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Old 01-02-2007, 08:57 PM   #31
Flaptail
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On the Outer Cape I never wade into open surf. Usually I am twenty feet back. Lots of nights the fish are in the wash. It don't make sense to walk on 'em. There are bars that people wade out to at low tide as they feel they have to get outside to reach the fish. What they don't realize is the even forty pounders think nothing of wallowing over a bar in less than a foot of water to scrounge bait that inhabits the three foot depths inside the bar to the beach proper. Especially at night.

Big surf has a lot of dynamic forces that will try to drag you into Triton's realm. Looking up into a cold green wave at two in the morning that you only noticed coming as it blotted out the stars is unerving to say the least and if survived runs the whole experience.

Estuaries have there pitfalls as well. Mucky spots and my favorite the holes left by clammers who worked the low tide and down you go as you wade in the dark over the same spot at the high turn. Sedge bankings are fun and having witnessed along with Art Crago, a fisahing friend of mine, a section collapse into the creek that was where we were standing minutes before casting flies at Scorton one
day is really an eye opener. 30 feet by five feet wide by six feet high just tumbling into the creek. Scary.

I fish a lot of rocks on an island you all love in mid summer. Corkers on and out and up you go onto rocks 30 feet from shore in six feet of water. No problem getting up onto them but getting down is really hairy and when a dragger goes by and sends in a seven set of four footers where your boots are usually six inches out of the water and it's time to perspire while watching them come at you. Your going over, no question. A lonely feeling in the wee hours.

To wade safely, anywhere, you must know your turf and what can happen. Respect the law of averages and calculate the risk versus the gain and it never pays to walk through a school of feeding fish.

Why even try.........
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Old 01-02-2007, 09:14 PM   #32
Karl F
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Originally Posted by Flaptail View Post
On the Outer Cape I never wade into open surf. Usually I am twenty feet back. Lots of nights the fish are in the wash. It don't make sense to walk on 'em. There are bars that people wade out to at low tide as they feel they have to get outside to reach the fish. What they don't realize is the even forty pounders think nothing of wallowing over a bar in less than a foot of water to scrounge bait that inhabits the three foot depths inside the bar to the beach proper. Especially at night.

Big surf has a lot of dynamic forces that will try to drag you into Triton's realm. Looking up into a cold green wave at two in the morning that you only noticed coming as it blotted out the stars is unerving to say the least and if survived runs the whole experience.

Estuaries have there pitfalls as well. Mucky spots and my favorite the holes left by clammers who worked the low tide and down you go as you wade in the dark over the same spot at the high turn. :

Yep, Well Said.. I know nothing of Rocks
As one of the regulars on my beach says.. we only wear waders, to keep our socks dry.
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Old 01-03-2007, 12:35 AM   #33
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Yep - what Flap said, Karl - so true about the beach and keeping the socks dry. At my age anything above my knees gets hairy.
Anyone who even thinks of wading in the ditch is completely nuts. That includes the east end at low tide. I have seen a few screwballs taking a crack at Pips Rip with waders on at dead low. When a tanker comes through and you get sucked in you are going for a long swim.

low & slow 37
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Old 01-03-2007, 12:42 AM   #34
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depends of im catching.. if theres fish there, and my bass fever is boiling, i am more apt to take stupid chances..... if its slow and im easily distracted i take less chances.

In my mako- im ultra cautious.
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Old 01-03-2007, 01:37 AM   #35
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I fish Montauk most of the time, so it's mostly rock-hopping for me. I'll hardly ever put myself on a rock where the water is deeper than my waist...I'm not one of these swimming guys. If the surf is running too high, I'll back up a bit if I can. There's no fish worth dying for. I'm double careful at night and carry both a strobe light and a manual whistle just in case I get into trouble. You'd be surprised how loud one of those coaches whistes are!!! Oh and the safety tip of the day...NEVER turn your back to the surf while perched up on a rock. Don't ask how I know.
Bassnuts,
I know what u mean, its a completely diff game at night. Any rock that looked easy during the day at the same tide is completely diff at night when the eyes are not so reliable. You better have an exit strategy ,a whistle and a cyalume stick is not a bad idea either. esp if you are alone.
Scariest experience late this fall was at Shagwong ,Montauk(a sand beach) late night. Wading parallel to the shoreline I stepped up to almost my chest in quicksand right where the currents converge,never expected it, completely caught off guard. Since I had waders on, 2 good waves is all it would have taken to get into serious trouble. There was not a soul around.Thats how it happens, when u least expect it.

