August 2024 SUDS Newsletter

A Letter from our President

Greetings Surfcasters,

My two favorite club outings are approaching – our early October trip to Cuttyhunk, and our season finale Thanksgiving trip to Island Beach on the New Jersey shore. I would love to see more members sign up for these trips. Besides catching fish, sometimes BIG FISH, there’s a camaraderie that develops share meals, fish stories and tales of woe. Maybe it’s because of Covid, maybe it’s because that the costs have gone up. But the member numbers have not been what they used to be years ago. My first Cuttyhunk trip was in 2003. I sat out the first several years thinking I wasn’t “Good enough,” an angler to venture out to those hallowed Martha Vineyard Sound waters. Of course I was wrong. Every experience level is welcome.

We are confirmed for nine beds in Lehner House https://www.petesplacerentals.com/rentals/rooms/c202316d-46a6-493f-8bce-3cc2d27e0f22 for Thursday, October 3 through Sunday October 6. We must fill the nine beds in Lehner House before the club will absorb the cost of additional housing. $80 a head per night is cheap, comparatively speaking.

It’s common knowledge that we lost the services of Capt. John Paul Hunter and his water taxi, Seahorse. That’s a shame. Twenty-five or so years hustling passengers to and from the Island. But his heartfelt retirement letter said it all – costs, overhead, ticket increases, insurance, repairs and on and on. However, the Cuttyhunk Ferry https://cuttyhunkferryco.com/, for early October, has added Thursday morning trips out of New Bedford, with the usual 3:00 Sunday afternoon return departure off the Island.

Please check you schedules, budget, work or family obligations and see if this year you make your first, or a repeat trip after staying away for a while.

Now the Thanksgiving trip – usually Wednesday through Sunday (give or take a day at either end) will be November 20th through 24. I have already contacted Jerri at Island Beach Motor Lodge, a family owned travel back-in-time motel right on the beach. They still wrap the toilets in a paper band that reads Sanitized For Your Protection. www.islandbeachmotorlodgenj.com/ Our club rate for late November is a steal especially if members share rooms. There will be more about this trip soon. Consider this season ending trip. We have great fun. Compared to Cuttyhunk it’s a real value.

tight lines everyone,

Mike S.

CSA Membership Meeting

Wednesday August 7th Will will be having a membership meeting at the Surf Club in Madison, but as of right now, the topic, speaker or activity is unknown. Pat Abate may be showing us a new Sluggo alternative. Of course it would be nice to see everyone and chew the fat about how awful June and July were for fishing and now we are on to better fishing... See you there.

Those going to Cuttyhunk in October should bring the remainder of their payments to the meeting.

If you need to renew your Fishing License

Go to https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Fishing/General-Information/Fisheries-Licenses-and-Permits to renew.

Connecticut Coastal Access Guide - https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Coastal-Resources/Coastal-Access and and click “Here."

Club Contests

Striper a Month 2024

Each year CSA runs a year long contest to see who can catch a striped bass in the 12 month period between December of the previous year and November of the current year. The following members have managed to catch at least one bass a month from December 2023 through July 2024.

Steve Hasselbacher

Jim Munson

Liam Rosati

High Hooks and Top 10

High Hook Rules are as follows:

1. Fish must be caught from shore or surf, with both feet planted on Terra Firma.

2. The High Hook club tournament generally runs from the first Sunday following Thanksgiving for a period of one year.

3. Overall length, measured from the tip of the lip, to the end of the tail, is used to determine the winner. Weight is optional and not used to determine a winner.

4. Entries must be reported by the first membership meeting following the catch.

5. Entries can be sent to Mike Mullen at mike@highhooklures.com or the current Club President via email or submitted in writing at a club meeting.

Things we find on the beach

A beach memorial

A nice morning fish

Left by one that got away

Sharks in the Water

It has been mentioned on the message board that sharks have been recently spotted in our local waters. Therefore, we should all be aware of our surroundings and not make risky trips swimming out to rocks, day or night. From my own experience, during daytime fishing last year, I was very freaked out to when I looked down alongside the rock that I had waded out to, in chest deep water, to see a large, wide and 6+ foot long shark slowly swimming by.

Just be careful and stay close to shore.

