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WOW
#1
Hit the Long Island Sound again Wed. and Thurs. and all i can say is wow. Followed the birds and caught stripers up to eight pounds till my arms hurt. Thurs. I fished in rain but no wind so it wasn't bad. Today there's rain and wind so i'm setting at home thinking about next time out. Forecast is good for Mon. so i'll try then. The stripers were hitting poppers and deadly dicks. Top water action was fantastic. I see Willow pond is making site news again, great little place to spend a few hours.[cool]
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#2
Great to hear Poncho. Sounds like I'll have to get out there with the float tube Tomorrow

Maddawg
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#3
I'll bet that was a blast! Thanks for sharing, and it's good to see you around.
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#4
Well done, I bet you got one heck of a workout dragging those puppies.
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#5
Wow George, you really know how to make a guy feel jealous.
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#6
Deadly dicks? Now what in the name of Sam Lucifer is that? It almost sounds pornographic... mind if you show us what that looks like? I have never heard of it before.
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#7
Deadly dicks, they can be jigged, trolled or cast. When cast you can bring in fast and skim the top of the water, drives em crazy.
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#8
Excellent!!! I heard the Stripers were on the rebound. Any Blues this time? A great technique to get into some real huge fish is to seek out bunker schools (usually in late summer) and snag then liveline the suckers. Chuck it back in the school and hold on! If you see any nervous Bunker give it a whirl, the birds would most likely be diving over them if thats the case. If you know this already my apologies. I got all this LIS knowledge might as well help someone else get into them.

Have you targeted Blacks yet, or plan too? They should be starting up real soon now, just can't remember when the season opens, Sept or October. The 7th sticks out in my mind for some reason. Good Luck!!!!
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#9
hustler

Caught a few blues mixed in with the stripers, but most were striper. That was my 3rd and 4th trip to the sound so I won't pass up any suggestions. I haven't seen them attacking bunker, not sure that i would know what i was seeing anyway. I have bought some frozen bunker and chuncked but didn't have any luck. Had a couple of good hits drifting a chunck with no weight but no hookups, all my fish have come on lures.

From what i have been reading on ctfisherman.com the blacks are starting to hit pretty good on green crabs. I'm not sure where to fish for them but hope to learn soon. All of my fishing has been in the mouth of the ct. river. I haven't ventured out very far yet. I bought a chart and am planning to venture out to some of the reefs. I've been catching alot of fish along the break wall. Not sure my boat is big enough to get out too far. If you want to keep up with the reports for the sound go to ctfisherman.com lots of good stuff there.
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#10
Lets see if I can help you out a bit. Not familiar with the CT side of the sound. I used to fish mostly the western sound along the North Shore of LI. Fished The Rye beach are of CT and quite a bit around the center Island area for Black Fish. The Light house is good and there are lots of wrecks in that part of the sound where they stage this time of year in preperation for thier migration. The Bunker usually begin migrating out of the sound in late September. Thats when huge schools can be seen out in open water. Just look for fish splashing around on the surface. When you get close if you see them tight to the surface and they don't go down there are predetaors beneath them.

Heres the best tip I can give you for Black fish regardless of where you are. Get yourself a Lobster license. It's only five bucks and it alows you to set up to five traps. Set a trap or five. Enjoy the lobster Smile and keep the spider crabs an Conch that are a welcome by product. Crack the spider crabs and place them in a chum pot and use the Conch for bait. Not many people know this but Blacks love strips of Conche most of the time anyway. Green crabs are great too and you may get some in your trap or you can walk the local docks with a net and scoop them up off the pilings. More fun than paying for them and nothing beats fresh!!! Reefs and wrecks are the place to be. Structure is important. Exactly where is the CT river in terms of sound location?
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#11
The Ct. river is between Old Saybrook and Old Lyme it runs along Hwy 9 out of Hartford. I understood everything except conche you got me there not sure what that is.
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#12
Heard of Hartford but being an NY boy don't know much about CT. I'll look it up on a map. I see you don't know any Italians, LOL, "Scungelli" is thier name for it and by the way are also very tasty. Everyone I have spoken too about them call them Conch but with a little internet investigation I found out that they are called Channeled Whelk. They are those large sea snails that can be found in just about any bay or harbor. Heres some info and a pic:

[Image: chan1.gif][Image: chan2.gif]

The Channeled Whelk (Busycon canaliculatum)
up to about 7 inches
The channeled whelk has five to six whorls with very small "beads" along the whorl edges rather than the knobs found on [url "http://www.assateague.com/lt-whelk.html"]lightning[/url] and [url "http://www.assateague.com/knob.html"]knobbed[/url] whelks. As with the knobbed whelk and most other whelks, the channeled whelk's opening is on the right side.
Indians once used the beads cut from the whorls around the central axis of the shell as ornaments and money.
Channeled whelks live in the sand just below the level of the low tide. As with the lightning and knobbed whelks, the females lay strings of [url "http://www.assateague.com/whel-cap.html"]egg capsules[/url], attaching one end in the sand. Each capsule can hold up to 100 eggs, and a small hole at the top allows the larvae to escape.
The channeled whelk is found from Massachusetts to northern Florida.


Another great bait that I hadn't tried as much as I should have is steamer clams, or thats what I think they are called. They are those soft shelled clams that are oval shaped and can be located at high tide by digging when you see a stream of water squirting out of the wet sand. Just crack the shell and cut into the meat a little to make it "bleed" than place the entire clam on the hook shell and all.

Believe it or not but Barnacles may be the best choice. I have never tried this but it seems that they make up a huge part of the blacks diet. I used to dive and spear fish them but after a few trips I would just sit down there and observe thier behavior for a while. After they adjusted to my presence they would just continue feeding by rubbing thier faces on the rocks as the dislodged the barnacles. I was shocked when I witnessed this behavior and was sure I stumbled onto something good. Never had the chance to try. This peaked my curiousity so of course I experimented. I took down a chum pot filed with clam chum and that didn't attract them at all (except for the smaller ones). Tried leaving different baits within thier view (fiddler crabs, green crabs, shucked clams) they didn't budge. Just kept rubbing the rocks. The bergals had a feast that day. If you don't know what bergals are just think jordenelle perch only uglier.

Blacks are a challenge to find but you will have a blast once you do!!! They are little powerhouses called bulldogs by the locals and they know how to cut you off real quick. If you hook into a rather large on just take the time to appreciate him, since they grow so slowly you may be looking at a 20 year old fish. Good Luck!!!
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#13
You would probably be better off leaving the chunking to a night fishing trip when they aren't actively chasing live bait but scavenging the bottom for the left overs. Don't forget the bunker chum that could make or break the trip.

Casting to them is more fun anyway especially when they are crashing the surface. Nothing like it to get the adreneline flowing!
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