Friday, August 30, 2019
Thursday, August 29, 2019
Double digit days here and there
James sent me a message on the text phone that they had a double digit day with BLUE MARLIN releases on the Dragin Fly yesterday. He'll be here in a couple of weeks for a double digit day on red drum. Here are some pics from Chris
Wednesday, August 28, 2019
Tuesday, August 27, 2019
Monday, August 26, 2019
Sunday, August 25, 2019
Now you know what to call them and double digits
Now that you know what to call them, my report from yesterday morning was 3 old drum, a single and a double header while fishing 4 different spots.
Yesterday afternoon I stopped on some bait and caught 1 old drum then I moved to where I caught the double header in the morning. The wind machine had started and we could not fish more than 4 rods due to the fierce bluefish bite and steady drum action. We ended up landing 3 puppy drum, 8 yearlings and double digits of the big uns.
What are double digits?
We refer to a catch of ten fish or more as "double digits"
The hope is to keep in perspective the significance and value of catching just one of these big drum. Some days we catch less and some days we catch a lot more, but catching 10 in a day is a really big deal. We want to keep expectations in check and not make catching these giants a competition.
Yesterday afternoon I stopped on some bait and caught 1 old drum then I moved to where I caught the double header in the morning. The wind machine had started and we could not fish more than 4 rods due to the fierce bluefish bite and steady drum action. We ended up landing 3 puppy drum, 8 yearlings and double digits of the big uns.
What are double digits?
We refer to a catch of ten fish or more as "double digits"
The hope is to keep in perspective the significance and value of catching just one of these big drum. Some days we catch less and some days we catch a lot more, but catching 10 in a day is a really big deal. We want to keep expectations in check and not make catching these giants a competition.
What to call a drum?
Officially, NC's state fish is the "red drum"
or it may even be technically the "channel bass" which is what the
old timers would call them.
The "slot/keeper" sized red drum are called "puppy
drum". (2-3 years old)
Ones smaller
than legal size of 18 inches, we call "pup pups" (less than 1 year
old)
Other places they are called
"rat reds" but when we are talking to folks from those other places,
we refer to our "rat reds" as anything under 40 inches just to make
fun of the little size of their red drum.
To further confuse things, the over slot sized 27 inchers
up to about 40 inches we call "yearlings" even though they are about
3-5 years old.
The big 'uns, over 40 inches and a really big one about
50 inches may be between 5 and 50 years old.
At that size, they are adults and
like adults, their age cannot be accurately measured by their height.
Everywhere else in the world they just call them redfish,
but if you call them redfish then a local will know that you are from anywhere
but here.
cooling off and firing off
Turning around now……much better bite
yesterday with this nor’easter. Cooling
off the water and firing off the bite.
Get ready.
Friday, August 23, 2019
gathering is upon us
They are on the way. I took a recon mission out and headed a pack of them off at the pass. Had a double digit afternoon with the big uns.
Monday, August 19, 2019
a little slow right now with the drummies......
I was expecting more out of them afte rthis big full moon......the big mass of them will be here soon enough
Saturday, August 17, 2019
Thursday, August 15, 2019
Sunday, August 11, 2019
Southern Flounder North Carolina's Epic Fail.
Southern Flounder North
Carolina's Epic Fail.
by Anna Beckwith
In 2016 a lawsuit was filed by the North Carolina Fisheries
Association, the Carteret County Fisheries Association and the Counties of
Carteret, Dare and Hyde suing the NC Marine Fisheries Commission (MFC) and the
NC Division of Fisheries Management (DMF), preventing them from taking
management actions that would have prevented the flounder debacle we are now
currently experiencing.
It is important to understand the relationship between the MFC and
DMF. The MFC is a nine-member board appointed by the Governor to manage,
restore, develop, cultivate, protect and regulate the State's marine and
estuary resources. It does this by adopting rules and policies and implementing
management measures for state fisheries. DMF is the management, science and
enforcement branch of the State's government for marine and estuary resources.