Bonito Time by George Baldwin

This striped bass season was the worst I’ve seen from shore since I started surfcasting in the early 90s. My first night had a great start, with a nice fish in the high 30 to maybe 40” range, then one about 32” and… nothing. Not just that night, but for many weeks. Granted, I didn’t get out as many nights as usual, but that was mainly based on absence of bass when I did go, coupled with miserable reports from others and unusually hot and stormy weather. Yeah, I know the boaters are getting them out on the reefs, but shore fishing has been much less than spectacular. Much less than average, too. I’ve resorted to fresh water on most of the occasions I’ve gone out, with fly fishing being my favorite method. While most of my saltwater fishing was on boats with my Sound School after school and summer programs.

I’m itching badly to get back into the surf. So, let me see, what are the options at this time? Bonito have been making appearances at Martha’s Vineyard, Rhode Island and Eastern Connecticut already. These guys won’t give you the fight of a 40 pound striper, a 15 pound bluefish or an 8 pound albie, but they’ll give you some worthy fishing on light spinning gear or a fly rod. So that’s my next plan. I’m no expert on these guys, but I have caught them and have learned a bit about them, so I believe I can offer you a bit of information to get you started.

Bonito are Scombrids, like mackerels, false albacore and some other tunoids. They’re built for speed and distance swimming. People often get them confused with false albacore because they do look pretty similar, but there are several characteristics that easily differentiate them. Bonito have several relatively straight lines on a green background on the upper body. Albies have shorter, broken lines that change at different angles. Bonito also have teeth, albies don’t. Those two distinguishing features are easy to remember and are relatively obvious.

If you’ve fished for albies, you have the gear you’ll need for bonito. They’ll average about 4-6 pounds, but may be double that weight. An 8-10’ light action rod with a reel in the 3500 to 4000 size would do just fine and maximize your enjoyment. Fifteen to seventeen pound test mono line or leader should do the job. I recommend not setting your drag too tight, as they may slam your bait at high speed or change direction on a dime and jerk your line hard enough to easily break it if you crank down too tightly. Wire or a heavy bit tippet is not needed, as their teeth are conical and the leader will generally fit between them very nicely and avoid biteoffs. If you’ve got albie lures, save your money and use them. Thin metals such as Deadly Dicks, epoxy jigs and Albie Snax will work, but don’t be shy about using something a bit larger, too. The first bonito I’d seen landed was back in the early 90s at Block, when one of my friends caught one on a Rapala Sliver, close to a foot long. I’ve caught them on SP Minnows, too.

Fly rodders should use a 9wt rod. These guys aren’t usually found in estuaries and rivers, they’re on the outside and you’ll probably have some wind to contend with. A floating line will get your fly in front of them much of the time, but a sinking line has the density and small diameter to cut through the breeze much better. Epoxy flies, Gummy Minnows and Lefty’s Deceivers that imitate silversides and anchovies are necessities, but also bring a few larger Deceivers.

Breachways, jetties and rocky perches where the water depth drops off quickly are great places to find them, as are harbor mouths and salt pond outflows. Ocean beaches with a steep grade can also provide opportunities. They usually start showing up sometime around later July to mid August. Check the reports from the Vineyard, Cape and Rhode Island in order to prepare in time. They can be found as far west in the Sound as Niantic most years, and some may be found much farther in, but I would go east for a better shot. They can stay in some parts of the northeast until late October or early November, which is when my friend Chris caught the bone on the Rapala Sliver from the jetty on the south side of the Coast Guard channel on Block.

Bonito are good eating, and taste like most tunas. If you’re planning on keeping your catch, bring along one of those bags used for transporting frozen foods home from the supermarket. Freeze a few 12oz water bottles overnight and toss them into the bag in the morning. When you catch one, slit its throat just under and in front of the gills to bleed it out, and get it on ice once it’s done draining its arteries. Otherwise the flavor will diminish in quality, as will its texture. It’ll end up like peanut butter with an old tuna taste.

Well, that’s about all I’ve got for ya. If you want to learn more just ask your good friend Google. I’m gonna go rig up my 9wt and gather some flies.

