Newsletter- March 18, 2015
 

 

Greetings!
I have some good news to share. Through the efforts of a lot of people, anglers and non-anglers alike, the final rule for Rhode Island's Striped Bass harvest has been finalized. For at least 2015, the daily harvest is one striper per angler per day at a minimum size of 28". (If it were up to me striped bass angling would be totally catch and release for everyone, but we have a better chance of realizing world peace before that will happen.)  As I noted in my last newsletter, for my charter business I will continue a total catch and release policy for striped bass.  Historically 100% of my fly fishing charter guests have practiced catch and release for stripers and probably 95% of my light tackle guests, same thing.... we let'em go.
 
Last month I appealed to you to write to the Rhode Island Director of Environmental Affairs, Janet Coit, and express your desire for the regulations to change to protect these valuable fish. For those of you who did write the Director, thank you so much for your efforts. Through our drive and the fine efforts of a lot of people, Rhode Islander's and non-residents alike, we made this change a reality.  
I have included in this newsletter a short overview of the timeline and relevant issues surrounding this win written by the Rhode Island Saltwater Anglers Association, in addition to a link to the RIDEM website that denotes the 2015 regulations as well as a link that will take you to Director Coit's decision.
 
Thanks, Jim Barr

  Capt Jim Barr

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Capt. Jim Barr
401.465.8751
Skinny Water Charters
 

www. SkinnyWaterChartersRI.com
 

 

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Rhode Island 2015 Final Rule on Striped Bass Harvest

 RHODE ISLAND GOES 1@28" for everyone!


 
PROVIDENCE - The Department of Environmental Management today filed new regulations governing the Rhode Island recreational striped bass fishery for 2015. They establish a bag limit of one striped bass per person per day, at a 28-inch minimum size. The season will be open year-round.


 
DEM Director Janet Coit based today's decision on the need to protect the health and future of the striped bass population. "Faced with the stark reality of a declining population, I am compelled to take strong action, consistent with our neighboring states, to reverse the decline and restore the striped bass fishery to a more robust and sustainable status," said Coit.


 
 
Atlantic striped bass are a premier gamefish, as well as an important commercial species - in Rhode Island and up and down the coast. The crash of the stock in the 1970s, subsequent rebound, and current decline form the backdrop for today's action.


 
The most recent benchmark stock assessment, conducted by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC), found that, since 2006, the spawning stock biomass (SSB) of striped bass along the Atlantic coast has been steadily declining. As of 2012, SSB had fallen below the management target and was approaching the overfished threshold. In response, the ASMFC took action, requiring all coastal states to implement management programs that reduce fishing mortality to the management target within one year.


 
For the recreational fishery, the ASMFC adopted a new coastwide regulatory standard of one fish per person per day, and a 28-inch minimum size. This was a reduction from the previous coastwide regulatory standard of two fish per person per day, and a 28-inch minimum size. On a coastwide basis, the new standard is projected to achieve a 31 percent harvest reduction from 2013 levels


 
The ASMFC's management program allows for state-by-state conservation equivalency (C/E). As such, states may propose individual state programs that are conservationally equivalent to the coastwide regulatory standard.


 
DEM and other members of Rhode Island's ASMFC delegation strongly supported the development of a C/E proposal, as a management option, to address the interests of Rhode Island's for-hire industry. Rhode Island's C/E proposal set forth a separate regulatory standard of two fish per person per day, with a 32-inch minimum size, applicable to all individuals fishing aboard RI-licensed charter and party boats. Coupled with the one-fish-per-day-at-28-inch standard applied to all other recreational fishermen, this proposal was projected to achieve a 29 percent harvest reduction for Rhode Island.


 
From mid-January of this year through early March, DEM conducted an intensive public review process, focused on an evaluation of the two management options: adoption of the C/E proposal versus adoption of the coastwide standard for all recreational fishermen. Hundreds of public comments were offered, many in support of the C/E proposal, many others in support of the coastwide standard. On March 2, the Rhode Island Marine Fisheries Council voted 5-3 to recommend adoption of the C/E proposal.


