Sunday, November 28, 2021

Visit from George and deep drop with Dom

Later in November our friend George visited from central Florida. There were a few species Ally and I could help him add to his list, so we made the rounds to a few of our usual spots.


Photo credit Ally Toth.

First up was freshwater goby, which George was able to catch right away, much to our surprise. We looked for striped mojarra as well but no luck. I'm embarrassed to admit this, but I don't think I caught a single fish at this spot.



Next we looked for bigmouth sleeper. George focused on the likely spots for them, and Ally and I fished for other stuff. George caught his sleeper, and we caught a few of the usual fish at this spot.

Florida Largemouth Bass (Micropterus floridanus)


Much to our surprise, George didn't have a frillfin goby, so we made that our third target. They're easy to catch in the Indian River anywhere there's rocks or concrete. George got his goby, and my excitement for the afternoon was landing another angler's gafftopsail catfish. I wish I could catch one this big! The next morning we sent George to one last spot for molly miller, and later that night he emailed me several photos of ones he caught.

Gafftopsail Catfish (Bagre marinus)
Photo credit Ally Toth.

Two weeks later we got an invite from Dom to go deep dropping for swordfish. That's an invite you do not say no to! We headed far offshore to the area where he's caught them before.



Dom has a huge electric reel for swordfishing. The weight required to keep the line from bowing in the Gulf Stream current is around seven pounds. That's not a weight you want to reel up manually a third of a mile.



My fish finder can occasionally show bottom in over 1000 feet, but it's only reliable up to 500 or 600 feet. We tried for swordfish in over 1700 feet. Even if we didn't hook a swordfish, I was excited at the prospect of catching anything that lives that far down.



We didn't hook up with our target, but we did have one short bite. The bait was a whole squid with a skirt similar to what you would use for trolling. We though we saw a few small taps on the rod, and when we pulled the bait up the back half of the squid was missing.

The plan for the rest of the day was to deep drop with smaller hooks around 1000 feet. Before we moved though, we saw some small tuna chasing bait on the surface. Ally threw a small Krocodile and hooked up.



We were glad she was the one to hook up, because it turned out to be her lifer skipjack! It got turned into a few days worth of sashimi and a couple of good shark baits.

Skipjack Tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis)


The wind and current were pretty mild, so I was able to use my manual reel at the deep drop spot. I recently took off the 65 pound braid and replaced it with 30 pound. It helps me hold bottom much more easily. Right away we got bites, and I pulled up a pair of blackbelly rosefish.

Blackbelly Rosefish (Helicolenus dactylopterus)


We took turns dropping, hoping for something new, and eventually I pulled up a red fish from 1025 feet that looked different from the blackbelly rosefish. We could tell it was a scorpionfish, but it took a few days to settle on the ID.

Longspine Scorpionfish (Pontinus longispinis) - new hook & line species #801


We filled up an empty bucket with water so we could take photos of our fish submerged to better see the cirri between the eyes.



Here's one more shot showing the top of it's head.



Ally pulled up a longspine scorpionfish as well, but Dom wasn't as fortunate. He wasn't deterred though, and a week or two later he texted and said that he caught one from the same spot.

Sunday, November 7, 2021

Maryland fall 2021 - part 2

We arrived in Annapolis in the afternoon, driving past the Naval Academy on the way to our fishing spot. I didn't realize how much the people of Maryland love crabs, but now I know.

Photo credit Ally Toth.

We poked around a public dock and a concrete seawall, hoping for blennies or gobies or maybe a spot croaker. Fishing was slow though, and we were ready to give up and move on to another spot. I left my bait sitting on the bottom a few feet out from the seawall, and when I checked my line I discovered a tiny funny-looking fish holding on to my worm! I don't even think the hook point had penetrated his mouth, but that doesn't matter. Skilletfish was my 800th species!

Skilletfish (Gobiesox strumosus) - new hook & line species #800


Thanks Ally for capturing this momentous occasion.


Photo credit Ally Toth.

We had time to try another saltwater spot. We parked a half mile from the water and hiked down to a jetty and small beach that looked promising.



We fished the rock jetty for blennies and other micros, but the only two species we could find were mummichog and Atlantic silverside. Both were very aggressive. I had no problem hooking them with a #14 hook and a large piece of worm.