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Old 01-03-2007, 08:25 AM   #36
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Exactly..
when I fish with JoeP (who is 8ft tall)... I have to be careful when following him if I'm not in my wetsuit!
I agree. Joe goes where no man has gone before. I've seen him standing in water at Narrow River that is over my head.

When I was younger I had very few limits as to where and when I would fish. As I got older my limits became more defined.

20 years ago there was a rock at Watch Hill we called Widows Rock (for obvious reasons). I'd fish that in a 25 SW at high tide without reservations. Now I won't fish it flat calm at low tide.

No boat, back in the suds.
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Old 01-03-2007, 10:03 AM   #37
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I fish mostly a low sloppy jetty flanking a hard running narrow inlet. Basically you walk out to the beach hop on the rocks and walk east 200-250 yds until you are at the end where a big rip sets up off the tip. You are pretty exposed out there. There are two types of waves you can encounter, Boomers and Sweepers. The boomers are the waves that come in looking all big and nasty and smash into the base of the rocks and send spray everywhere. They put on a good show. The sweepers are the waves that look totally innocent and small but at the last minute they come charging horizontally across the top of the rocks and put the fear of god in you. I got knocked down hard one night in the spring by a sweeper I didn't see coming because I was fiddling with my plug. It was 2 AM on a full moon dropping tide, luckily I was left high and dry on the rocks but had I gone in I would have been 100s of yds out before I even came up for air. I don't fish there without a PFD and don't go out when the surf is really up.
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Old 01-03-2007, 12:00 PM   #38
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When and where I fish the rocks the danger level is minimal. However there are two places where I stand waist deep in moving water that is filling up a large area that gives cause for concern. Incoming tide, if you dont keep your left foot planted and think before deciding to move and replant the foot you are in serious danger. The same with the right foot on the outgoing. Thtas why I where the sospenders. I have stumbleb a few times but never went down. Ususally when I did get wet it because I had a fish on close and wanted to land it, so I did what I had to do to catch the fish. I am amazed at some of the pictures I have seen here and posted elsewhere of fishermen completely awash under or in a wave.

I lost quite a bit of weight a few years ago and had to be far more careful stepping into the current because of that. Less weight, less ballast. Bought a new Aqua-Skinz last year and while a I wore it a few times I never really put it to the test except in heavy rain and in that regard it performed admirably. Looking forward to drenching it this year coming though.

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Old 01-03-2007, 08:05 PM   #39
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Exactly..
when I fish with JoeP (who is 8ft tall)... I have to be careful when following him if I'm not in my wetsuit!
Yeah but when you're in your wetsuit you definitely are more comfortable being soaked in water that deep with a big surf on than I am.
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Old 01-03-2007, 08:49 PM   #40
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I had no fear until my son was born

then my perspective changed on how productive that one rock is 30 yards out

Comfort level now depends on tide and how big the water is

A couple of sleeper rogues this past year sent me for a ride off a perch

false sunrise in gansett with decksweeper, and another unknown south of us, surf picked me up and I was swimming back to the rock...never saw it coming

wading belt is a must, with or without a surf top!!!!

Neck deep to get to a new rock on calm nights, high tide sure turned out to be quite productive, right decksweeper
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Old 01-04-2007, 09:59 AM   #41
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My comfort level isn't quite as "deep" as yours Jim so didn't benefit from that perch that night...Had fun listening to your reel whistle though...
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Old 01-04-2007, 10:43 AM   #42
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I tend to feel more comfortable in a wetsuit vs waders whether its sand or rocks near deeper water, current is the thing I respect most. On calm nights most can push themselfs to farther points and rocks but its those fishy rough nights where you had best know the terrain and face the water at all times. Although I know there are never any garrentees, experience speaks volumes and how well you learned from people you've fished with. Something as small as knowing how to brace yourself at waves can mean all the difference in fish & ofcourse health wise. You don't have to be a surf junkie to fish rougher water just do it smart. I think to many guys are afraid to get wet. Don't get confused with...some place's you just shouldn't be in the water.
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Old 01-07-2007, 03:54 PM   #43
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Rogue Wave