 
In reaching her final decision, Director Coit reviewed the entire public record, with a particular focus on five key factors: resource conservation, risk, enforceability, compliance, and equity. While the record included compelling justifications both for and against the two options, Director Coit found that the arguments in favor of taking a more risk-averse approach applicable to all Rhode Island recreational fishermen outweighed the case for including the two-fish option applicable to Rhode Island's for-hire industry.


 
"In acting to protect the health of the resource, I seek to protect the long-term interests of all fishermen, including those in the for-hire industry, who rely upon striped bass for recreation, food, and employment," said Coit.


 
Looking ahead, Director Coit said she intends to work closely with the for-hire industry to pursue separate for-hire quotas for the various fisheries that are important to their operations, with a view to enabling the industry to remain strong and viable.


 
The regulations are available on DEM's website: http://www.dem.ri.gov/programs/bnatres/fishwild/mfsizes.htm


 
Link to Providence Journal announcing the rule change:

http://www.providencejournal.com/article/20150317/NEWS/150319310/13753/?Start=2

Link to Director Coit's ruling: 

http://www.risaa.org/info/striperdecision.pdf

Fly Casting Workshop- April 25, 2015
Hand Casting I am holding a fly casting clinic on April 25th in Bristol, RI at Colt State Park. This is a free event, running about 4 hours (but could very well go longer). It is open to individuals using all weights of fly rods/lines.

Attendees should bring their own rods, reels and lines and the lines should have a 7 ½' leader with a piece of yellow or red yarn tied on as a substitute fly.
 

Last April when I held a similar event we had ten participants. This is not a clinic for individuals who have never cast a fly rod, but rather for those with some level of experience all the way up the scale to advanced intermediates. It will be geared towards solving individual casting problems as well as demonstrating the types of problems most people face in fly casting and offering instruction on how to remedy them.


 As I did last year I will bring my personal inventory of rods/reels and lines so that attendees can mix and match their equipment with what I will bring in order that we can arrive on a "perfect" combination for each caster. Many fly casters have perfectly good equipment, but their rods and lines are often mismatched making fly casting a chore and frustrating. I will conduct a casting analysis of your equipment, first to evaluate your setup and then to make recommendations. We'll then get into the meat of the program, then experiment with different rod and line combinations. I guarantee it will be a fun learning experience.


 There is no cost for this clinic. For those who would like to move forward to a next step and get individual instruction at any level, we can arrange private or small group lessons, and there will be a cost associated with those lessons.


 

At this point I'm interested in sampling the waters, so to speak, to identify the level of interest. If you would like to join in the fun, email me at (JamesBarrRI@gmail.com) with your name and contact information, and where you would be coming from. Once I further narrow the list of potential attendees I will set up a group mailing list to advise details of how the session will be organized. I intend on enlisting the assistance of other  fly casting instructors for this clinic in order that we will have an optimal student to instructor ratio.


 

To date I have eight casters who have signed up from my first announcement.

 

I am a Certified Fly Casting Instructor, per the International Federation of Fly Fishers organization. For further information follow the link below:
http://www.fedflyfishers.org/Home.aspx 

 
Water Temperatures/ Will they affect spring angling?
Recent warmer air temperatures have warmed our salt waters which is a good thing for we anglers. I periodically check several weather buoys to sample water temps and to analyze trends. In the last couple of weeks we have picked up an average of 3 degrees for the 7 buoys I monitor. When we compare 3/15/15 to 3/15/14 we are still a bit colder, but given the extraordinarily cold winter we had, there's not much deviation. An average across those same buoys indicates we are only 1 degree colder than last year at the same point in time. If this warming trend continues we could be warmer than 2014 at the same points in time, that might translate into good numbers of bass arriving in our salt ponds during the first week of May. (Last May in our salt ponds we didn't have good numbers and sizes of fish until half way through the second week.) I would expect we will see the typical flood of small bass in the third week of April at many of the normal early spring spots (refer to a recent post on my Facebook page, Fly Fishing in Rhode Island for a list of those locations), with the Pawcatuck River in Westerly being first on the hit parade followed shortly thereafter at the West Wall, and then 2nd Beach in Middletown.
 
