Newsletter- March 2014
 

 

 

Greetings!

This newsletter contains articles on the following topics: 
  • Water temperatures may delay migrating stripes
  • Risk mitigation for wade fishing at night
  • Tips- Angling Strategy, Techniques, Equipment
  • The Casting Corner- creating an additional stripping guide
  • New England Saltwater Fishing Show- Skinny Water Charters presentations
  • Featured Fly Pattern- Rich Murphy's "Pamet Special"
  • Quotation- Ed Zern

Winter has still not left us both from the perspective of the official date and temperatures that continue to force us to put a fire in the fireplace most nights. When will it end?... everyone's asking that question. However, there's a lot to get done as April is only a few weeks away and that's when fishing in these parts starts to open up. My plan is to get in some trout, largemouth bass, pike and pickerel fishing before things in the salt start to happen in May. For anyone interested in fishing the worm hatch, I have some very good dates remaining. I am booked the following days (May 10, 12, 15 thru 24 and 27 thru 31...and June 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10, 19, 21 and 28), however  May 11, 13, 14, 25 and 26 are excellent days as are the 5th and 8th of June. Fishing the Rhode Island Cinder Worm Hatch is the closest thing you will experience to dry fly fishing in salt water. If you haven't tried it or want to give it a go once again... give a call to 401-465-8751 or write me at info@SkinnyWaterChartersRI.com

 

I hope you enjoy this month's newsletter. Think Spring!

    

Thanks, I hope to hear from you...and Strip Strike that Fish!

Jim

 Capt Jim Barr

Capt. Jim Barr
401.465.8751
Skinny Water Charters
 
www. SkinnyWaterChartersRI.com
 
info@SkinnyWaterChartersRI.com

Fishing Skinny Water on Price's Neck- Newport

Lund
In this Flybox
Cold Ocean Water Temperatures- May Delay Stripers
Risk Mitigation for Wade Fishing at Night- A Lesson Learned the Hard Way
Tips- Angling Strategy, Techniques, Equipment
The Casting Corner- Create an additional Stripping Guide
New England Saltwater Fishing Show- 3/28-30- Skinny Water Charters presentations
Featured Fly Pattern- " Pamet Special"
Quotation
Pro Guide Sponsors
 
Pro Staff
Bass Pro
Pro Staff- Foxboro, MA
Sage dark
 Redington
Rio
John Nguyen- Tautog on the fly!
Cold Ocean Water Temperatures- May Delay Stripers

 

The 2013/2014 winter has been an abnormally cold one in New England. This of course impacts ocean water temperatures that are slow to warm, despite longer days (more sun) and wind shifts away from the northern compass points to the desired southwest breezes that bring warmer air temperatures. March continues to be cold and surface water temperatures are considerably lower than historical averages. Many freshwater lakes in Rhode Island still have ice. While this is not unusual for other northeastern states, for Rhode Island it's very rare. The chart below displays surface water temperatures taken at eight weather buoys, several in the ocean and others in Narragansett Bay, comparing 2014, 2013 and 2012 in mid-March.

E-Z Body Cinder Worm

Steve Key
Steve Key at Fishers Island, NY

 

 

Buoys are located at: Newport, Quonset Point, Conimicut Point, Providence, New London, Montauk Point, Eastern Long Island Sound and Block Island.
    
*Note significant deviations from 2012 to 2014

 - Stripers in 2012 arrived in force in the south coast salt ponds by mid- April 
 - In 2013 stripers arrived in weak numbers by mid-May

 - Based on this two-year history, current 2014 water temperatures might suggest a further delay for strong populations of stripers entering south coast salt ponds (assuming water temperature is the primary influencing factor for the northerly bass migration, and that the gain in water temperatures follows a similar curve to historical experience).

   Only time will tell, but my projections are that we won't see good numbers of stripers until late April or early May. (I hope I'm wrong!)

 

 

Risk Mitigation for Wade Fishing at Night- A Lesson Learned the Hard Way
 

Personally I would rather saltwater fish in very shallow water (preferably with a fly rod), thus the name for my charter business, Skinny Water Charters. (www.SkinnyWaterChartersRI.com). Most seasoned striped bass anglers know these fish prefer to feed heavily at night and in the low light of early morning and evening. It's true that in the spring and fall months stripers can be found in the middle of the full light of day, typically when they are making their spring and fall migrations or when they have pushed bait to the surface creating those dreamy sustained top water blitzes. This top water action is found in both shallow water as well as deep water environments. In Rhode Island, during July and August, stripers will often retreat to deeper and colder water that can significantly degrade our shallow/top water fishing opportunities.

