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Category Archives: 2010 FISHING REPORTS
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631-433-6220
Posted in 2010 FISHING REPORTS, 2010 June Fishing Reports, Bass info, Fun Stuff, Kat Tails
Tagged bass, boat, CAPTAIN PAUL, fishing, fluke, Long Island, Mama Mia, new york, news, PABLO, reports, shark, southbay, striped bass, twitter, Youtube
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It was a Fire Island Weekend for me :)
Saturday had Dave out on my boat we were going to look for those Bunker Pods and then switch over to Fluke and Sea Bass as we made our way West I found no Bunker but I was so far I could see the Fire Island Light House
How much Futher can it be? i look over at Dave and he says Pablo I don’t have anywhere to go I’m down. So we find the Bunker pods only thing by the time we got there 8:30-9am the Bite was ending and we had no takers making hours of drifts through huge bunker schools. Around 1:30pm I said were all ready here might as well go Fluking for a few housr then come back for the dinner crowd. We head to 75′ of water noe in Fire Island you have to go like 10 miles Wholly Crap!!! In Moriches you have to 1 mile… Anyway we had several shorts and the 1 keeper.
we had a Nice long ride home stop off at Sea Bass City and nailed a few keepers
The Sun Set and we headed in
Back at the dock dissapointed no Big Bass I get a call from Brian. Hey Pablo what are you doing tomorrow, I got no one to go with? Without hesitation I said I’m in !!! See you at 5:30 Am
Sunday Came and we were back at it again. This time the Bunker were far and few, No huge pods like the other day and we had a hard time locating a pod with fish on it. Finally around 8:30 am I got taken and landed a fish in the low 20′s then soon after Brian also landed one a in the high teens. We RELEASED them both and headed in eairly. Thanks You Capt.Brian Phelps for another great day in Fire Island I can’t wait to return the favor on my boat come this fall
Hey if your ever in Fire Island don’t for get to stop by Frank + Dick’s Gas/Bait and Tackle located right on the water. They also serve hamburgers hot dogs and full concession tell em Pablo sent ya
I think that concludes my Fire Island Fishing for this year unless those Pods are still there we will see
Capt.Paul Peluso aka Pablo
631-399-2400
149,356
Fluke Season Is Here look who made the paper again
Fluke Season Is Here
By Angelo Peluso
May 04, 2011 | 03:58 PM
One of the
most popular game fish along the east and mid-Atlantic coasts is the fluke or
summer flounder. That flatfish is prized both for its sporting qualities and its
tasty flesh.
Despite regulations over the past several years reducing
length of season and upping legal size — an effort targeted to help rebuild
critical-mass stocks — Long Island anglers are blessed with typically bountiful
seasons. This year recreational anglers can possess a limit of three fish per
day with a 20.5-inch minimum size per fish. May and June are the prime time for
fluke on the north shore, and some of the best fluke fishing is just a short
boat ride from any harbor on the Long Island Sound.
Fluke are prolific in
the waters around Long Island, perhaps second only to striped bass in
popularity. Fluke is also one of the most easily identified of all fish species.
It has a distinctly white underbelly with a dark brown, mottled and spotted back
and eyes positioned on one side of its head. Unlike its closest relative, the
winter flounder, fluke have a mouth full of sharp teeth.
That notable
dentition renders fluke quite capable of dealing with larger prey, such as sand
eels, spearing and squid. Fluke will burrow in the sand and remain motionless
until some unsuspecting prey moves into their feeding zone. Then they will
accelerate out of the sand and attack, often with surprising stealth and speed.
Fluke are very aggressive feeders and will also follow bait for some distance
before striking. When fishing for fluke, most anglers use spearing or squid for
bait. Artificial lures known as bucktails are also very
effective.
Finding a shoal where bait and fluke congregate can be an
especially productive area to prospect. If the shoal is adjacent to deeper water
there will often be some larger fluke on the prowl. Some of the most productive
early-season fluke locations are found in water approximately 12 to 22 feet deep
off shoals or expansive sand flats that are close to much deeper areas.
Getting and keeping the bait as close to the bottom as possible is imperative.
As the boat maintains its drift, impart a subtle action to the lure or bait,
moving it along with a slow and steady retrieve. One boat technique that works
well is to set up on a drift much like you would as if bait fishing. I prefer to
move off from the fleet a bit and fish the shallower edges of shoals or set up
on a flat. Wading for fluke is another option especially in the early part of
the season when those flatties are predisposed to shallower water. Again the
best strategy is to concentrate on backwater areas, bays and mud and sand flats.
