Luckily I had worn my dry suite which protected my
valuables. Once safe I heaved the blue across the Atlantic and then had a good laugh
and paddled back to my spot. I should
have known at that point these feisty little blues had a major attitude problem
and where looking for blood. On the very
next cast my gulp was swarmed by a school of Bluefish and they attacked the
gulp as if they were a pack of piranhas. I reeled in my jig with just a tiny
piece of gulp left, not wanting to waste my grub I casted out basically a
scented hook and immediately hooked up with a decent blue. I brought the blue demon over the rail, grabbed
him with my left hand and while trying to reach for my pliers to remove the
hook the fish somehow managed to wiggle out of my left hand and propel himself
towards my right hand. Within a
millisecond I had 15.5” yellow eyed demon clamped on to my forefinger like a
pair of vice grips. The only difference is vice grips don’t have razor sharp
teeth. With my hands kind of occupied
trying to keep this blue from taking a chunk of finger off I used my left hand
to keep him steady. Luckily Dan was within
yelling distance and I was able to get his attention. He quickly paddled over to aide in the
removal of the Bluefish clamp that was fused to my finger. I could feel the teeth hitting the bone in my
finger. It took maybe 30 seconds of
prying and beating this blue before it finally let go, which to me felt like
minutes due to the horrible pain I was in.
After ejection of the Bluefish from the kayak I had to make a decision -
stay and continue fishing or paddle back for the first aide. Paddling would have been difficult seeing as
I was pouring blood all over the kayak and gear. Seeing how the fishing was good with plenty
of Hickory Shad to keep things fun, I decided to deal with my wounds at a later
time and knew eventually the bleeding would stop. I took a break from the bluefish for awhile
and caught a few croakers and plenty of Hickories while trying to find the
stripers. I never did find any stripers
but had fun and around 11:30 decided to call it a night as I had plans to be on
the Eastern Shore early in the morning.
Hearing
good reports of drum being landed from the eastern shore, I finally had a day
that the weather allowed me to get over there and chase some bruiser reds
around the flats and shoals – well, so I thought. The day started out optimistic with nice
weather and a light breeze.
Sunrise overlooking Fisherman's Inlet |
I arrived at the Wise Point boat ramp a little after 6am and
not long after my arrival Rob Choi pulled up.
After a short strategy session we were off. It was slow, slow, and slow.
The water clarity wasn’t the best for
sight fishing and with the slight chop on the surface my eyes started to play
tricks on me. Slowly making way towards
the shoals, while trolling 6” Swimbaits, thick fog started to roll in. As cool as it looked at a distant, it was not
cool once we were engulfed by it.
Navigating around the breaking shoals was a no go. After limited visibility and no fish, Rob and
I decided to split and cover two different areas in hopes that one of us would
be able to locate the fish. I made my way to the North end of Fisherman’s
Island bayside. The water was much
cleaner there. After a couple hours of
scanning dead water I made my way back south to an area where I had seen
stripers in the last few years. Still,
no luck. That was frustrating, I hate
getting skunked! The only good thing was
the water clarity improved a lot from earlier in the morning but by then I had ran
out of time. I had to be at the Pirates
of Lynnhaven meeting early that evening, so I made way back to the boat
ramp. That’s when my last glimmer of
hope for the day came as a school of stripers came screaming along in some
shallow water - like 18 inches shallow.
They saw me and broke into two groups still within casting distance. I landed a perfect cast, or so I thought,
about 20 yards ahead of the moving school. With the water so shallow, the
splash of the cast spooked the school and they left the vicinity and headed for
the nearby channel. Just as quickly as
it appeared there disappeared my chances of catching a fish that day. Out of time I called it a day to head back to enjoy the camaraderie of the Pirates
of Lynnhaven.
Until next time, go and get
Infishicated!