Product Review by Dave Nguyen

Nite Ize Waterproof Phone Case

For those of you who like to carry a phone with you while fishing, I am now using the "Nite Ize RunOff Waterproof Phone Case.” It retails for $40 and I have found it to be quite useful. Before using this case, I was using one of those cheap waterproof pouches with the plastic clips on top and a lanyard to wear around your neck. It unsurprisingly failed on me one night while wetsuiting, and I returned to my car with my phone in a pouch full of water. Luckily my phone was upside down and the water had not entered into the charging port and my phone was safe. So, I went out searching for a better phone case and came across this one from Nite Ize. This case uses a TruZip waterproof zipper. This is the same zipper that is used by Simms and Fishpond on their submersible packs, which I also own, and I have never had an issue with them. The zippers can be a little tough to pull with one hand, but as long as you ensure they are fully closed, they will not leak. The zipper is also toothless and self healing, which means you won't encounter any issues with the zipper failing. Besides the zipper, the case also has some other neat features. It has a clear front that allows you to use the phone while in the case with no issues. It also has a clear back so you can take photos. You do have to press a little harder on the screen but everything still functions even with wet hands. The case also has a small pocket inside which I can put my car's key fob into which is an added bonus. I use an Iphone 13 mini so those of you with larger phones may not be able to fit your keys in there. I wear this case around my neck under my surftop while wetsuiting and it has proven reliable so far.

Fishy Readings by Mike Mullen

Sometimes I get the bug to find something to read and so I search my library’s catalog. In a recent search I went looking for mysteries / murders in places I have liked to fish in. I came upon Martha’s Vineyard Mysteries, a series of books with a main charcter who likes fishing and gets involved in murders or attempts at murder on Martha’s Vineyard. The series is written by the late Philip R. Craig. The main charactor is a fortyish former Boston policeman who after a number of years of service, left the force after being shot and having a bullit lodged near his spine (he killed the shooter) and decided to try for a quieter life on the island where his father had built a house on a pond near Oak Bluffs.

It turns out he likes to fish for bluefish, not so much bass, and he likes to cook them up in lots of different ways which are always “Delish.” There are recipes with each story. He also likes clamming and fishing for mackerel, flounder and snagging bunker for bait.

All this is very nice and takes the reader on trips around the island to lots of familiar places where he also finds trouble. He is actually a trouble magnet. The situations always involve the local police, all five different police departments on the island. Did you know there are five different police departments on the Vinyard? Plus the State Police. He generally gets along with them, but some do wish he woud just stay home or go fishing. He is the good guy and he always gets the bad guy, or kills him or her. No matter how bad things get in a story, so far he always gets the basturds in the end. He may be severely injured, people die, but, and this is the only way I can continue with a book when things get awful, which they do, he will find a way to fix things in the end.

I don’t read these books as bedtime reading. I would never get any sleep, but I do like to read them out in the shade on hot afternoons.

For bedtime readings I generally turn to lighter fare like To Hell With Fishing, by H. T. Webster and Ed Zern. Some examples will follow.

CSA Annual July Picnic - Wed July 3rd

Reminder: The CSA Annual July Picnic is at 6:00pm on Wednesday, July 3rd under the pines on the west side of the Madison Surf Club. This takes place of a July meeting. The club will supply burgers and dogs. Please bring a side dish or dessert, and some raffle money.

CSA July SUDS Monthly Newsletter

A Letter from our President

It’s great to be into the summer months. The best part for me is the chance to fish club outings with new members, old friends and hopefully new friends. So far we, have had outings in April, May, a couple in June, along with the Mystic Seaport planetarium event. Each outing is an opportunity to meet someone new. I make it a point each outing to reach out to a new member. We have charter members dating back to 1993 and that first Cuttyhunk trip. We have new members dating back just a few months such as Brian Mawdsley who landed the Spring Cow prize and Frank Boskello who made his first Cuttyhunk appearance just last month.

Some new members have a lot of experience under their surf belts. Some, not so much. When you get an opportunity ask long time members Kevin Schwatlow or Bill “D” Delizio when they first joined the club. Or me. Yes, we fished and had fished for years, actually most of our lives. But until we join CSA our depth of knowledge and fishing network was very limited. I remember back in the late 1990s when I joined I brought along on one of my first outings a 9’ Fenwick yellow fiberglass rod paired with a Penn 704 greenie spooled with 20lb. mono. I caught fish but wasn’t really happy with the setup’s “feel.” Long gone from my memory was a CSA member fishing next to me who said, “Hey! Is that a Fenwick rod?” I knew that much but not much else except to know I bought the rod/reel from my Fairfield Beach/Penfield Reef classmate Carl. I was either 13 or 14 years old. So it wasn’t new in the late 1960s when I bought it. I learned that outing from the fellow next to me that my really slow almost noodle rod was PERFECT as a pencil popping rod. A what? So close to 30 years ago I’m learning for the first time about pencil popping. Fast forward to today. That same setup, the blank remade, the same Penn Greenie with fresh mono, is still my absolute favorite 1.5 ounce pencil popping rod. What pleasure! The parabolic whipping of a slow fiberglass rod with stretchy mono.

