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Thread: How to locate, stalk, and catch large fish in the surf.

  1. #1
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    Default How to locate, stalk, and catch large fish in the surf.

    How to locate, stalk, and catch large fish in the surf.

    by: ALAN CAOLO

    The same sight-fishing excitement that has captivated bonefish and tarpon anglers for decades is now mesmerizing striper anglers from Long Island to Cape Cod. But despite growing interest in striper fishing and the techniques required to catch the fish, most fly fishers still don't know how to sight fish for stripers in the surf.
    There are three types of sight-fishing techniques for stripers: wading inshore flats, wading or boat fishing offshore flats, and sight fishing along ocean beaches in the surf. The most challenging sport is in the surf, where the fish run large, presentations are complex, and fly selection is difficult. I began sight fishing the surf eight years ago and managed just three hookups for the entire season that first year. Since then, 60 percent of my fishing from June through September is spent stalking stripers in the surf. In 1997 I averaged three hookups a day. Here's how I do it.
    You must understand striper surf moods if you want to sight fish for them. As the spring migration concludes, the fish leave the rivers and estuaries and take up residence along Northeast ocean shores. As water temperatures rise into the 60s (F.), the fish begin their summer feeding pattern, nocturnally feeding on squid and diurnally feeding on a variety of surf prey. Unlike the bold, aggressive school-fish we're accustomed to seeing during spring and fall migrations, summer stripers quietly prowl the surf, often alone, as they feed selectively on the ocean bottom.

    Daytime surf feeders are large fish. Ten- to 25-pounders are the usual targets, with 25- to 40-pounders often in the mix. They are from 7 to 13 years old and have keen survival instincts. Expect them to be wary and challenging. Smaller fish enter the surf near dark, which accounts for the schoolies that are often taken by blind casters but are seldom seen by sight casters. The right sight-fishing strategies are the key to catching the large, challenging fish. Striper track diagram.
    Except during slack tides (dead high and dead low), stripers work the surf all day. They maneuver it in a number of patterns that are influenced by tides, sandbar and hole formations (rip tides), the prey they're eating, and wave action. Your presentations must correspond to these patterns (see striper track diagram).
    Cruisers. A straight track parallel to the beach is perhaps the simplest striper pattern to recognize. These fish are known as cruisers and they may be inches from the shore on a high tide with low surf, or well outside of the breaking waves, or breakers, during low tide. Slow-moving fish are the most likely eaters. Fast movers are relocating and are unlikely to take a fly. Feeders move slowly with the current, while relocators move quickly against the current.
    Surfers. Other striper tracks are wavelike and more challenging in terms of your fly presentation, but they offer the highest potential for a take. Unlike cruisers that may travel alone, in pairs, or in strings, these fish are known as "surfers" and are always solitary. Gently rolling meanders along the beach through the intertidal zone(or more parallel tracks, spiked with sudden, shoreward rushes behind rolling waves(betray actively feeding bass. These fish are good targets, and you can stalk them for several minutes as you wait for the right shot.
    http://www.flyfisherman.com/northeas...ers/index.html

  2. #2
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    Nov 2008
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    Great post. I am new to SW flyfishing but I am always amazed at the sheer number of fisherman who run onto a beach without stopping to read the water. I am guilty of it myself at times. Most of the fish are in or near the wash. Keep your fly near the white water.

  3. #3
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    Thanks Plugcrazy, I been to Alan Caolo seminars. After reading your post, I'm going to get his book. I sight fish for Bonefish, Barracuda. There's nothing like spotting a fish approaching and try to intercept it with a fly.

  4. #4
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    Nov 2008
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    worth another read.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
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    That was filled with a lot of great tips. Thanks for posting it.

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