. I know one guy who caught multiple 50's and sixties (mostly from the beach, with witnessess)... never took a pic.. He's like, why??? I just wanted to sell them, and bottom line, thats what it was all about, in the 40's, 50's and 60's,70's, early 80's.
Yes, it is another tool, and a most effective one, in catching, like John Hollenberg (Hi John!), my shoes are still stuck in sand, the fish are fewer, (and smaller), but, I still get a cleansing of the soul at night, alone on the beach, that I just can't find out in a boat.
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Old 07-17-2005, 10:19 AM   #19
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I resiged to that fact several years ago too Steve. I love the beach and have been a MBBA member for 20 some odd years but have not put a vehicle on the sand in several years. I just wasn't catching that much and when I moved off Cape and had to drive an hour or so you can get pretty tired of getting skunked. I just now prefer to fish from the boat. That is why I own 2 boats. I love my 14' tin boat and would never give it up, sorry BM, I have more fun in that thing than any boat I have owned. People told me to sell the thing when I got my 19 footer and I said are you crazy, never. I just like to fish and am not caught up in the beach vs boat stuff. To each his own. I like both but fish from boat 80% of time and enjoy it more and that is what it is all about for me enjoyment. Perfect example I went to Barnstable last nite and fished from shore and got nutin. Perfect nite and tide to drift eels but my truck in shop and couldn't get the tin boat to the water. I know there were bass in that channel too because a guy came in with fish that he got in a tin boat. BTW I would like to mention another original Worcester guy who lives in Sandwich for many years. #^&#^&#^&#^& Cook. To me one of the best. Paul

Last edited by ProfessorM; 07-17-2005 at 10:26 AM..
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Old 07-17-2005, 03:01 PM   #20
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bassmaster
welp, i had boat in 80s and 90s
and always did both , sold grady as sand was way good
got skiff?
got skiff

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