They provide the science used by the MFC and implement and enforce management
strategies approved via the MFC process.
Although it was clear that Southern Flounder were in trouble, this
lawsuit claimed that the new management measures proposed by the 2015 MFC to
reduce flounder catches were unnecessary and that data was insufficient. At the
time, the MFC felt that 10 years of data and two previous approved stock
assessments provided ample basis for taking action to protect southern
flounder. In hind sight, it is clear that additional management
measures were indeed needed and if they had been fully implemented, would have
given southern flounder stocks a real chance at rebuilding.
The range of management measures offered in 2015 by the MFC
concentrated on the problems facing southern flounder rather than in spreading
the pain among all user groups (Recreation vs. Commercial) and gear types
(pound nets, gigging, large mesh nets). While recreational users had achieved
some reductions, in multiple instances other commercial gears had increased
their catches. This strategy of directing regulations on those who were not
meeting the needed reductions was treated as radical and was unpopular among
many members of the NC Legislature.
The problem with flounder is simple. Not enough fish are growing
up and getting out of the nursery areas and into the ocean where they spawn.
They are caught in internal waters by hook and line, gigs and gill nets and as
they migrate offshore in the fall they run into a wall of pound nets.
I occasionally hear that I "should have done more" to
help Southern Flounder during my time on the NC MFC. Unfortunately, my
"resource first" position and aggressive, vocal support for real
action made me an unpopular choice when my term was up for reappointment in
2015. My replacement resigned after two meeting and the seat I had occupied was
left without a voice for some time.
In 2005, in order to achieve a sustainable harvest of the southern
flounder stock, the required harvest reduction was estimated at 38%. In the
absence of real action over the past 15 years we are now faced with a needed
reduction of 72% in 2020 to achieve a sustainable harvest.
Despite the 2015 MFC's valiant effort to move forward with real
change, we are now facing a near moratorium on harvest with devastating socio
economic impacts on all user groups. I wonder if those measures put
forth by the 2015 MFC now seem less offensive to those who sued to stop them?
There is a need to restructure the southern flounder fishery in
order to achieve a measurable harvest while still providing access to the
resource, considering discards, bycatch and protected species interactions.
I am surprised that the current MFC accepted, at the advice of
their lawyer, DMF's proposed recommendations in Amendment 2 without any
alterations. This current MFC relinquished their opportunity to restructure the
fishery by bringing some of the 2015 proposals or developing new ones of their
own.
DMF provided management recommendations for the legally required
reductions that spread the pain equally across all sectors and gear types.
However, in my opinion, the southern flounder fishery must be
restructured, so that the greatest overall benefit to the state and the
highest and best use of this resource is achieved. While the MFC must
be fair, they are not required to be equitable and they can treat fishing
sectors and gear types differently if they chose.
As a fisheries manager, Southern Flounder has haunted me. I
consider the management of this fishery an epic fail and hope that someday
there is light at the end of the tunnel.
At my last meeting on the NC MFC I read onto the record the
following statement which may be entertaining for those who would like to read
a little history.
Anna on the record regarding southern flounder
The following was read into the record in May
of 2015 at my final NC MFC meeting, some clarifying notes have been added in italics.
“Our purpose as a
Commission should be to protect the resource as our primary objective. When the
resource can sustain harvest, all the user groups including commercial, recreational,
consumers and those who simply like to know the fish are out there should be
allowed to utilize the resource.
The problem is that we cannot continue to allow harvest at
current levels while ensuring the long term viability of the Southern Flounder
stock in NC.
During the initial FMP development in 2005 the indicated
reduction required to stop overfishing and achieve a sustainable harvest was
approximately 40%. Instead, the
commission opted for an estimated 25% reduction through various management
measures.
The recreational sector did achieve some reductions in harvest
as compared to the 2005 levels. Regulations
implemented by the 2005 FMP had no impact on commercial landings which
continued to increase through 2009. In addition, the commission chose to twice
grant exceptions to the pound net fishery and allowed harvest in December in
contradiction to the standing FMP. The management
measures chosen by the commission, based on the best science at the time were
intended to end overfishing and rebuild the stock but they failed.
