rockhopper
05-19-2011, 12:51 AM
I was searching for the info on the Cuttyhunk bass and came across this, it amazes me that such huge bass used to be commonplace. :drool:
Donald Zboyan of Fords caught a 68-pounder off Sandy Hook on June 29, 1970, and Joseph Elisio of Trenton nailed one that went 64 1/2 pounds on a chunk of mackerel while fishing off the Seaside Heights pier in 1974.
Tom Schnoor, Middletown, caught a 67-pound, 2-ounce bass on a live bunker May 27, 1976, at Sandy Hook, and Thomas James Russell caught a 69-pounder Nov. 18, 1982.
Russell's bass still stands as a 16-pound test International Game Fish Association world record as does the 66-pound, 12-ounce bass that Steve Thomas caught on 12-pound test line Nov. 1, 1979, at Bradley Beach.
Not in the 60-pound class, but a world's record, nonetheless, is the 48-pound, 9-ounce striped bass caught on 12-pound test line by Edna Yates while fishing in Deal on July 27, 1980.
New Jersey boasts the largest striper recognized by the IGFA, the 78 1/2-pounder caught by Albert R. McReynolds on Sept. 21, 1982, at Atlantic City.
McReynolds' fish replaced the 73-pounder caught Aug. 17, 1913, by Charles B. Church in Cuttyhunk, Mass. That fish measured 60 inches long with a 30 1/2-inch girth.
Charles E. Cinto tied Church's weight on June 16, 1967, with a 73-pounder that measured 56 inches long with a 35-inch girth. That fish was also caught in Cuttyhunk.
Sept. 5 of that same year, John J. Salonis caught a 68 1/2-pound bass at North Truro, Mass. That fish measured 54 inches long with a 32 1/2-inch girth. Ralph Gray had caught one of the same weight at North Truro on Oct. 1, 1958. His measured 50 inches long with a 34-inch girth.
Edward J. Kirker came just a pound shy of that mark with a bass he caught Oct. 10, 1969, at Cuttyhunk. That one measured 51 inches long with a 31-inch girth.
At the time the 72-pounder was publicized, a reader wrote Saltwater Sportsman magazine that he had a 75-pound bass caught in a North Carolina net years ago that was mounted. That fish had measured 53 3/4 inches long with a 34 1/2-inch girth. It contained 14 pounds of roe.
Robert Rocchetta holds the men's 50-pound test IGFA record with a 76-pound bass he caught off Montauk, N.Y., July 17, 1981. Chester A. Berry holds the IGFA 80-pound test record with a 70-pound bass he caught off Orient Point, N.Y. on Sept. 5, 1987.
Despite all of the recreational effort that has gone into striped bass fishing in the last 125 years, no one has matched the netters. Numerous fish in the 75- to 80-pound class have been reported taken in the twine.
The largest were two seined at Edentown, N.C., in 1891 that weighed 125 pounds apiece.
Possibly the largest ever taken was one that was netted off Worton Point in upper Chesapeake Bay in 1915 by a Capt. Charles O. Cummings. His fish weighed 106 pounds without the head, tail, roe and entrails.
Marine biologists estimate that the discarded parts would have weighed 38 pounds bringing that fish to a total weight of 144 pounds.
The monster stripers have all been females. Male stripers grow faster than females from the second to the fourth years, but from then on the females grower faster and apparently live longer.
Male stripers older than 10 years are rare in the Atlantic Ocean, and studies done by Maryland biologists from the 1950s through the 1960s revealed few big males.
During the period from 1954 through 1963, the Maryland scientists checked 44 male bass that weighed between 15 and 20 pounds, eight that went between 20 and 25, six that weighed from 25 to 30 pounds and one that weighed 32 pounds. It measured 40 inches in length.
The largest male was one that was measured at 45 1/2 inches long when it was tagged and released April 19, 1958, in the Nanticoke River, a Chesapeake Bay feeder stream. That fish was caught six weeks later off Barnegat.
Donald Zboyan of Fords caught a 68-pounder off Sandy Hook on June 29, 1970, and Joseph Elisio of Trenton nailed one that went 64 1/2 pounds on a chunk of mackerel while fishing off the Seaside Heights pier in 1974.
Tom Schnoor, Middletown, caught a 67-pound, 2-ounce bass on a live bunker May 27, 1976, at Sandy Hook, and Thomas James Russell caught a 69-pounder Nov. 18, 1982.
Russell's bass still stands as a 16-pound test International Game Fish Association world record as does the 66-pound, 12-ounce bass that Steve Thomas caught on 12-pound test line Nov. 1, 1979, at Bradley Beach.
Not in the 60-pound class, but a world's record, nonetheless, is the 48-pound, 9-ounce striped bass caught on 12-pound test line by Edna Yates while fishing in Deal on July 27, 1980.
New Jersey boasts the largest striper recognized by the IGFA, the 78 1/2-pounder caught by Albert R. McReynolds on Sept. 21, 1982, at Atlantic City.
McReynolds' fish replaced the 73-pounder caught Aug. 17, 1913, by Charles B. Church in Cuttyhunk, Mass. That fish measured 60 inches long with a 30 1/2-inch girth.
Charles E. Cinto tied Church's weight on June 16, 1967, with a 73-pounder that measured 56 inches long with a 35-inch girth. That fish was also caught in Cuttyhunk.
Sept. 5 of that same year, John J. Salonis caught a 68 1/2-pound bass at North Truro, Mass. That fish measured 54 inches long with a 32 1/2-inch girth. Ralph Gray had caught one of the same weight at North Truro on Oct. 1, 1958. His measured 50 inches long with a 34-inch girth.
Edward J. Kirker came just a pound shy of that mark with a bass he caught Oct. 10, 1969, at Cuttyhunk. That one measured 51 inches long with a 31-inch girth.
At the time the 72-pounder was publicized, a reader wrote Saltwater Sportsman magazine that he had a 75-pound bass caught in a North Carolina net years ago that was mounted. That fish had measured 53 3/4 inches long with a 34 1/2-inch girth. It contained 14 pounds of roe.
Robert Rocchetta holds the men's 50-pound test IGFA record with a 76-pound bass he caught off Montauk, N.Y., July 17, 1981. Chester A. Berry holds the IGFA 80-pound test record with a 70-pound bass he caught off Orient Point, N.Y. on Sept. 5, 1987.
Despite all of the recreational effort that has gone into striped bass fishing in the last 125 years, no one has matched the netters. Numerous fish in the 75- to 80-pound class have been reported taken in the twine.
The largest were two seined at Edentown, N.C., in 1891 that weighed 125 pounds apiece.
Possibly the largest ever taken was one that was netted off Worton Point in upper Chesapeake Bay in 1915 by a Capt. Charles O. Cummings. His fish weighed 106 pounds without the head, tail, roe and entrails.
Marine biologists estimate that the discarded parts would have weighed 38 pounds bringing that fish to a total weight of 144 pounds.
The monster stripers have all been females. Male stripers grow faster than females from the second to the fourth years, but from then on the females grower faster and apparently live longer.
Male stripers older than 10 years are rare in the Atlantic Ocean, and studies done by Maryland biologists from the 1950s through the 1960s revealed few big males.
During the period from 1954 through 1963, the Maryland scientists checked 44 male bass that weighed between 15 and 20 pounds, eight that went between 20 and 25, six that weighed from 25 to 30 pounds and one that weighed 32 pounds. It measured 40 inches in length.
The largest male was one that was measured at 45 1/2 inches long when it was tagged and released April 19, 1958, in the Nanticoke River, a Chesapeake Bay feeder stream. That fish was caught six weeks later off Barnegat.