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| Northeast Let's talk 'bout fishing for local in-shore species |
What have you got to say about the topic of: "gearing up for blackfish". Here's how is started: "People either love it or they hate it! What's that? Tautog fishing! Tautog fishing takes "
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![]() Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: VOODOO GRILLE MYSTIC
Posts: 2,911
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People either love it or they hate it! What's that? Tautog fishing!Tautog fishing takes a lot of patience and good supply of hooks and sinkers. The one good thing about tautog fishing is that you can do it from the shore. The other good thing about tautog fishing is that the conditions do not have to be perfect. The water can be cloudy, the wind can be blowing, and yet the tautog can still be biting. We have our annual tautog runs two times of year. Though tautog bite all summer long and sometimes into the winter if the conditions are mild, the larger fish bite in the spring and in the fall. The spring run generally starts some time in April and runs through June. The fall run starts in September and runs through November. "How do you catch tautog without getting hung up?" If you're not getting hung up at least "every once in a while" you're probably not catching tautog. Tautog live in areas of structure such as rocks, ledges where there are lots of barnacles and debris, underwater concrete slabs or riprap. Offshore, they live in shipwrecks or artificial reef sites. As soon as they get hooked, these strong fish head right for the structure, often causing the angler to become hopelessly "hung up." To do your best to avoid getting snagged so often, there are several things you can do. First and foremost is use common sense. If you cast to a certain spot and continuously get hung up, do not cast there anymore. Move up or down the rock jetty or bulkhead and try another spot. (Hint: A "hot spot" during an outgoing tide may be "snag city" on an incoming tide.) The trick to tautog fishing is to cast out far enough without casting out too far! If you cast too "short" you will get hung up immediately on rocks or the bulkhead where you are fishing. If you cast too "far" the current will move your sinker too fast and you will get hung up on an underwater ledge. Experiment with your casting distance, increasing it as the tide slacks and decreasing your distance when the tide runs hard. You want your sinker to stay relatively still on the bottom after you cast out. It can move a little, but you don't want it to move a lot. The next thing to keep in mind when tautog fishing is to "keep it simple." When tautog fishing from the shore you need to use only one hook and one sinker. You want no metal top and bottom rigs or sinker snaps. Most anglers make a very simple rig out of 40-pound test monofilament leader material. Tie a double surgeon's loop at the end of a 4 to 5-foot piece of 40-pound test leader for the sinker and then tie a second double surgeon's loop a few inches up the leader and insert a loose Octopus styled hook (a #2/0 or #3/0 Mustad #92553BL). Keep the loop 3 to 5 inches long, no longer. Tie a barrel swivel to the end of the 40-pound test monofilament. Don't make your rig too short, especially if your line on your reel is 20-pound test or lighter. Underwater rocks play havoc on your line. You want your leader material to take the brunt of the rock abrasion. Many anglers use 40-pound test on their reel and make these rigs right from the line off their spool. This works fine because a tautog fisherman does not need to cast out very far. You do need to have a "surf size"-spinning spinning reel if you want to spool up with 40-pound test monofilament line. Other anglers have had good luck using the new super lines such as Berkley Fire Line, Power Pro, or other brands of Spectra fiber line in the 30 to 50 -pound test range. When you use these ultra-thin diameter lines, you can get away with a smaller reel. You want to make your leaders out of 40-pound test monofilament and tie the leaders into the "braid" line with either a barrel swivel or a uni-knot. It is very easy to feel the bites with the super "braids" and since there is no stretch, it is easier to pull "hung up" rigs out of the rocks. Another common problem when tautog fishing is having a big fish on and then having the sinker get hung up in a rock. You can feel the fish, but can't budge the line. Some anglers use a rubber band on the sinker, so when it gets hung up you can break it easily and still get your fish. Simply loop the rubber band through your surgeon's loop and then loop it through the eye of the sinker. It's easy and it works. Tautog are fast and you need to be faster! As soon as you hook a tautog, you want to get your rod tip up and start cranking so the tautog's head stays up so he does not go under a rock or ledge. Even if the fish is large and fighting hard, keep your rod tip high and pump the fish up. If you have never tautog fished before but have had any experience with grouper fishing in Florida or other southern areas, it is similar. If that fish gets its head down and goes into a hole, it is often, "all over." Since you need to keep the pressure on