Surf, Rock and Jetty Fishing
Author: Jimmy Cox
When you fish any of these three
places you've reached the pinnacle of inshore fishing. Surf fishing,
technically speaking, is fishing at any sandy shoreline where the ocean
beats against the beach. Rock and jetty fishing is surf fishing too,
except that here the tides beat against something more solid than sand.
The rocks and jetties - there is so little difference between breakwater
and jetty that this book will treat them as one and the same - are no
places for your wife or Andy or Peg to use as a perch.
The sand beach is far safer, yet it can be treacherous, too. But here
the family can go, provided you first pick your spot well and they
continually keep their eyes open against the unexpected. Your favorite
bathing beach, or a spot close to it, can be as good a feeding ground
for fish as rock or jetty. The unexpected to watch out for can be an
unusually high breaker or a heavy piece of floating debris. One more
hazard to watch for:
people swimming. Swimmers and anglers don't mix.
The surf - whether it is beach, rock or jetty - offers its top rewards
in the fish to be caught: fighting gamesters with minds of their own and
the strength of the sea behind them. Stripers, channel bass, permit,
tarpon, snook, croakers and corbina, squeteague and blues.
They're battlers all and once you've landed your first you're on your
way to acquiring a mental strut that sets you apart from all other
saltwater fishermen. You'll be a Sultan of the Surf, a title than which
there is no higher.
Surf fishing, obviously, is done to catch fish. But it is far more than
that. What if there is a day when you catch no fish? Just being there
can be reward enough.
The majesty of the open ocean, the pounding waves, the surging of the
tides, the sun, the sand. And why didn't you catch any fish today? Did
you read nature's signs right? Or did you read them wrong?
Was the wind too strong? Or was the wind too weak? Did you pick a day
when the sun was too bright and pass up that day of rain and storm? Did
you cast out two hundred feet when the fish were feeding just fifty feet
offshore? Did you hook a demon and let him have too much leeway with the
line? Or did you set the line
up too tight and let him break away?
All these questions, and many more, there are answers for. But there is
only one person to give you the answers. You. Answer them right, and if
you caught no fish today, tomorrow's another day.
The surf is a majestic place. But it is no place to fish if you have a
weak heart or a physical ailment that cuts down on your agility and your
ability to move fast - jump fast, perhaps. But if you have an ailment
that can be cured by physical therapy, you'll find no better set of
therapeutic conditions anywhere at any price. And you'll have fun taking
the treatment. |