In 2009 another stock assessment was completed and accepted
for management. Although that assessment
would not pass peer review today due to new information available on Southern
Flounder stock structure, it was the best available at the time.
Based on that information there was some cause for hope,
even though it was also clear that a reduction in the overall harvest was
needed to achieve a sustainable harvest.
Due to the hardships being faced by our commercial large
mesh gill net fishery (from interactions
with endangered sea turtles and newly required federal management measures),
no further restrictions were placed on commercial gear types. The federally required
measures appeared to be enough to result in a harvest reduction of about 20%
which was assumed to be enough to end overfishing in two years and achieve a
sustainable harvest.
Soon after implementation, exemptions from the “settlement
agreement” (federal rules required to mitigate the endangered species interactions
with large mesh anchored gill nets) were granted to areas including
Albemarle, Croatan, Roanoke Sounds and an extra day of harvest was allowed
south of Beaufort inlet.
A decrease in harvest was seen in 2010 and 2011 across all
commercial gears, but analysis of commercial landings suggested lower
availability in the Albemarle Sound Management Area as the main reason for the
decline, not regulations.
Commercial harvest increased again in 2012 substantially. This demonstrated that yet again the efforts
by the Commission to achieve a consistent harvest reduction across the
commercial sector and achieve an overall sustainable harvest level had failed.
During this same time recreational regulation did achieve some additional
reductions.
Although the 2014 stock assessment was not approved for management,
I find the following reasons for concern and need for action:
·
The original FMP was developed to expand the
spawning stock biomass. The current biomass (based on 2014 information) is stable meaning that all attempts to
manage the fishery have not resulted in an increase in biomass.
·
High fishing mortality on pre spawn fish is
occurring which can and apparently has limited the rebuilding of the stock by
limiting the reproductive potential.
·
An extremely high portion of the landings
consist of Age 0 and Age 1 immature fish. This is not good for the long term
sustainability of the stock. (Juvenile
Overfishing)
·
The data does not indicate any year classes
moving through the population and the age structure is truncated.
·
Signs point to declines in recruitment and
abundance as well as availability to recreational fisherman.
·
Even though the 2014 stock assessment was unable
to model an open population, tagging studies indicate that our fish head south
and no real indication that the opposite is true (Meaning that we do not appear to receive fish from other systems).
·
We also have new information that points toward
a substantial amount of fish being retained for personal consumption or
donations which are not tracked on trip tickets and therefore not included as a
source of removal in the assessments.
The original 2005 FMP includes a statutory requirement to
rebuild the stock within 10 years. There is enough information available from
the 2014 assessment to indicate that we have NOT rebuilt this stock during that
time period.
Many of the decisions made by this Commission over the last
10 years were due to concerns for the fisherman and the devastating socio
economic impacts that come from drastic cuts.
While I am highly sympathetic to the concerns and fears of
the commercial fishing industry, it is the duty of this Commission to take
steps that will rebuild Southern Flounder and ensure the long term viability of
the stock. To achieve this I view the
Commission as having two possible courses of action:
1) The first would put the central focus of the Commission
on job retention over stock health and require reductions across gear types
causing socio economic hardships across the board while likely increasing
discards dramatically to achieve reductions in catch BUT retain the appearance
of equity.
2) The second route puts the central focus of the Commission
on the resource but requires a restructuring of the fishery to achieve a
measurable management harvest while still providing access to the resource and
consideration to discards, bycatch and protected species interactions.
Regardless of the path forward our purpose at this table is
to achieve a sustainable level of harvest and ensure the long term viability of
the stock. After 10 years of management I do see a critical need to move
forward.”
-----Anna Beckwith --May, 2015
The result of the NC Fisheries Association
lawsuit on flounder management:
Below is a
quick summary of the management measures that were so incredibly controversial
at the time. There were six proposals
put forth at the May 2015 Commission Meeting. All are worth reading and many good ideas on
how to restructure the fishery were provided.
