Todd with a nice rainbow in 2018. He caught it at the lower end of the campground.
A blog devoted to more than half a century of recreational fishing in and around Connecticut in both fresh and salt water. Fishing is more than having fun with fish. The people we met and shared the game with will never be forgotten.
BONUS WEATHER FOR LATE-SEASON ANGLERS:
by Dick Alley
WOW! As I sit and type, the weather guys are predicting another 10 days or more with daytime highs in the 50's, no frosty mornings and bonus fall fishing.--- and we're not just talking salt water. Fall trout and salmon stockings are happening. There is no better time to squeeze in a trip to the shores and tributaries of Lake Ontario.
Salt water species are migrating and stopping off to feed at warm-water spots like power plant outflows. This beauty was caught some years back when Millstone was open.
Blackfish are always popular for late season anglers. When we can fish for them in 60-degree temperatures they become a late fall favorite.
There is still time for targeting lunker-size striped bass and gator blues. As the migration continues and action fades along the Connecticut and Westchester shorelines, the hop across to Eaton's Neck, Buoy 11B then westward to Oyster Bay can bring bonanza catch and release fishing for schoolie-size fish.
THREE SNAPPERS A DAY - RIDICULOUS!
by
Dick Alley
While my last blog about NO FISHING signs at Burying Hill Beach made mention of it as a prime location for fishing for snapper blues, it barely touched on an even sadder side of the fishing picture regarding these late summer and early fall favorites.
SNAPPERS are baby bluefish, spawned in the spring season and now in the 3 to 4-inch size. Before they leave in late September, many will measure half a foot in length.
I discovered snappers in the late 50's, early 60's, when I first began fishing the waters of Long Island Sound. I started with stripers, thanks to the late Ed Boland, first owner of the Westport Tackle Shop. The summer time striper picture slows considerably, but snappers are fun, fantastic in the frying pan and available in every cove, creek and current flow.
They are relatively easy to catch, feed on live or frozen fish baits and attack artificial lures with hard-hitting strikes that put a bend in a fishing rod and a smile on faces of kids from six to sixty and beyond.
At PAL snapper derby's the bamboo rods were ideal for starting kids snapper fishing. |
In the good old days, the easiest method was the bamboo pole, line and bobber, baited with a frozen shiner. Weekends in August and September found dozens of anglers lining the Post Road Bridge on the dropping tide and everyone catching fish. They were mostly families--Moms, Dads and youngsters all sharing in the fun.
More sophisticated and/or more experienced anglers utilized a favorite trout rod loaded with 4 to six pound test line, a heavier leader and a choice of a variety of shiny silver lures. Early favorites were the Thomas Eel, the Kastmaster, the small Hopkins, anything that was shiny and flashy. Then came the Snappa-Popper and variations that combined the splash of a panicked baitfish with plastic or rubber-based small lures. Many of us simply hooked up a bobber and baited with frozen shiners.
There were dozens of great spots along the river. Almost any dock was fair game for finding snappers. Fire-fighters fished behind the Firehouse in Saugatuck. Anglers lined the river bank next to the Black Duck. The waters under the I-95 bridge and boat ramp was a popular spot. The most popular locations for locals were always Burying Hill and the tidal gates at Sherwood Mill Pond.
A family fishes for snappers at Sherwood Mill Pond. |
A day's fishing consisted of filling a bucket to take home, clean and either feast or freeze for feasting during the winter months. Anglers could keep their catch. There was no limit and for decades, there was never a problem. Snappers came back in droves, year after year, no matter how good or bad the season was for the bigger of the species.
Now the biologists are telling us there is a shortage of bluefish and this year limited the daily catch to 3 blues, irregardless of size. Not in terms of "science" but in terms of common sense, this is ridiculous.
An older photo of the creek and bridges at Old Mill. |
Snappers are food fish for many ocean predators. They are a favorite fluke bait. Stripers, sharks, sea bass and probably even bigger bluefish all feed on snappers, along with seagulls, cormorants and likely lots of other critters found in the waters of Long Island Sound.
If the bluefish population wasn't harmed back in the days when few recreational fishermen paid attention to conservation, how can it be a problem now when there are far fewer anglers on the waters and most are aware of and practice conservation.
I doubt whether any of our so-called scientists could come up with any real numbers showing increased bluefish populations due to a 3-fish limit on snappers. I'm sure that there are real numbers of small tackle businesses that have shut down because of over-regulation of the recreational fishing community.
How many thousands of bait boxes full of frozen shiners won't be sold this summer? How many lures, rods and reels, bamboo poles won't be put in the hands of kids with nothing to do? Kids who could be safely enjoying the sport of fishing in a time when most other sports are deemed unsafe in these times of COVID-19.
