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Captain's Focus

Written by Capt.Allen   
Monday, 06 June 2011 05:30

6/5:  After hearing report after report on how good it was yesterday afternoon I had to coerce today's charter to move it to the afternoon. John Kuhles and his crew obliged and we met at noontime ready to target some slob bass. John brought Bill, Darren, and Greg K (Proteus) aboard for the trip.  Ran south, got into bunker off Mantoloking, and filled the wells quickly. Greg hooked a beautiful fish, our first of the day moments later on a live bait - that fish turend out to be our biggest and it dropped a scale to just over 40#! We got a call from Max from Andrea's toy to shoot south as it was going off, so we did that. More bunker down there, and we had a few runoffs and a couple more fish. At this point it was maybe 2PM....

Right after that, my other deckhand Michael who is also a PPB police officer called to tell me that it was GOING OFF up off Jenks, so we hightailed it back north.  On the way, we found a pod of bunker getting demolished by bass in tight to the beach - we got in there, and had instant bass on both live baits, dead baits, and plugs. We stuck with these fish for awhile, until a load of boats showed, then we headed north, finding another pod getting annihilated by monster bass. On this pod we continued catching slob bass, as the bass were knocking bunker clear out of the water, and were exploding with whitewater all around us. It was insane!!! This particular pod got pushed right in on the beach, and we stayed with them for maybe a mile, until they got pushed down by yet more boat traffic.

Around 4PM we hopscotched north of our inlet and again found fish BLOWING UP from Sea Girt up to Belmar. Readings were insane. At this point we were out of live bunker - but it didn't matter. These fish took dead, cut, etc as well as plugs with reckless abandonment. We were simply stopping on readings, throwing plugs and dead bunkers, and still catching 2-3 fish a drift.  Highlight of the day was a football field of bass and bunker creating havoc right in front of the E&S in Spring Lake - fish were everywhere just destroying the bunker!!! (I will post pics from Kenny's camera)

Called it a trip by 7PM as we were simply exhausted. We easily boated 30+ bass, every one of them was over 25#; most were in that 25-35# cookie cutter range, but we had several over 35# topped by Greg's big fish. John was on fire with his 20 year old yellow swimmer, he must've hooked at least  a dozen fish himself.  I even snuck up to the bow and nailed 4, biggest going 37# on swimmers and poppers - even a blind squirrel finds a nut sometimes!!  We easily boated 20 of those fish on plugs - pencils, darters, swimmers, and regular poppers while the rest were boated on live or dead bunker. Out of the 30+, we kept 9, releasing the rest of the fish to fight another day, nice and healthy.

What can I say - this trip was one of the top 5 bass trips I've ever had and will go down in the books as a great bass trip catching big slobs!!! John and his crew were fantastic, and they will be back on Reel Class next Sunday!!! Thanks again guys!!

6/4:  Had Kenny Caleca's charter on board today. His crew consisting of some of our other regulars wanted to take an early shot at the bass, then spend some time fluking and seabassin before we called it a day early as Kenny had a commitment yesterday afternoon as did I.  No problem getting bait in regards to the bunks - they were stacked and we filled both wells in 25 minutes. Ran south because I saw less boats there LOL as up north it looked like the biggest mosquito fleet ever on the radar and with the binocs. Down there we rode around, checked out some spots, put the livies in but came up with nothin.

Got a call there was a little bite in the deep off SRI so we went up there - boat traffic dwindled and we had a few runoffs, once fish had the hook pull right at the boat and another was dropped. Shortly thereafter, with our time constraints the guys wanted to try fluking and we hopped on a few "local" hills and had surprisingly good action - my mate Kenny got the first keeper on the boat this year @ 23"/4.5#. Jimmy also nailed a nice keeper there and we had a couple other right @ 18" along with a good amount of shorts.

We then shifted back S to target seabass, and found one piece where we read them like crazy - first drop it was real quick action with some keepers going in, but it quickly shut off. Hopped around to a few other pieces, and only had a few more - screaming N current made it tough to drift and when we went up on the hook that light S swung us off.

Finished the day back in on the beach, off Bay Head and Mantoloking. We had half a crew fluking, half a crew livelining. Quite a few more short fluke, and loads of bunker.  Got in the inlet, and the calls started coming once we were at the dock - "It's going off!!!" ...Right where we left the bunker LOL ...Not our day, we did wind up with some nice fluke in the box and we boated ~20 seabass. The guys were great as always and they will be back this summer for some flukin'...

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