2010 Fishing Season in Review
With the cold Air Temps that have Moved in and all the Fish headed South for the Winter. It’s time to reflect on the Greatest Season I EVER HAD!!! From an early Spring run of Bass in the Bay to the 40 plus pounders in June , The Mako’s that won 1st place $$$
in the Noreast Big Dog Mako/Thresher Shootout and the Grand Finally of Striped Bass we had for over a Month outside Moriches like we never had before. IT WAS THE GREATEST!!! And I was so glad to have shared the best of times with my family, friends and Clients. I’m most thankful my wife was aboard on June 22 2010. Where she was able to land several 40 plus lbs Striped Bass all by herself. NEVER before have I witnesses 50 lbs Stripers LEAPING out of the water
YES totally launching themselves out of the water after adult bunkers. It was INSANE. I am Also glad to have caught a very Rare Species of fish a Sturgeon, It was the crowning achievment off of a very good year of fishing.
I would just want to take this Oppertunity to wish everyone a Very Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays
and a Special Thanks to Angelo Peluso and Michael Wright for always putting us in the local Papers
Thankgiving Week Issue of the Manorville Press Katrina was once again on the pages of this paper
Herring Are Coming
BY MIKE WRIGHT
Another duck hunting season is upon us, and once again it has arrived well ahead of the time when I have any interest in skipping a trip to the beach in search of stripers to sit in the duck blind shielding my eyes from the sun. I wish our waterfowl season just started on January 1. you see, the herring are here and the striped bass fishing is about to get really interesting. They showed up a week ago Monday, and they’ve swept into the waters off the entire South Shore in dramatic fashion.
Block Island Sound is engulfed in a giant hurricane of gannets bombing the water’s surface, their razor sharp scissor-like beaks agape and herring fleeing from striped bass below in their sights. The fishing, when it’s like this, is the best there is. Spinning gear and fly rods are all the tools you need to tussle with amped-up stripers. The story is much the same well to the west. From Quogue to western Fire Island, there are huge clouds of birds swirling above herring schools a mile or two off the beach, and hundreds of boats in hot pursuit. There hasn’t really been a major run of herring through East End waters in about four years. We’ve had herring—mostly in Montauk—the last few winters, but the runs have been wimpy at best, anemic at worst. The last time we had a really good run of them was 2006, and that year there was an amazing push of bass and bluefish along the beaches from Montauk to Moriches in early December. It will be interesting to see how the herring schools affect the pretty good fishing we’ve had from the beaches already, thanks to the large amount of sand eels in the surf zone. The last two years, the sand eels have dominated the fishing scene and I don’t think it’s a coincidence. Nary a bunker, peanut or otherwise has been seen in the surf the last two years. It’s not for any lack of bunker in the area, there’s been tons. They were clogging pound traps in Peconic Bay until a few weeks ago, then disappeared all of a sudden. A few days later, there were a few in the surf off Bridgehampton, but not many fish on them. The bass holding on the points gorging on sand eels barely looked up long enough to see a bunker tail flitter by. In a certain way, I hope they react the same way to the herring. The herring, as usual, brought tons of new fish down with them. Fat fish, with dark stripes and bright silver sides—compared to the light brown and opaque colored fish that have mottled themselves to match our sandy bottoms. The herring should hang out for a couple weeks then split on the heels of a cold front. When they go, they will take all those fish that followed them here with them. But the sand eels won’t leave like the herring will. They’ll stay in the surf all winter, just like they did last year, and if our fish, or some fish, stay with them, we could catch fish well into late December, especially if we don’t get an early cold snap like last year. There’s some nice fishing being taken on the North Side in Montauk. The sand in East Hampton and Southampton have fish too, but mostly schoolies and rats. Blackfishing is hit and miss. Some cod are coming up at Coxes Ledge and there’s bluefin tuna roaming the 30 fathom region. Catch ‘em up. See you out there.
Kat Peluso with a delicious bass caught aboard the Mama Mia off Moriches last week. CAPT. PAUL PELUSO
Also Featured in Times Beacon Record an On line colum by Angelo Peluso My wife again 
Fall angling winds down |
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| Katrina Peluso with a striped bass caught while fishing with husband, Capt. Paul Peluso. Photo by Angelo Peluso (click for larger version) | ||
November 24, 2010 | 02:50 PM
Long Island anglers have been enjoying a solid fall run of striped bass and bluefish. It has been one of the best runs of the past several years. The most active fishing locations during the month of November have been along the South Shore. Bass and bluefish schools slowly spread out from their earlier concentrations at Montauk to all prime fishing spots along the south side of Long Island. Fish have been widely dispersed from the Hamptons to the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge. The southern sand beaches from the East End to the west have experienced a strong influx of sand eels, a preferred prey species for bass and blues.