 
RI Cinder Worm Hatch- Just Around The Corner
The Rhode Island Cinder Worm Hatch is just around the corner. I prefer not to book any charters for the first week of May as I believe the water in our salt ponds will be too cold for stripers unless the balance of March and April deliver to us a good amount of sun and warming ai temperatures and our ocean waters and the water in the salt ponds rises to about the 55F mark. Last year, we had worms at the beginning of May, but only a few bass rising to take them.  I have some very good dates still available if you are interested in this exciting fishery. As of this writing I have the following May dates open: 10, 11, 13, 14, 16, 17, 21, 22, 23, 24, 31- and June 3 & 4. June 6-10 should also be good dates given my sense that hatches will start late and end late. I fully expect I will book all of these open dates once we start getting warmer weather and folks are anxious to put a bend in their fly rods.
                       George Layton
                   Tyson's Corner- VA
 

  
New Toys Aboard "Strip Strike"
Yamaha 150 4-Stroke
As I write this newsletter, a new Yamaha 150hp Four-Stroke outboard engine is being bolted on "Strip Strike", my Mako 2201 Inshore Bay Boat. I'm looking forward to being even more "stealthy" as I enter our quiet inshore and salt pond waters, while at the same time having more than enough power to rip through rougher waters.  The Yamaha family of outboard engines has a superlative performance record, equating to more time, security and fun on the water http://yamahaoutboards.com/outboards/Inline-4/gallery

Additionally I am replacing my chartplotter with the Garmin echoMap 94sv chartplotter/sonar- https://buy.garmin.com/en-US/US/on-the-water/fishfindergpscombos/echomap-94sv/prod507942.html. This is a brand new series of marine mapping and sonar that combines HD-ID sonar, DownVu, and SideVu capabilities for the cleanest scanning sonar on the water.
Garmin echoMap 94sv

For this season I am putting aboard several new Sage, and TFO fly rods, as well as Offshore Angler and Shimano light tackle spinning rods, combined with Shimano Saragosa's and Quantum Cabo PT and Smoke PT spinning reels.
Hogy Lures

 I have also recently joined the Hogy Lures Pro Staff Team and will have aboard a large selection of their light tackle hard and soft baits. http://www.hogylures.com/


The Venturing Angler- Interview
Earlier this month I was asked to do an interview with Tim Harden of The Venturing Angler. He caught me in a "frank" moment and the link below will take you to Tim's website and the interview.
Temple Fork Outfitters- "Hawgleg"
If you like to flyfish for largemouth bass in heavy cover here's a rod you should try. It's the Temple Fork Outfitters "Hawgleg". At 7'11" it's available in both 7/8 and 9/10 weights. These rods have been in the marketplace for a couple of years but only available through an exclusive arrangement TFO has with Bass Pro Shops. The blank is a deep, almost iridescent red, it has three stripping guides and oversize snake guides. The grip and fighting butt are very high quality as is the up-locking reel seat. This rod has been used with considerable success in our southern climes for wrestling big redfish and largemouth bass. At 7'11" it is very maneuverable in tight spaces, has tremendous lifting power, and when matched with one of the shorter-head floating lines in generally one weight higher than the rod's weight, casts a beautiful line. I would recommend either the Sage Bass II Taper 330 grain floating line  or the RIO Products Outbound Short. This is a two-piece rod that for me is not a detractor, as it fits very nicely in a 50" tube, also available at Bass Pro. It comes with a rod sock but not a tube.

 At $149, together with TFO's Lifetime Warranty, this rod is a bargain. (I suggest you not consider purchasing any quality rod that does not provide a lifetime warranty as this has been and continues to be the standard in the marketplace). Because the rod is made with corrosion proof components, it is saltwater ready. I will have several of these rods on board my boats this season, along with the Sage Bass II (Largemouth) series rod, that likewise is a really great flyrod, but with a price point north of the TFO. Both the TFO and Sage Bass II rods are superlative freshwater largemouth bass rods, but because of their quality components, are perfectly suited for use in the salt water.
  
New Industry Affiliations
Hogey Lures
Skinny Water Charters is proud to be recently added to the Pro Staff of three top quality brands in the fishing and outdoor field sports arena.  Simms of Bozeman, MT., Filson of Seattle, WA, and Hogy Lure Company of Falmouth, MA.
  



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 whenever I can find the time.
 
My best,

 

Capt. Jim Barr
Skinny Water Charters