the fish, it is necessary to keep a fairly tight drag. (If you are using a no-stretch "braid line" you will want to loosen the drag up a little more than if you were using monofilament.) "I heard that you need to set the hook on a tautog before it even bites?" No, this isn't true and almost impossible to do anyway. The trick is to feel the tautog take the bait and wait until the fish gets it in his mouth before setting the hook. Once you feel the weight of the fish, set the hook. All fish bite differently on different days or tides. Big tautog will often "slam" the bait and while small tautog will "pick" at your offerings. Tautog are often harder to hook during a slack tide than during a running tide. Experiment around, and if you are successful at catching one or two, try to remember exactly how you were holding the rod and how you set the hook. Do it again! If you have the time, watch the veteran tautog fishermen and see what they do. Don't fish; just watch and you will be surprised what you may learn. "What do I need to go tautog fishing? Where should I go?" Even if you are not an avid tautog fisherman, it is something to do when you can't hold bottom in the surf with a cinder block or if you just have an hour to "kill" and don't want to do anything complicated. During tautog season I always keep a 5 gallon bucket in my truck with 10 flat 2-ounce sinkers, a 10-pack of loose hooks and some 40-pound test leader material, a pair of kitchen shears and a couple barrel swivels. When I want to slip out tautog fishing for an hour I grab either a dozen green crabs or a pint of sand fleas. (Double the above for a two-hour tautog outing and hope you don't need that many sinkers!) When it is cold and nasty in the spring and fall many anglers like to go surf fishing when the wind is blowing from a westerly direction and go tautog fishing along the bayside when the wind is blowing from an easterly direction. This means that the wind will be at their back in either case (thus they are more comfortable) and the water in front of them is calm. Tautog generally bite before and after the flounder run, giving anglers another species to fish for. In the fall of the year, anglers are also likely to catch sheepshead, red or black drum, and even stripers while tautog fishing. In the summer and early fall, triggerfish are also around. All of these fish are very good to eat! Popular tautog fishing places in Ocean City on the bayside are: the bulkhead from 2nd through 4th Streets, 5th Street, 6th Street, the end of the Oceanic Pier, and near the draw of the Route 50 Bridge. Anglers, of course, fish for tautog at the Ocean City inlet and seawall. Indian River Inlet is also a very popular tautog haven. Indian River has the advantage of having two rock jetties and sea walls so anglers can fish with the wind at their backs whether the wind is blowing from the south or the north. "Does that really matter?" Not if the wind is blowing 5 to 10 miles per hour, but if the wind is howling at 20 to 30 miles per hour it is always nice to have it at your back. It is more comfortable and easier to control your cast. Controlling your cast and getting that sinker right where you want it is important to successful tautog fishing. Once you do it a few times you will learn to find the deeper holes where the larger tautog are hiding. You can actually feel the sinker fall in a hole when you nudge your line in. This is where you will get that "bite." "How about the bait?" Tautog like crabs or clam, but they especially like crabs. The little sand fleas (or sand crabs) that you dig on the beach are a great tautog bait. So are green crabs that you buy at local tackle stores. Any other kind of crab you can catch works good for tautog. To hook a sand crab, insert the hook point into the apron of the crab and out the outer shell approximately an eighth of an inch. To prepare a green crab, most anglers use a pair of kitchen shears to cut the crab in half. Then, you want to pull off the shell and insert the hook in one leg socket and out another. I like to cut the legs off as well. If the tautog are running large I like to use the whole body section. Cut off the legs, pull off the shell, and insert the hook in one leg socket and out the claw socket. (I save the big pieces for the slack tide.) Small crabs can be used whole with the legs and shell intact. Hook them near the swimming fin. Tautog fishing is not for everyone but these fish, pound for pound, fight harder than any fish around. If the sheepshead and drum are biting, tautog fishing can be "double the pleasure." It's worth trying it at least once or twice. And hey, they're all good to eat as well! Good fishing. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ||
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| | #2 | ||
| NBS Member Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 1,404
| Nice article. Blackfishing is good in the spring at the breakwalls in new haven, Fall is good on the reefs and rocks. | ||
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| | #3 | ||
![]() Join Date: Jul 2006 Location: Clinton, CT
Posts: 2,734
| Good article to get us going. We just started Blackfishing for the first time last fall. Lots of fun and good eating. | ||
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