I recall as a kid surfcasting in Marshfield during an incoming tide. 1-2 ft swells were common, the tide was 75% full (about 1 hr from Hightide it was windy out of the SW (offshore). As we stood along shoreline were noticed and heard the rumbble and crackle of the rocks underneath the water being sucked out at a tremendous undertow....we were amazed as the ocean seemed to just want to go outbound...1-2-5- -6 ft out from where it was....we pulled in our lines..and as we did we saw on the horizon a black/ grey wall of smooth water rising and dancing on the horizon(probably 1 mile out)...It was an incoming huge wave appx 25 ft -30 ft high!!
we scrambled off the beach as did everone else ...across 25-30 feet of dry sand to the stairs on Hartford Road and over the seawall....about 5 seconds latter the wave broke about 5 ft from the seawall and oversplashed wall as water ran down Hartford rd,,,,we ran to wall afterward to see towels coolers and tubes all going out to sea and the ocean as clam as before,,,this happened about 1966 or so never saw anything like it before or since
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Old 01-07-2007, 06:51 PM   #44
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I'm a bad person to ask. The best bass waters are the worst for humans.
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Old 01-08-2007, 08:35 PM   #45
NIB
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[QUOTE=Pete_G;446905]Being bashed ON the rocks is what scares me. If I'm on rocks where there's more rocks behind me, anything above the knees sends me running.
QUOTE]

I was slammed this yr.On a T jetty in NJ.Big ground swell.Bailin nice fish..I was in a trance looking at a wall of water.
I remember thinkin to myself wow thats a big wave..
It blasted me like a 300 lb lineman an thru me back 10 ft back on the rock on my back..
I didn't have a scrape.or a bruise..Got up my friend asked me if i was alright.Looked like he had seen a ghost..The big guy was watchin over me that day..
As time goes on the legs don't have as much will to do some of the things i used to.Or at least as many of the things i used to..
Standin on a barof bowling ball rocks over my waiste in Montauk as 3-6'6" guys keep pushing out is not really as much fun as it used to be.especially when its cold an they are not biting..
There seems to be a risk reward factor I still will be willing to breach when the all is right..
I also Have way less fear at night.I look at some of the things I have done in the daylight an I scratch my head....
I had scary crossing one night to a island when there was alot more current than expected..We pushed the envelope try to get to this spot early.we had on our wetsuits but the 150 yd crossing was not going as planned..I ended up usin my pole to push me the last 30 yds..
One of my friends broke away an was only a few yds from no return..
We got up on the beach relieved an went an caught some fish..
Now a days I weigh the comfort level against the productivity.
Still getting overly abused by the waves gets old fast an keepin one eye on the water.an one eye on what I'm doing hurts my head..
So i find myself fishing spots like the oldtimers section in the canal..It's as close to Tom Mc Cann fishing as u can get..
When the surf calls I can still here it..

FORE!
It's usually darkest just before it turns Black..
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Old 01-09-2007, 03:53 PM   #46
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Things that go "bump" (or chomp!) in the night

Those who know me know of an "incident" at an extreme east end location I fish with a couple of other guys. That scared the bejeezus out of me and although I still fish there I am more careful than ever about the tides, dead-reckoning etc. I do not want to ever go through that again...

As far as the more mundane goes, I am actually afraid of sharks. There, I have fessed up! Despite the fact that I can be found way offshore in the middle of the night on a rock, and don't seem to have a problem on the way out there, I am always apprehensive about stepping off the rock into deep water at the end of the night. I guess it’s because by that time I have had hours to think (and worry) about it. Yes, I know a shark attack on a wetsuiter in the middle of the night on Long Island has never (to the best of my knowledge) been reported but with my luck I’ll probably be that guy who breaks that long-standing record….
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