I encourage all of you to be open to questions from new members. Many new members are not new to fishing. On the contrary statistical analysis pursuant to the algorithms available through Artificial Intelligence tells me that most new members have an average of 13.956 years experience under their belts. Answer questions, reach out to a new person and say, “You want to tag along?” Maybe every once and a while you can back it off a notch, to mentor a newbie. Reach out and they won’t be a newbie in a season or two.

tight lines and dark skies,

Mike S.

Upcoming Events

DECEMBER HOLIDAY PARTY!

WHAT?!?! What holiday are we talking about? The December holiday? Really? Now?

Yes I am. We have had really fun holiday parties when COVID allowed us. Last year’s December holiday party held on the first Wednesday was a lot of fun. The Branford Community House facility was fantastic (thanks Branford residents Bill and Deb Goeben). We had room to move around. Plenty of table space, buffet table flexibility. However, alcohol was not permitted. It was not a deal breaker but it was a consideration. Past president Mike Mullen (and this Suds editor) made it clear to me that he in the worse way would have enjoyed his regular Pink Squirrel cocktail (3/4 ounce creme de noyaux, 3/4 ounce white creme de cacao,1 1/2 ounces heavy cream,

Garnish: freshly grated nutmeg). So your e-board looked into alternative venues. And right under our noses popped up the Clinton Town Hall facility, the Green Room where Demo Day is held each year.

CSA is confirmed, reserved for Wednesday, December 4, 2024, for our annual party. A writing request to the Town of Clinton managers asking permission to serve alcoholic libation has already been made. It is expected that we will have alcohol available whether by BYOB or possibly a catered bar. It’s also a regular meeting night. So PLAN NOW if you are a spring cow or striper-a-month candidate or potential high hook winner. We want you there to accept your award and receive accolades from fellow members. Bring friends, guests, Carter to assist me in the fantastic raffle prizes expected to be provided by our e-board member, raffle prize chair Nate Kahle.

Mike, bring your martini shaker. I want to see that heavy cream foam floating on tip of your cocktail.

CSA Annual Picnic

Next Wednesday July 3 is the CSA annual picnic. Please use the forum to add your name and number attending the party. Food will be on grill at 6:30pm. Those who wish to bring a side fish or dessert, please add your reply on the thread.

We will have a raffle also.

If you need to renew your Fishing License

Go to https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Fishing/General-Information/Fisheries-Licenses-and-Permits to renew.

Connecticut Coastal Access Guide - https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Coastal-Resources/Coastal-Access and and click “Here."

Club Contests

Striper a Month 2024

Each year CSA runs a year long contest to see who can catch a striped bass in the 12 month period between December of the previous year and November of the current year. The following members have managed to catch at least one bass a month from December 2023 through June 2024.

Mike Benzinger

Steve Hasselbacher

Jim Munson

Liam Rosati

Bill Tesbir

High Hooks and Top 10

High Hook Rules are as follows:

1. Fish must be caught from shore or surf, with both feet planted on Terra Firma.

2. The High Hook club tournament generally runs from the first Sunday following Thanksgiving for a period of one year.

3. Overall length, measured from the tip of the lip, to the end of the tail, is used to determine the winner. Weight is optional and not used to determine a winner.

4. Entries must be reported by the first membership meeting following the catch.

5. Entries can be sent to Mike Mullen at mike@highhooklures.com or the current Club President via email or submitted in writing at a club meeting.