In the Nov.
2015 meeting the Commission voted to move forward the following management
measures:
Commercial
size limit increase to 15 in
Minimum mesh
size for gill nets increased to 6 in
Escape
panels mesh size in pound nets increased to 5.75 in
These recommendations survived the lawsuit/injunction and
were implemented.
At this same
meeting, the Commission also passed the following management measures but they were
stopped by the lawsuit and never implemented:
Southern
flounder gill nets prohibited from Oct 16-Dec 31
Recreational
southern flounder fishery closed from Oct 16 – Dec 31
Pound net
quota corresponding to a 38% reduction
Commercial
southern flounder gig fishery closure when pound net quota is reached.
A few thoughts from Anna on large mesh gill nets, pound
nets and gigs:
Large Mesh Gillnets
While never
approved by the Commission, a controversial management measure was proposed to
ban anchored large mesh gill nets in 2016. The proposed measure read as
follows:
Large Mesh Anchored Gill Nets: Effective January 1 2016
large mesh anchored gill nets will be a prohibited gear in the taking and
possession of flounder in internal waters. (This
would still have allowed drop/strike/run around netting and properly deployed
drift nets with large mesh gill nets but would have eliminated “set” or
anchored nets).
Pound nets are a good gear type. They allow release of undersized fish, have
limited mortality when interacting with protected species and could be managed
by quota and monitored reasonably well. This being said, there is room for additional
management consideration. I am not suggesting that all the ideas below are
appropriate or needed but that some may be worth discussing as part of the
needed restructuring of the fishery via an amendment. The
pound net permit application process is extremely concerning, almost
guaranteeing all applications to be approved.
It blows my mind that additional pound net permits continue to be
granted given the state of the southern flounder stock. Further
consideration of capacity by area and increasing required gaps between pound
nets should be considered to allow increased escapement by flounder to their
offshore spawning grounds.
A few
additional management measures for consideration might
include:
·
Construction of escape panels including increasing
the number or size.
Assess if the
location, type of webbing or placement can be altered to increase escapement.
·
Assess capacity by area; set max number
of pounds allowed per area.
·
Limit number of pound net permits and/or allowed harvest per
SCFL.
·
Limit number of pounds harvested per pound net
set each year.
· Prohibit pound nets in crab spawning areas. (Already delineated near inlets, allowing flounder to escape into the ocean.)
·
Implement TAC (total allowable catch) by region,
recognizing seasonality in Northern, Central and Southern Zones.
·
Require daily reporting as condition of permit.
·
Moratorium on new pound net permits and permit
transfers until a sustainable harvest is achieved.
Commercial Gigs:
Allow only 4 days per week with a 15 inch size limit and trip limit of 36
flounder per valid SCFL on the boat with a max of 2 limits per boat.
Thursday, August 8, 2019
Monday, August 5, 2019
My first customer
I wanted to repost this as I have referenced it in the newsletter and this post was bumped off due to all the Africa pictures.
My first customer.
I show up at the dock, still wearing tennis shoes back then, but the white boots weren’t far to follow. Just out of college and I am fired up about my first official trip as Down East Guide Service. As I pull up to the ramp, my one customer is waiting, small igloo cooler at his feet, half a stinky un lit cigar being chewed from the corner of his mouth below a big mustache. A tent-sized red rain jacket covered up the enormity that was Rick Goines.
As soon as I swing through the boat landing and wheel around the 60 mph bass boat from which I was guiding in those days, Rick is yelling at me.
I didn’t know at the time that he wasn’t really yelling at me. This may have been in the early days of his hearing loss and to compensate for not being able to hear, he would raise his voice.
Before I get the boat in the water Rick informs me:
“Beckwith, I’ve fished with a lot of guides before and I know how you guys operate”.
“Beckwith, I’ve fished with a lot of guides before and I know how you guys operate”.
I didn’t dare divulge that this was my first for hire trip.