How do we get a kid excited by letting him or her catch 3 fish in five minutes and then telling them it's time to go home? How do we produce a meal for a family with 3 fish measuring under 6-inches in length? A 3-fish limit is worse than ridiculous. It is obviously the product of a bunch of politicians, probably none of whom ever caught a fish in their life.
NO FISHING SIGNS - BURYING HILL
by
Dick Alley
Yesterday's 06880 Pic of the Day showed a man with a fishing rod who was obviously crabbing in New Creek, next to a No Fishing Sign. I commented on the photo, wondering about the signs and labeling them as unfair to Westport's angling fraternity.
Having moved back into Westport in December after a 20 year absence, I was shocked when I saw the signs for the first time, but presumed they had been installed sometime during that time due to some tragedy. I made a note to look into the matter once Covid problems were fewer and town offices were all operating normally again. Now I'm hearing they are new this spring and am really wondering why.
Except for 20 years, I have lived in town since 1952. My wife was born here as were her parents and Grandparents.
I will include a few photo's from the old days, all taken at Burying Hill of fish and fishermen. Westport Striped Bass Club and PAL teamed up for a kids snapper derby at Burying Hill Creek
The late Howard Dreyfuss with a nice catch of blues at Burying Hill Beach |
As a Staples teenager, I joined my buddies in hassling Bill Lockwood by running past his car which he sat in as one of the early Security Guards, jumping into the creek to ride the currents on the dropping tides. He would yell at us, then laugh, probably wishing he could join us.
Burying Hill Beach looking east towards Bedford's Point |
Anglers fishing the Creek at Burying Hill for snappers at flood tide |
PAL dishes out burgers for the kids at PAL Snapper Derby at Burying Hill |
My son Todd plays a bluefish in the creek at Burying Hill. Probably 1970. |
William "Doc" Skerlick with a couple of nice Boston mackerel caught from the beach at Burying Hill |
Angler's fishing for blues at Burying Hill Beach. That's the late Louisa "Lulu" Parsell, daughter of Westport legend, Alan U. Parsell, fishing in the foreground. |
It wasn't until a few years later after I was married, that I got back into serious fishing. Burial Hill was a favorite spot.
It remains a place with special memories, not just of fishing. My kids spent summers at Burying Hill beach since before they could walk. Sun tans and swimming were just for starters.
My son, Todd was in 3rd or 4th grade the day I picked him up at school, fibbing to the office there that he had a doctor's appointment. I had driven there directly from Burying Hill after seeing bluefish blitzing the bait schools up and down the beach and on up the creek. I headed back to the beach handed Todd his fishing rod and he waded in, school clothes and all. It was possibly the biggest fishing day ever in Westport, but one of many great days over many great fishing years.
It's too bad that whoever made that decision didn't have the opportunity to talk to Mary Eliason. Mary lived on North Morningside Drive and was my wife's school crossing guard. She was in fact Westport's longest term school guard (more than 30 years) and was honored for her service in a celebration in the classroom by Chief Bill Stefan when she retired. When she wasn't getting thousands of Westport youngsters safely to and from school, first at Greens Farms Elementary and then at Burr Farms, she could likely be found at Burying Hill Beach. She loved the sun and she loved fishing for snapper blues even more. She fished every day, every summer and fall from the time snappers were big enough to eat until that first frosty Nor'Easter chased them out of the Sound to southern waters. What she didn't eat herself, she fed to her cat.
Whoever decided to post NO FISHING signs would have done well to have spoken with the late William "Doc " Skerlick, a Westport fisherman of legend, known for his conservation work as much as for his fishing. Doc could also be found casting into the creek on a daily basis for snappers. He fished for many different species but liked snapper fishing the best. He didn't have a freezer but would usually persuade someone to store his snapper catch every day and at season's end would put on a snapper cook-out for one of the many conservation organizations he belonged to.
On a persona;l thought, I best remember Burying Hill Beach for the Westport PAL Kid's Fishing Derby, a combined effort by the Westport PAL and the Westport Striped Bass Club, two of my favorite organizations.
For several seasons, we gathered at Burying Hill with special kids, supplied them with Bamboo poles, bait and supervision and enjoyed an afternoon of fishing and feasting with burgers and treats cooked up by P-J Romano and others from PAL.
I don't know why, how, or who made the decision to post No Fishing signs at this small but popular swimming and fishing spot. I presume it went through the Recreation Commission for discussion. I certainly hope that it could be reconsidered, rather than waste this valuable recreational resource at a time when fishing is a sport that can be practiced in complete safety.
30
Army Days - Godchild, Susie Hodio at her christening. |
My 48 Chevy in 1955 made many "Monmouth Runs" to and from the base. Mary Anne took it over when I was transferred to White Sands Proving Grounds. |
Birds of Prey |