“Blood guts and Bugspray” by Steve Hasselbacher

Much has been written or said about chunking over the years. And there’s a lot of different attitudes out there about bait fishermen. Entire satire personalities have achieved fame in this small world going on about “the art of the soak”. Many well known, respected fishermen that came before me have written/done seminars about targeting large bass with decapitated menhaden. There’s no question about whether or not it works. And if you’ve ever been on the internet I’m sure you’ve seen someone express their belief on how bait fishing is inferior. I welcome these attitudes, more for me. I go fishing to have fun and enjoy myself. And catching big bass certainly helps achieve those goals. In recent years I’ve invested more time fishing chunks, this time of year specifically, than I have since I first bought a surf rod. I’ve found it a great way to find some space to myself, learn new places, target more known places in “the wrong conditions”, and to really just show me how often I’m putting myself in front of big fish, without knowing. So here’s how I go about it.

Fishing bait requires lots of planning and work for me. Where do I want to fish, what am I gonna use for bait, how am I gonna get bait, how am I gonna, store, carry, and prepare bait, and how much is enough bait. It's an all afternoon/night affair more often than not, as opposed to choosing 8 plugs, throwing a bag on my shoulder and going. So I suppose what kind of bait is where I start. In an ideal world, I would snag 20 or more adult menhaden at sundown right where I plan to fish, and be chunking around that same school by dark. A lot of times they show themselves right at sundown. And you would never know there are large numbers of bass tailing them. They don’t seem nervous or threatened, and show no signs of predation. I can only imagine what’s going on down there but it seems as if bass often just tail these pods, like it’s their safety blanket. They may not be charging into them or pushing them to the surface, but more so just not wanting to let them get too far away. Probably picking them off lazily here and there. Theres a number of places this seems to play out. Where even a livelined bait doesn’t get a sniff. But dropping an easy low risk, high reward piece of meat is just too good to pass up. I often think of calorie expenditure/gains when fishing. Like if I were in a survival situation, which I assume is a striped basses entire life, what is the greatest way to increase my calorie intake, without burning more in the process. We’ve likely all read or heard stories from larger than life fishing personalities about chunking bunker heads on long Island with 8 and bait tackle. Don’t get me wrong. Bunker heads are the gold standard in the world of chunks. They cast well, hold the hook good, deter many smaller predators and bluefish, and leak head juice. They’re the best… that is if they are fresh. And I don’t mean “fresh bunker in stock” from the bait shop fresh. I mean preferably decapitated while the heart is still beating fresh. I do this at night and Idk what time those shop bunker were caught, and sat on chlorinated ice for. Sometimes a freshly snagged and cut bunker VS one I snagged and kept in a bucket for 2 hrs after dark, makes all the difference. I won’t even entertain the idea of frozen bait. I mean in reality anything will work at times. But I’ve made enough observations, to make the extra work well worth it for myself.

In recent years finding obtainable bunker close to home has proven quite difficult. But the chunk is not exclusive to bunker. I would have to imagine anything would work as a chunk. But law only permits us to use/ posses/dispatch so many things. The chunk revelation came to me when I turned 18 and got my drivers license. I could now fish places other than my local rivers, where bunker was undependable, and weightless sluggos, storm shads, and minnow plugs ruled the world. One night fishing a local rocky point, with the same tried and true lures available from Norwich Benny’s, I was coming up empty handed. There was another angler to my right in full gear throwing a needlefish. He took one small fish. Looking around the rocks in boredom, I found 2 decent sized scup left behind from the daytime crew. I opened my backpack to find one of those giant gold eagle claw baitholder hooks that came on the “striped bass rigs”, cut em up, and was immediately onto a good fish. Unfortunately I was either not good at tying knots, using lighter gear than I should’ve or just fishing too rough terrain, but I broke off a lot of good fish that night. Every chunk I threw got eaten in short time, and I brought the biggest fish I landed to the tackle shop when they opened the next morning, and weighed it in at 38lbs. In the years since that night I have seem the same scenario play out time and time again. Sometimes even a live eel won’t do the trick like a chunk does. I don’t know the exact laws about having unmeasurable scup in your possession. Once you’ve cut em up there’s no way to prove it’s legal. But nobody has ever stopped me and I know I’m allowed to keep a lot. They’re relatively easy to catch from shore, and they work great. As do hickory shad, which are much more commonplace than snaggable bunker in a lot of places. They make for an easy and fun bait mission before dark. American shad works great too, but I’ve never caught one. I have however found them trapped in rocks and chunked them with great success. Law permits me to keep 6, and an average shad gives me about 4 pieces. A legal scup is 3 for me. And a bunker is 2. An entire article could be written about bait acquisition. I loathe carrying 2 rods, but a sabiki rig or some squid and small hooks is about all it takes. Atlantic mackerel have made a local appearance last 2 years and I am sure they would make for fantastic fresh bait as well. So the next issue is chunk math.