In Rhode Island we are blessed with many shallow tidal estuaries, flats and salt ponds, absolutely wonderful places to fish for stripers and hickory shad. During those warm summer months one of my favorite places to fish are the salt ponds along our southern coast, each of which is connected to the ocean via narrow breachways that supply cold and highly oxygenated water, and striper forage that includes crabs, shrimp and a variety of small baitfish. Ideally I like to target fishing in darkness, during an incoming tide, and in skinny water. During periods at and surrounding the new and full moons that bring big tidal exchanges and fast moving currents, the incoming night tides can produce spectacular fishing in a beautifully serene environment- with few, if any competing anglers, no waves or engine noise from passing boats, only the composite sound of the ocean breaking on the distant barrier beach, the occasional screech of a seagull or tern and the nearby slurping of stripers feeding in shallow water.

Night wade fishing on Quonnie Pond

Tragedy Narrowly Averted  

Several years ago on an early July evening, the stage was set for such an outing. In two canoes, three of us crossed the narrow breachway as the tide began to turn. The new moon would guarantee no light except the faint glow of a starry sky. We each wore a life vest for the crossing, and brought our chest waders, chest packs, and headlamps that would provide the light we would need to change fly patterns and hopefully unhook fish. We anchored the canoes in a foot of water on the southernmost end of an expansive sand flat that was beginning to come alive with gulls and terns wheeling over clouds of sand eels that were beginning to school on the flat. We removed our life vests and stashed them in the boats for the return trip, and we wet waded a short distance to dry land to put on our waders and packs, string our fly rods and tie-on our starting fly patterns. In short order we were positioned on the flat and casting to nervous water as the sun set and the salt pond began to fill with cold ocean water. Our timing was near-perfect, as light fell from the sky and the beach goers on the far shore packed up their beach chairs and wine glasses. Soon the parking lot emptied, and the stripers began feeding heavily.

As expected the top water fishing became spectacular. We had the entire flat to ourselves on a warm summer evening with all the striped bass we could ask for feeding on the surface as close as a rod length away. We continued to wade the flat casting to pods of breaking fish as they recklessly fed further north on the flat into the belly of the salt pond. During those several first hours of the incoming tide the fishing was so fast and furious that we paid little attention to the gradually deepening water and the distance we were opening from our anchored canoes. The sky was black, the only light being our headlamps that we switched on occasionally to change a fly and unhook a bass. I glanced at my watch and realized there were two more hours of incoming tide before the water went slack. Panic set in when I realized we were roughly 200 yards down current from where we anchored the boats, that the current was still flowing heavily against us and that I recalled having crossed through several low areas on the flat where the water would be deeper than the waist high depth I was now standing in.

We soon realized our peril. I was the strongest wader of the three, so the plan was that Dick would stay with his girlfriend, they would turn on their headlamps and make whatever progress they could as I pushed hard against the current and deeper water to get to the boats before we were all swept off the flat into the deep water where with all our gear weighing us down there would be little chance of avoiding being drowned.

As I crossed several deeper areas on my way to the boats, as feared, the current pushed water over my waders so that by the time I reached the relative safety of the canoes I was exhausted and my waders were nearly full despite wearing a tight wading belt. I stripped off my beach shoes (I never wear wading boots when fishing in saltwater estuaries) and waders and piled into the canoe and floated both boats down-current to my fishing partners. Together we found shallower water further west on the flat, and eventually paddled back to the launch.

Lessons Learned

I have since wade-fished that same flat during similar conditions but I do a few things differently than the night we came so close to tragedy. What's different?

-          I tell a friend or family member where I'm fishing and roughly what time I expect to be off the water, and that I will text message them when I am on dry land.