As would be expected, the hungry, migrating game fish followed the sand eels in hot pursuit, providing many inshore and close-to-the-beach fishing opportunities. Some of the best locations for finding fish have been Shinnecock, Moriches, Smith Point and the Fire Island National Seashore, and the Robert Moses and Jones Beach areas.
Those fish will continue their migration west so any beach or offshore locations to the west of FINS should also become active before the fall run loses steam. For anglers who prefer using artificial baits, some of the hottest have been lures that replicate sand eels: soft plastic imitations, tins and tubes, and slender swimming plugs.
Back on the North Shore, the Long Island Sound this fall has been relinquishing a remarkable number of blackfish, which should continue for some time to come. While many of the offshore pieces of bottom structure have yielded the most and the largest tautog, some of the shallower inshore areas as well as the harbors have given up some nice quality fish as well.
Green crabs and Asian crabs have been best baits for this sporting and tasty game fish. Black sea bass can also be caught with a high degree of regularity throughout our area. The sea bass season runs through Dec. 31.
The final stages of the Long Island season can prove a boon to local anglers under one very special situation — the presence of herring. When herring make a showing, striped bass — usually large ones — home in on that late season dietary preference and feed aggressively. The larger and more widespread the schools of herring, the more the bass will school in their attempt to maximize the consumption of that annual prized bounty. Some of the largest bass feeding binges of the season will occur at this time.
Area fishermen eagerly await this potential bounty. When top water feeding blitzes are encountered they can often cover acres and bass will readily hit most large lures that imitate herring. The real opportunity of this fishing is that it often goes unnoticed since most anglers are not on the water at the time the herring appear. There is still time to give this fishing a try so keep an eye open for diving gannets that also enjoy tasty herring. While herring will move though the Sound, the best bet for encountering this type of fishing is offshore in the ocean.
Once striped bass and bluefish leave our area they move through the waters along New Jersey and the mid-Atlantic states. For anglers willing to travel, fabulous fall fishing can continue — just a day’s journey away.
And I made the Southampton Press too Dec 1 2010 Issue
And Finally If all that wasn’t enough Kat made Miss December as see is Featured in the 2011 Fishing Calendar
which is Currently for sale NOW you can view it here and buy a copy too.
Posted in 2010 FISHING REPORTS, 2010 IN THE NEWS, 2010 Nov Fishing Reports
Tagged 2010 year in Review, bass, Blitz, Blitzing Stripers, Bluefish, bucktail, Bunker, CAPTAIN PAUL, Dan Heller, Dean Locke, Diamond Jig, fall fishing, fall run, fishing, Kat, Keeper Bass, live bait, Long Island, mako, Mama Mia, Mama Mia Fishing, Mia, Moriches, moriches bay, new york, Noreast Saltwater, Noreast Saltwater magazine, ocean, orient, PABLO, Pam Heller, peanut bunker, Peter Park, shark, Shinnecock, Smith Point Bridge, striped bass, Yo-Zuri Crystal Minnow
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Monday Nov 29 2010 19 Striped Bass, 2 Keepers. The Fall Run is winding down
I all ready know what your thinking. 19 Stripers and your saying it’s slowing down ??? Yes, because on Monday I had out Mark Flurry and Elias also known as the Human Fish Finder on my boat. Between Mark’s teasers and Elias’s never give up attitude plus myself 19 fish was a SLOW day. At 1st we arrived at the scene and found birds diving and fish blitzing all over. We ran out Striper count up to 9 with 1 keeper in about 30 minutes or less. We all thought oh boy this is going to be 1 of those days
. Then about 8:30 am the bite died down to a trickle and we then found ourselves in for a very long day picking only another 10 Stripers, Skates and Spiny Sand Sharks also known as Dog Fish. Elias was determined and fished hard all day he even landed a 3 Flukes
After hours of fishing hard off the bottom Mark landed the only other keeper of the day on his custom Teasers he makes himself. Way to go Mark this was the second Keeper he landed on my boat using his teasers . We all had a good time ribbing each other all day even though it was slow. I’m Sensing the end is near because of the lack of fish, No reports and some bad weather for the next few days I think the EPIC 2010 fishing season as come to an end. So I just wanted to thank everyone who supported me, went fishing with me and all my family and friends. The 2010 season will long be remembered
SEE YOU NEXT SPRING !!!
Merry Christmas Everyone and Happy Holidays
Captain Paul Peluso 631-399-2400
49,500
Posted in 2010 FISHING REPORTS
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