I suffer from bait insecurity. Running out when the gettings good is a devastating feeling. And I tend to go through a lot. I don’t like to use a piece for more than 10 minutes. I change them and I change them often. I want as much blood and guts as possible. Bass have a relatively well developed sense of smell. I’m not even convinced they need their eyeballs anymore. Between that and their advanced lateral line they can hunt in some of the dirtiest and darkest conditions other fish can’t. I no longer worry about “dirty water” as long as weeds aren’t making it impossible. So once a bait has been washed clean by the tide, or crabs have taken the innards I toss it. For a 6 hour tide, at 10 minutes a piece, and 2 chunks per bunker (the head cut on a bias to include some guts, and the belly with the tail removed) 18 bunker is a good goal. I recently got a large (2 gallon?) Sealed jug from CSA member Greg McNamara that holds enough for a whole tide, and has a shoulder strap that allows me to take them with me onto rocks and in water without losing any precious juices. If I cut them in advance I’m sure I could fit more.

There’s 3 ways to lose a chunk that I can avoid. The first is by catching fish. If I run out of bait because I caught lots of fish with 36 pieces great. Non issue. I can run out go home and sleep comfortably. 2nd is cast offs. How you hook the piece can make a difference. Heads I go through the lower jaw and up through the bony nostril area. Belly’s, which are softer, I hook from the bottom. The skin is tougher, and you can also pin some guts in that way. Your tackle choice also helps, but we’ll get to that. 3rd way is scavengers. Crabs, dogfish, skates, and God knows what else will be all over your bait at times. Sometimes I think it actually helps draw attention to your offering. But determining what is a good take, and what is bottom critters, keeps me from setting on small mouthed scavengers that result in me losing bait. I try not to use lead. I don’t want my bait pinned to the bottom. Slowly tumbling, with an occasional lift, and brief settling is my goal. Sort of like working the world’s slowest bucktail. Keeping it moving makes it look more natural and deters these junkfish. I use a VS250 just because it’s what I have, in freespool with my finger on the line at all times. Im waiting for a thump, followed by line coming off the spool. Often I can feel bass playing with, or investigating my offering before actually taking it in and moving off. I don’t feed them very long, but once the lines coming out I get it on the roller, crank as fast as possible until I’m tight, then swing like Babe Ruth. I’ve been told not to set the hook with circles, but it sure seems to help. I suppose this is segwaying into gear and tackle choices, let’s do that.

Hooks. I like em big and wide. The idea behind circles is that they catch the corner of the mouth when a fish takes off. A good percentage of fish I take on them are hooked all over the jaw, a lot of times right in the tip. If you look at the jawbone on a really big fish, it’s wide. So wide even a 30lbs boga won’t fit over it unless you come in from the corner and slide it up. Mustad demon wide gap in 10/0 is a great chunkin hook. I’m sure there’s other great choices. But make sure it’s good and beefy. I’ve broken more inferior hooks than I have line or leader. It’s not a good feeling. Should be noted that paying line to a fish before hooking shouldn’t take long. I just want to make sure it’s actually a bass before I engage. I’ve still gut hooked fish time to time with big inline circles. At least with a j hook you could back it out sometimes. But on circles it’s tough to make that final turn and pop it out when it’s deep. In this case I just cut the line as close to the hook as possible. Your choice in rod can make a big difference in the amount of bait casted off. Fast action rods are not my choice for this. The heavier GSBs and Surf Machine Elites are what I use. And I don’t punch it. Let the rod do the work. I try to put myself into a position where distance isn’t a concern. As mentioned before I don’t use weight often. And when I do 2-3oz is more than enough. If I need more than that I’m fishing artificals. I don’t own an 8 and bait heavy chunkin rod like the sand beach guys prefer. Idk what a bunker head actually weighs, but something rated to 6 or 8 oz does the trick. And bug spray. Bugs love slime. There’s no way to do this without getting covered in essence of bait. Spray down your hat neck, arms, it’s torturous to be stuck with a fish nosing your bait, finger on the trigger, and a swarm of bugs in your face. So that brings us to where and when.