  

-          I wear an inflatable life vest. The type that you can manually inflate by blowing into a tube, but that also allows for instant inflation by pulling a lanyard that opens a CO 2 cartridge. These vests are very lightweight and not bulky and they provide a high degree of peace of mind when wading at night near deep water. http://www.basspro.com/Bass-Pro-Shops-Auto-Manual-Inflatable-Life Jacket/product/11090805012133/?hvarAID=shopping_googleproductextensions&om_mmc=shopping_googleproductextensions&kpid=11090805012133 

 

-          I wear a chemical light stick and a plastic whistle on a neck strap that is activated by bending the plastic tube. These light sticks are waterproof and glow for many hours without worrying about losing battery power. They are also bright enough to change fly patterns and to handle a fish. http://www.basspro.com/Offshore-Angler-Chemical-Light-Sticks/product/30731/ 

 

-          My headlamp is waterproof and my batteries are fresh. If I do happen to be swept into deeper water, I will be easily seen by someone providing assistance. https://www.google.com/search?q=waterproof+headlamp+bass+pro&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a#q=waterproof+headlamp+bass+pro&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&tbm=shop&spd=10140417192088499764 

 

-          My cell phone is encased in a Lifeproof case http://www.basspro.com/LifeProof-Case-for-iPhone-4-and-4S/product/12091205013849/ 

and the case is inserted into the Lifeproof Lifejacket Float http://www.basspro.com/LifeProof-LifeJacket-Float-for-iPhone-4-and-4S-Case/product/12091205013851/ 

 

-          I tether my canoe or kayak to my wading belt as I wade across the flat. Gone are the days of having to fight against a strong current to get back to the boat.

As anglers we generally are in overkill mode when it comes to gear that we take fishing. At the end of every wade fishing venture I take, I can easily identify half the inventory I brought that I didn't use, but the problem is I don't carry forward that lesson to the next outing. If you can build into your behavior a discipline that steers you away from toting stuff you never use and backfill some of that space and weight with the safety gear noted above, you will be more inclined to fish some of those quasi-risky locations and conditions where the big ones prowl.

Tips- Angling Strategy, Techniques, Equipment
 
  • Fish where current meets or leaves a ledge and other structure
  • Fish where flats meet deep water breaks
  • Fast moving water & turbulent water provides ambush points for stripers- Venturi effect
  • Scout boulder fields and shoreline contours during low tides and mark them with your chartplotter- helpful at night for wading anglers or with  your handheld GPS to allow you to find them at night 
  • Mark structure not appearing on your chart with your GPS 
  • Use drift socks on your boat to counter the effects of wind and current 
  • Use top water hookless lures as teasers in shallow or dangerous waters to prospect for fish
  • Use a heavy "river anchor" in muddy soft bottom areas where a traditional fluke type anchor will not hold
  • Stripers will stay on the flats all summer as long as the water temperature stays below 75F
  • Tides are critical- a flooding tide is typically more productive than the ebb and at the lower stages of the tide
  • When the flat is emptying, fish are hastily retreating off the flat to get to deeper water   
    Fish edges of deeps & shallows
 
Fishing the break points between deep and shallow water-Little Narragansett Bay (link)
 
  • When flats fishing from a boat look closely at the dark grass patches on the bottom where bass will be spending more time than over white sand 
  • Drape fishing net over your outboard, hydraulic lines, cleats... any obstruction that can foul fly line
  • Use blue painters masking tape to cover fly line fouling areas- cleats, rod holders etc
  • Stay put when fish blow up- resist the temptation to move- drift through those areas several times- fish will repeat a pattern of feeding. The bait that fish blew-up minutes ago is still there and fish will oftentimes circle-back
  • When fishing a surface frenzy, particularly tuna species- it often pays to dead drift your fly pattern or use a very slow retrieve- and vary the retrieve
  • Windy fall fishing... 8 wt rods are not up to the task.  Go with the heavier rod and the sinking line to power through the wind
  • Fish creating swirls may actually be 2-4 feet down but because of their size and large tail fins they are moving a lot of water
  • Feeding fish signatures- Mornings they become most noticeable in flat water-  look for swirls, breaks, birds looping/ hovering/dipping, baitfish spraying
  • Have your fishing partner cast into the immediate area of a caught fish- oftentimes his buddies are nearby
  • Use a kayak or inflatable with your "mother ship" to access hard to reach or private and delicate waters
  • On the RI flats (Little Narragansett Bay for example) you will rarely see bass on top, they will be on the bottom looking for crabs and shrimp
  • Always bring binoculars to help with sighting fish and birds. Binoculars with a  built-in compass are invaluable in pinpointing a bearing in open water having no landmarks or navigational aids for reference  

