What a Mess
Today I went for a short, early-morning outing for striped bass.
Today I went for a short, early-morning outing for striped bass.
Last Tuesday, Ed Labunski would’ve celebrated his 82nd birthday.
One really has to wonder what the real numbers are when it comes to striped bass mortality.
Back in 2006, the folks at The Fisherman headquarters in Shirley, NY asked me up to join the Long Island team at our home office.
Call it the Striped Bass Do Si Do, or maybe a little Hokey Pokey; I’m not 100 percent up on what dance moves the kids are doing these days since I stopped doing the “Running Man” and the “Cabbage Patch” a long time ago, but this feels like little more than a square dance gone wrong to me.
Results of the preliminary stock assessment have fishery managers looking for answers to help rebuild the striped bass fishery.
On April 18, a young man from Pennsylvania fishing with his two young sons on the Jersey side of the Delaware River hooked up with the striper of a lifetime.
As I sit here and write this week’s Editor’s Log I am wallowing in self-pity as a result of a rather poor outing at a local trout stream.
A couple of months back, we told you the New York State Senate and Assembly had both voted for legislation to prohibit the taking of menhaden (bunker) by purse seining.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) recently announced that $1 billion will be distributed this year for conservation efforts across all 50 states and U.S. territories.
As noted in this week’s News Briefs section, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) is scheduled to have their annual Spring Meeting this week in Arlington, Virginia.
Good quality photos are always in demand. Send us yours and you just might end up on the cover of The Fisherman.
The official announcement of seasonal regulations seems to come later and later each year.
From April 29 through May 2, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) will convene for their annual Spring Meeting in Arlington, Virginia.
In the 1970s, anglers on Long Island, especially surf anglers, became increasingly concerned about declining budgets for L.I. State Parks, serious storm damage, increased vandalism, and declining access to shorelines.
“So, how many saltwater anglers are there in the United States?” If you ask the folks from NOAA Fisheries they’ll say there are approximately 9 million recreational saltwater anglers nationwide.