Monday, September 26, 2011

Snapper time is here!

Snapper Blue
Hello fellow fishermen, as you can probably see now we are entering the fall and that means great fishing. One of the things i love to fish for in the fall is snapper blues. These little guys start out at maybe six inches when you catch them and as the season progresses they get bigger until late October which is when they leave for the south to warmer waters. At about that time they are 10-12 inches. Snapper are fun to catch when you can't get out on the water for stripers and bigger blues and make great bait for fluke and gator blues who happen to like to eat their little brothers and sisters.

The set up for snappers should be a little 5 foot fresh water rod that has around 8 pound test on it and a steel leader. As for the fly fishermen out there (like me) you can use a 3 or 4 weight rod that has a strong tippet and a steel leader on it to prevent losing flies. Always flush your rod with fresh water after using it in the sound so nothing corrodes and your rod and reel stay well cared for.

Kastmaster
Snapper popper setup
For lures what i found works best is a snapper popper or a spoon. A snapper popper can be bought at your local tackle shop or made with a popping cork, a steel leader, and a snapper fly or a size size hook with live silver-sides or mummiechugs. To fish the popper cast it out into an area with action or just where you think the fish would be and pop the bobber like it was a popper. Pop it fast and non-stop. When the snapper strikes they normally hook themselves and all you have to do is reel it in. For a spoon you want to use a 1/8 of an ounce Kastmaster or similar. Cast it into the action or if there is none the where you think those little bluefish will be. Remember that these fish move around a lot so fan the water and if you don't get anything try again. Reel in fast and twitch the rod along the way. If you feel a bite do a little sweep set and reel in.

For the fly angler i would recommend a 4 weight fly rod with a bass tippet and a steel leader so you don't get bit off. as for flies i would go with any sort of small flashy fly. So a size six deceiver or such.
i tie my own special snapper flies on a size 6 hook with epoxy so that they last longer against the teeth of the snappers. ill make another post with instructions on how to make this fly later.

To find the snappers look for rocky shorelines that hold a lot of bait-fish such as silver-sides. the fish are where the bait are.

good luck and tight lines! i hope to see you on the water.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Bluefish On The Fourth Of July



The crippled herring spoon in the color and size I used.
Yesterday my dad and I went fishing to the sound on our boat like any normal weekend day. My day started at 5 in the morning and we went to our boat for the morning bite. On the way out of the Cos Cob port i snagged a bunker just in case the light tackle and fly fishing didn't work and we were off. At first we fished around Great Captain's Island with no success on anything, not even a live lined bunker which will normally catch fish under any condition. Eventually we decided to cross the sound and fish the power plant (the big 4 chimneys you can see from Tod's point) and Loyd's neck. We released the bunker and crossed the sound. When we arrived at Loyd's Neck we already saw some bunker being fed on by bluefish. My dad cast a sand eel fly right into the middle of the mini blitz and hooks up with a harbor blue. I casted out a 10 inch fin-s fin and watched it get destroyed by 3 fish at the same time. Unfortunately the lure was too big and didn't hook a fish. The blitz all of a sudden disappeared. We blindly casted until it appeared again. This time using a 1 ounce crippled herring spoon in the color above I casted right into the middle of the action and got bite almost as soon as the spoon hit the water. After one more harbor blue caught by my dad on the same fly we hit slack tide and the action stopped. We decided to go to the power plant and try there. We arrived at the power plant, but there was no blitzing. I took one cast with my spoon and had a nice harbor blue on and my dad had the same story with the fly. These fish weren't terrorizing anybody but they were there. I even tried a popper and it proved to work great! Whatever you threw at these fish that looked like a bait fish would work. This constant action continued until we had caught 23 fish all together and my mom called us and told us to come home. So to go get out on the water and catch these harbor blues here are a few tips...
- go during the day
- go in between high and low tide or visa versa
- use any spoon that is a decent size or a small popper such as a creek chub
- fish what ever you are using FAST!!! but not too fast...
- do not use soft plastics because bluefish rip them up and you'll have to get a new one every time you cast wherever you hook the fish or not
- try to use single hooks and if you can make them barb-less. I spent 1/4 of the time unhooking fish and let me tell you barbs+blues=mess and waste of time. To make a hook barb-less get a pair of pliers and just pinch the barb down. you'll save your selve time and you have more time to catch more fish
- watch out cause those teeth are really sharp! use pliers to unhook them 
so good luck and tight lines!

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Sorry

I'm sorry that i accidentally deleted 3 posted. i managed to recover 1 but Snow Day Post is lost forever. May it rest in peace.

Big suprise!!!!!!!!!!

Guess what? I back in the US and just before i left i hit 50 species!
these are the last ones.
House Wren
Red-Crested Cardinal
Masked Yellow- Throat
Bay-Winged Cowbird
 And one last thing leave a comment on what is your favorite bird. Mine is the Burrowing Owl.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Extra info

just to let you know my more exact location is in a farm, two hours south of Buenos Aries and in the direction of Mar Del Plata, it is a farm next to a river ( El Salado) and the geography is the pampas (look it up if you don't know what it is).

Friday, February 18, 2011

Even More Birds!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Day six and more birds!
Brown and yellow marsh Bird
Whistling Heron
Rufuos Collard Sparrow
White Browed Blackbird
American Kestrel
White-Faced Ibis
Now at 46!

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

More Birds!!!!!!!!

Still day four and after a fishing trip (a carp and a catfish were caught on a rig i made) I hit the fourty specie mark! here's the list...
Black-Necked Swan
Speckeled Teal
Peregrin Falcon
South American Stilt
Black-Necked Swan
Guria Cucko

33 birds in 4 days!

Hello, i'm in Argentina right now at my granparent's farm. It's day four out of ten and already I have seen 33 diffrent bird species. Here's the list

Great Kissadee
Rufous Hornero
Southern Screamer
Chimango Caracara
Southern Lapwing
Burrowing Owl
Monk Parakeet
Eared Dove
Crested Caracara
Fork-Tail Flycatcher
Greater Rhea
Aplomado Falcon
Masked Gnatcatcher
Field Flicker
Golden Brested Woodpecker
Tropical Kingbird
Chalk-Browed Mockingbird
White Crested Tyrannulet
Brown-Hooded Gull
Roseate Spoonbill
Neo-Tropical Cormerant
Red-Winged Tinamou
White-Rumped Swallow
Saffron Finch
White-Necked Heron
Blue-And-White Swallow
White-Banded Mockingbird
Great Egret
That's all for now. There's still more to come!

Friday, January 21, 2011

My pets

Buddy the bearded dragon
Buddy on the carpet


Snowflake the leopard gecko

Snowflake showing her colors

Tangy the leopard gecko

Tangy (she's about to shed)

Athena the corn snake

Athena on the floor

this is the rack i keep their cages on
So these are my pet reptiles.
Buddy is a 2 year old, Male, fire morph bearded dragon.
He lives in a 40 gallon tank and loves to eat salads and crickets. He is around 16 inches long.
next you have the Leopard geckos. They are both female and are around 2  years old. Snowflake is a half snow morph, female leopard gecko and she shares a 20 gallon tank with Tangy, the female super-hypo tangerine carrot-tail morph. They both love crickets and super worms. They are both around 9 inches long.
Last you have Athena the 2 and a half year old female charcoal corn snake. She lives in a 20 gallon Tupperware (snake don't need tank with lighting since they are mostly nocturnal. She gets all the space she wants and needs in that tub and is taken out often). she loves a good sized mouse and is a little over 2 feet long.   I love them all and they all love me ( I hope!) See you next time.