 

 

The Casting Corner- Create an additional Stripping Guide 

 

Hand Casting One of the most effective techniques in saltwater fly casting to gain additional distance as you power cast with extra line on the deck, on the water or in your stripping basket, is to create an additional stripping guide using the forefinger and thumb of your line hand. With your running line draped below rod level that you intend to shoot in your final presentation, if you rely on your first stripping guide to gather that line and to funnel it up the rod to the next stripping guide and onto the series of snake guides that follow, distance will be compromised due to line slapping and friction of the line sailing through the guide set. This is made worse when the line you intend on shooting, wraps around the butt of your rod or reel or your casting hand. A very simple solution is to keep your line hand positioned half way between your reel and the first stripping guide on your rod. Your line hand should also be upwards of two feet (or slightly less) away from the rod blank. As you make your final forward cast and stop the rod, release the line held between your forefinger and thumb, but release it inside a small "O" that you create with those two fingers. This becomes a "de facto" stripping guide that helps to gather your shooting line and position it for a straight feed into the first stripping guide. As your fly hits the water, your line hand is in the ready position to begin your retrieve, and should a fish hit the fly immediately upon it dropping to the water, you're perfectly positioned for your Strip Strike. It's a simple and very effective technique and it takes only a little bit of practice to master, so practice it in your backyard or park before you get on the water.

 

 New England Saltwater Fishing Show- 3/28-30- Skinny Water Charters presentations

Skinny Water Charters will be represented at the March 28-30 Rhode Island Saltwater Anglers Association's New England Saltwater Fishing Show. I will be at Booth #118

Link to the RISAA show's website 

 

 

Friday- 3/28

1:30 - Workshop Area-- Fishing the Rhode Island Cinder Worm Hatch

2:30 - Casting Lane-- Beginning Fly Casting Techniques

4:30 - Casting Lane-- Advanced Fly Casting Techniques

6:30 - Workshop Area-- Fly Fishing Newport Harbor

Saturday- 3/29

10:30- Workshop Area-- Fishing the Rhode Island Cinder Worm Hatch

12:30- Casting Lane-- Advanced Fly Casting Techniques

2:30- Casting Lane-- Advanced Fly Casting Techniques

4:30- Casting Lane-- Advanced Fly Casting Techniques

Sunday- 3/30

10:30- Casting Lane-- Beginning Fly Casting Techniques

12:30- Workshop Area-- Fishing the Rhode Island Cinder Worm Hatch

1:30-   Casting Lane-- Advanced Fly Casting Techniques

 

Featured Fly Pattern- " Pamet Special"

 

Rich Murphy's "Pamet Special.

Rich is quoted as saying... "I developed the prototype of this pattern while on an October vacation to Truro, Massachusetts in 1989. My intent then was to develop a large sand eel imitation I could use to capitalize on the striped bass blitzes that are routine during the fall months at the mouth of the Pamet River when, during the ebb of the tide, literally tons of sand eels are flushed into Massachusetts Bay". (The photograph accompanying this pattern description belongs to Rich Murphy.)

This pattern is material intensive, but the materials are applied sparsely which offers a wonderful profile, and it is easy to cast.

For step by step instruction on how to tie this pattern, follow the link: 

http://www.flyanglersonline.com/flytying/fotw2/102201fotw.php 

 

Rich Murphy's "Pamet Special"

Hook: 3/0 or 4/0 TMC 600, Trey Combs Big Game, Owner AKI, or Gamakatsu SC152H

Thread: Fine Monofilament

Tail: Bucktail in Light Pink, White, Olive Pale, Dark Olive, and Pale Lavender

Flash: Krystal Flash in Gray Ghost, Ultraviolet, Shrimp Pink, Peacock Red

Body Sheathing: Medium Pearl E-Z-Body

Eyes: 3.0 mm Black on Silver Stick on Prismatic

Glue: 5 Minute Epoxy

 


Quotation
"Fly fishing, or any other sport fishing, is an end in itself and not a game or competition among fisherman...   Ed Zern, "The Ethics, Perhaps, of Fly Fishing" (1966)
I hope this newsletter contained information of interest to you, and again I welcome input for future topics you may be interested in knowing more about. Newsletters are produced near the end of each month. 
 
My best,

 

Capt. Jim Barr
Skinny Water Charters