Rick went on, again, with voice raised loud enough that I and everyone else in the parking lot heard it
“You guides are all alike. You go here, you go there, you fish a little here and you fish a little there. Then at the end of the day, you go to the Glory Hole. Well, Beckwith, I like action and you can just skip all the looking around and take me to the Glory Hole right now!”
I slipped the boat off the trailer, told Rick to make himself at home and parked the truck, wondering all along if I was cut out for this kind of berating.
We left Lawson Creek Park and caught a livewell full of 3 inch menhaden just a few yards from the dock. Rick commented on the large amount of bait we were bringing and if I expected to catch a fish on every one of them.
We blasted off up the Neuse River and across to a huge array of pilings that are now all gone and replaced with a modern marina. Twenty years ago, the pilings we idled amongst were the remnants of a time long ago. Perhaps 150 years ago or more these pilings supported a huge loading dock to which ships under power and sail loaded and unloaded their fares. Now, nothing remained above the mean water line, but below, the centuries old pilings were encased in barnacles and mollusks, all with shells and sharp edges.
At lower “tides”, the tops of rows of hundreds of pilings would be revealed, but at times of higher water they would be barely visible if at all. It was a matrix that ate lower units and gouged the bottoms of boats who got too close, so no one fished there. But, if you knew how to navigate through the pilings and towards a drop off that went from 12 to 6 feet, then you had a chance of an epic day.
A drop off and structure, like a lot of barnacle encrusted pilings, equals striped bass; a lot of striped bass. They wait in the pilings to ambush baitfish that would swim along the drop off. The problem for fishermen is that if you cast anywhere near the pilings, a 24 inch striper would pull you back into the shell laden poles and cut your line.
Rick already had a rod in hand, waiting for a bait to be put on his hook as I explained the plan. I dipped into the livewell and broadcast a dozen live peanut menhaden into the water. They were thrilled to have escaped their enclosure, then terrified to be free and all alone. They made a mad dash for the security of the pilings, unbeknownst to them, behind every pole was a hungry striped bass.
The whole area around the boat erupted with striped bass as they gave pursuit to the baitfish and flushed them out into the open. For hours Rick and I caught fish and we laughed and caught fish and laughed and caught fish in the Glory Hole.
Rick was there for me buying fishing trips when he had no business buying fishing trips. He was my greatest ambassador and anyone who knew him, knew that he loved to fish and he told them about me. He built me up bigger than I was and made me famous on the radio and with marketing opportunities I never would have considered nor could have ever afforded.
We shared a lot of great fishing and a lot of great fishing trips. Rick loved the action of a hot bite in the Glory Hole, but he also had the patience to wait for it. He would keep casting, no matter what.
The most memorable trips for Rick and for me were the time on the water that he was able to share with his son Rich. Although Rich’s independence in life may not have led him down the easiest paths, it was that independence that Rick was so proud. He was proud and confident that no matter what was thrown at him, his son Rich was going to make it.
Don’t know what to say, but I’ll miss him. I imagine he is sitting behind a pile of red hot Jimmy crabs or sitting on the bank of a heavenly stream waiting for the first shad of the year.
Keep casting.
Sunday, August 4, 2019
Tarpon Tourney
Each year we have a little pick up tournament since there aren't enough tarpon around to have a 70+ boat event as in year's past. Just too many sting rays and too few tarpon fishermen killed that event. So the hard core guys get together and this is how it went down yesterday between the 12 boats fishing the event:
Greg Voliva jumped one off which would have won the tournament.
Gene Wooster caught one which was the first of 2 fish caught and
he won
Chuck Hudson later caught one on the Pamlico River but too little too late. Pretty work on your tarpon nonetheless, you're still a winner in my book.
Brynn Thomas jumped off two fish next to us in the Sound. Whew, that was pretty. Sorry you blew your chance!
It was really nice to see a few fish around. Got to sneak up on them on 3 different occassions and throw a live menhaden in the middle of them, only to have a bluefish snake my bait from the tarpon.
Couple of drum were caught by the fleet.
Congrats to Gene Wooster on your tarpon tournament win!