So depending on which way your coming from, get on 95 and get off exit….kidding. Chunking is a seasonal thing for me. If I fish bait after mid July I’m hooking brown sharks more than bass. And come fall the fish are pretty charged up, and I’m throwing plugs. So a really good place to start is just outside of wherever you find bunker in slower water. Your winds and moon phases can dictate where that is. A new moon with wind and tide moving together can render a good chunkin spot useless. A certain wind direction can render a good chunkin spot weed choked. There’s guys who drift chunks in current and do well. That’s just not personally what I do. If I find this scenario and the currents JUST strong enough to make my bait move too fast I’ll throw a small weight on a fishfinder rig. Too much weight and fish seem to be more hesitant to really take it sometimes. They can be quite finicky even with a chunk. When bunker pods aren’t an option, the sides of bars and points often have deeper slower water than work well. The fish may not be stacked up as they often are in the current seams near by, but a big, lazy, scavenging bass may be cruising nearby waiting for slack to move in. I often do this not far from where guys are getting them on plugs in good “fishy” water. Not so close that our casts interfere with one another, or that we can even see eachother, but the same broader areas where you might be fighting for real estate, or showing up early to find parking. Bunker also like really small shallow creeks and coves sometimes. Places where if bass were on them you’d know. The water erupts with every nervous movement. Sometimes just outside of these spots bass will stage in deeper water awaiting their departure. Lots of places that hold fish can be tough to effectively fish with plugs due to current direction. We are limited as shore anglers. And sometimes the fish are upcurrent where most plugs can’t bite into the water. Inside rivers, trees and access can make these situations commonplace. Slowly reeling a weightless chunk from upcurrent just fast enough to maintain contact, or lightly pinning down with weight can make for some great chunkin spots. Incoming tide against wind can slow down river currents as well. And just about anywhere deep enough to conceal a fish, slack low is as good as it gets. It’s a short window. But especially around fast water and structure the biggest laziest fish will often move in to take advantage of easy meals. And it doesn’t get much easier than a chunk. Pretty consistently this small window is when I find the biggest ones.

They may not “count”, it may take a lot of work, my car may smell absolutely disgusting, I may not be able to get the smell off my hands for 3 days, but I look forward to my spring chunking marathons each year, and the solitude, and big fish it brings.

CT Surfcasters Fishing Outing Wednesday June 19

Greetings All – This Wednesday evening the club is having an outing to Fire District Beach, Misquamicut, RI.  Member Mike Mullen is leading this trip.  Everyone should meet at the I-95 commuter parking lot right off Exits 70 in Old Lyme. We should be on the road by 6:30 LEAVING the commuter lot by 630, so plan on rendezvousing at the lot BEFORE 6:30.  Parking at Fire District Beach can be a challenge. Try and car pool if you can.

High tide is at 7:27PM.   You can fish sandy beach or try the rocks. Your call though the rocks do require Korkers.

  Any questions call Mike Mullen at 860.334.2324 or club Pres. Mike Simko at 203.556.7676

CSA June 2024 SUDS

Contents:

Meeting Notes
Upcoming Events
Time to Renew
Club Contests
Cuttyhunk Trip

Connecticut Surfcasters Association Membership Meeting
Wednesday June 12th at 7pm at the Madison Surf Club

Rod Night - Bring your favorite fishin’ pole and tell us all about it.

Prior to our ROD Demonstration we will have our regular business meeting.  We should also hear all about the recent Cuttyhunk trip and have sign-ups for the October 3, 4 & 5 trip.  Be prepared to leave a deposit of $80 or the full payment of $240 per person.

Also, Swap, Sell or Give Away night at the June meeting.

Have some tackle that’s lost your love or looking for a bargain maybe even some freebies. Here’s your shot at this Wednesdays meeting. Bring any fishing related items and tag them with a price or just free. Last years swap had some good stuff. Scored a couple of 7” Redfins for free. 
I’m giving away some vintage fishing shirts size XL - Pat Abate

Upcoming Events

Mystic Seaport Planetarium
Please mark your calendars.  We are confirmed for Thursday, June 13 for a 7:00 – 8:00 PM show specially geared toward the night sky during striper season.  Details shall follow. Procedure is attendees meet at the Seaport’s north entrance between 6:30 – 6:50 or so then guided into the planetarium from there.  Price is $9.50/head with the Seaport agreeing to take a CSA check once we have a final attendance headcount.  Find out more at the meeting.