Mummichog (Fundulus heteroclitus)


Atlantic Silverside (Menidia menidia)


The sun was getting low in the sky, but we kept fishing the jetty because the habitat looked perfect for blennies. I felt a fish bite when I dropped my bait between two boulders, but then I realized my hook was stuck. I pulled up on my rod, and when it came free there was another skilletfish on the end!

Skilletfish (Gobiesox strumosus)


Despite the low light, I was able to get some good photos in a calm pool of water behind the jetty.



One of the coolest things about skilletfish, or any clingfish for that matter, is that their suction cup is composed of several fins that have fused together. Their ability to cling to rocks or your hand is pretty impressive. 



Ally had something take her bait twice, but she was using presnelled tanago hooks, which unfortunately weren't strong enough to pull skilletfish out of the rocks. I gave her my rod that had 4 pound line, but she wasn't able to find another skilletfish before we needed to leave. We'll find them again someday!



The following morning we had time to check out a creek that had sampling data for rosyside dace. It was a small slow-moving stream in an urban park and again was easy to access.



We found fish in a small pool. Most of them were blacknose dace, but Ally was the first to notice that a few of them were rosyside dace. We each caught one, which made for a good end to the trip.

Eastern Blacknose Dace (Rhinichthys atratulus)


Rosyside Dace (Clinostomus funduloides)


Ally caught around six new species, and I caught three. We were both very happy with how we did, especially considering how cold it was. We'd like to go back to that area (not necessarily Marlyand though) to look for saltwater fish like striped blenny, skilletfish for Ally, gobies, and flounders.
 


Now back to Florida where it's 80 degrees!

Saturday, November 6, 2021

Maryland fall 2021 - part 1

It may be warm and sunny in Florida, but the rest of the country has been cooling off. Ally and I recently traveled up to Maryland for a three day weekend, and before we left we had to dig in our closets to find our winter coats to survive the frigid temps. Seeing the fall colors more than made up for the chilly weather.



We knew fishing would be tough, and most of the species wouldn't be colorful, but we picked out a few targets and made a plan to target them. First up was the Blue Ridge sculpin for both of us and a decent list of minnows for Ally. We fished a medium sized stream in the mountains and quickly caught a few different minnow species.

Bluntnose Minnow (Pimephales notatus)


Common Shiner (Luxilus cornutus)


I switched gears to focus on sculpin, but I wasn't seeing any among the rocks. However, I did find a well camouflaged northern hogsucker tucked under a rock and pointed it out to Ally. She put a piece of worm in front of its mouth, and a few minutes later I saw her dashing up the bank with the fish in hand.



I moved upstream to the next riffle and continued poking around for sculpin. This time I had no trouble finding them. After two failed hooksets I finally got a big sculpin to take my bait and get him to hand. The unnotched caudal peduncle bar confirmed that it was a Blue Ridge!

Blue Ridge Sculpin (Cottus caeruleomentum) - new hook & line species #798


The chin pigmentation and median chin pores also support the ID, but because there is significant variation within the species, I think as a hobbyist you ultimately have to use location as the most important evidence for separating Blue ridge from mottled sculpin.



Ally captured my fish-in-hand-in-water photography technique, which is also the reason why my lower back is sore whenever we go microfishing.


Photo credit Ally Toth.

We promised ourselves we wouldn't spend all our free time in Maryland fishing, so after we caught all the easy species in the creek we went for a trail run in the mountains. The views from the overlooks were pretty good.



The next morning we fished an urban stream that had fallfish for me and tessellated darter and another handful of minnows for Ally. It was an easy stream to access, and right away we saw fish.



We started off catching small minnows. Ally caught a satinfin shiner, and I caught a few creek chubs. We didn't see any fallfish or tessellated darters though.

Creek Chub (Semotilus atromaculatus)


We worked our way upstream until we found a run with good flow and more rocks. We spotted a few darters and got to work fishing for them.



It didn't take long for each of us to catch a tessellated darter, and we also picked up swallowtail shiner. Neither was a new species for me, but both were much needed photo upgrades for my lifelist album.

Tesselated Darter (Etheostoma olmstedi)


Swallowtail Shiner (Notropis procne)


I scouted further upstream and found a deep pool with a fallen tree providing cover at one end. It had a few big chubs in it, so I tied on a larger #14 hook and put on half a worm. I dropped it in the shadow of the fallen tree, and a bigger chub dashed out and grabbed it. My first fallfish!

Fallfish (Semotilus corporalis) - new hook & line species #799


With one more species to go to reach 800, we headed towards the coast to fish saltwater...