As the season progresses, we will be having many of our usual outings to more local beaches in Connecticut and Rhode Island.  We would like to plan for trips to Deep Hole, East Beach/ Fire District Beach and Shelter Harbor Beach, with dates to be announced.  If you have any ideas of places you’d like to try fishing or just want to get out of the house, come along or speak up if you want to run a trip yourself.

 

It really is time to renew your Fishing License

Go to https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Fishing/General-Information/Fisheries-Licenses-and-Permits to renew.

Connecticut Coastal Access Guide - https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Coastal-Resources/Coastal-Access and and click “Here."

Club Contests

Striper a Month 2024

Each year CSA runs a year long contest to see who can catch a striped bass in the 12 month period between December of the previous year and November of the current year.  The following members have managed to catch at least one bass a month from December 2023 through April 2024. 
 


Mike Benzinger
Steve Hasselbacher
Jim Munson
Liam Rosati
Bill Tesbir
 

High Hooks and Top 10

High Hook Rules are as follows:

1. Fish must be caught from shore or surf, with both feet planted on Terra Firma.

2. The High Hook club tournament generally runs from the first Sunday following Thanksgiving for a period of one year.

3. Overall length, measured from the tip of the lip, to the end of the tail, is used to determine the winner.  Weight is optional and not used to determine a winner.

4. Entries must be reported by the first membership meeting following the catch.

5. Entries can be sent to Mike Mullen at mike@highhooklures.com or the current Club President via email or submitted in writing at a club meeting.
 


 

Our June Cuttyhunk Trip

I think everyone in our group was glad to be back on the island.  Cuttyhunk looked great with lush green grass, bushes and trees.  There was some mung along the east side of the island and other places, that gave us problems for the first couple of days, but it did start to clear up on Saturday.

It was really great to see some old friends Like the Lombards, Asa and Chrissie, at the Island Market and young Asa, who works on the island year round for the town.  Lexi was glad to see us and she was a good deal more talkative this year.  I guess she too was glad to see some familiar faces.  Lehner House was in great shape and we settled in right away.  There were only 5 of us staying there, when there would have been plenty of room for all 9 who came out from the club.

We are used to being in a full house while we’re there.  We didn’t have any club cookout, like we usually do.  That seems to have been from a lack of a leader or organizer for our group.  I think we all agreed, that needs to be corrected for next time.

Aside from that, it was a good trip.  I felt really glad to be back to all the sights and sounds of the island.  I’ve been doing the trip for nearly 20 years and Mary and I have been enjoying our trips for at least the last 15 years.  I couldn’t wait to get out with my gear on the south shore and start casting out to familiar waters between the rocks and in the coves.  I enjoyed listening to the waves crashing on the shore and the water dragging the smaller rocks back out with it.  I love the sound of that.

There was bait around.  Birds were circling and diving on fish a few hundred feet off shore, well out of reach.  Guys were catching some fish, but not a lot and they were mostly small or in the 30” range.  I think Aram had the only big fish, what I think was a 40” bass.  I didn’t catch any fish for the first 2 days, I think because of the mung in the water.  But it was clearing up late Saturday afternoon and evening and I started getting a few hits.  It was kind of funny, as you may know I like to throw big lures.  Well, they just weren’t hitting the big stuff, but I do always carry what I call my “Change-up lures.”  What I found works on Cuttyhunk when the big lures don’t catch, is to go small.  I tried using a 4” stubby and it worked!  My first bass was 34” and it fought like hell and got me hootin’ and hollerin’!  I caught a couple more and I was just relieved to have been rid of the skunk.

Getting back to having a small group in the house, we actually talked quite a bit.  Not just hollering and swearing like the Plum Islanders.  We had actual conversations at mealtimes and at night after fishing.  We talked and listened to each other and we found, though we are very different people, we have some important things in common like our love of fishing and the enjoyment of being on Cuttyhunk Island.

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Editor’s note:  SUDS is generally better when more members contribute.  Do your part and write something up.  And remember, adding pictures can make a difference.  
Mike M.