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[Warning: at the end of this TR I have an OT bit about a War of the
Worlds that might be considered a spoiler for those who don't know the story by now.] This past weekend was the first tide in 3 weeks conducive to sight fishing the flats on South Beach. Any high tide from 10am to 3pm is ideal, in my opinion. Having, by way of timing, avoided traffic to the Cape Friday night, I arose early Sat morning to a cool, dull and foggy day. I arrived at Chatham and got on the Rip Ryder ferry. Visibility was just a few hundred yards and though there was no way sight fishing was going to be on in those circumstances, I have had good luck wandering the flats and looking for silver sides of fish. The odds are already stacked against you out there, so adding fog in simply puts the chance of any success almost out of reach. Which is (sort of) the way I like it: very difficult, not impossible. I only had a few hours on Saturday, so I stayed close to the ferry drop off and waded a flat a bit north of there. It was eerie to say the least to see, hear and smell the boats passing by 50 yds from where you stood, yet see nothing. I was betting on the fog burning off, but it only teased me every so often with a perceptible brightening, only to darken down again. And the fishing was not so good as I was forced into blind casting which I hate when out there. I did get a couple of flashes at my deceiver, but that was it. I walked over to the Ocean side, but the surf was huge and a cast into water absurdly would end up with the fly sitting on sand as the huge waves receded. I have caught fish like this believe it or not (not on sand, but in the breakers), but today I could not be bothered with the 2 pounds of sand that would be injected into each boot by the time I was done. So I admitted defeat and called it day. Ironically the fog burned off as the ferry arrived. Next day a building high-pressure system over Ohio brought a stiff North wind, dry air and clear skies. I knew this had to be the day, so I was gone by 6:30 and after a Dunkin Donuts breakfast I was on the beach at a little before 8am. Tide was 3 hours from high and I did my 2-mile hike over the flats I would be fishing later. South Beach changed a lot this year. The historically stormy winter left its mark on this already dynamic environment. A trench of deeper water that came up to almost the high tide mark and was a favorite spot for me to blind cast when the fishing was slow, or unfavorable to sight casting, is gone, completely. Replaced by a disconcertingly soft sand and green seaweed. The exit from South (Nauset) Beach and North Mononmoy is closing and most craft will not dare cross it, as the window to get back is small even at high tide. The shallow water to the south of Morris Island and North Monomoy (called "Chatham Roads" on charts) is filling in and can only be crossed at high tide with boats with a shallow draft. The seals that come in droves to the beach are only seen during high tide now. Boats in Outermost Harbor and Stage Harbor have decreasing options and at the end of my fishing trip there were at least sixty boats anchored on South Beach, with hundreds of people sunbathing. Last year you might have seen half a dozen boats at most. I signed a petition to have the town dredge the channels as they do as Bass River in Yarmouth/Dennis, but I guess they have no money even if they wanted to. In any case, some day soon I might be able to walk to North Monomoy, as I believe you could 50 years ago. Once my long trek down the beach was over I walked some deeper water looking for cruising fish. I had my local pattern, self tied, small shrimp (#6). After a few mins something caught my eye and I cast to it quickly locking into a nice fish in the 20s. I got another like that. On reflection I cannot remember catching fish based on a hunch or some sub-conscious signal that told me where the mark was, yet not reveal the fish. The water was about 3 feet deep and bottom covered in grass and weeds. So seeing fish was hard. Many times you perceive movement only by comparing what is stationery. This can lead to such odd things when the brain thinks what is moving is still and what is still is moving, so you end up casting to a piece of grass as the fish sail by. Doh. I picked up 2 more this time by seeing the actual fish and one lucky one, by seeing an actual fish and picking up another one I did not see. That area slowed down, so I made my way out to the flats quite a long way from shore. I picked a fish a bit over 30 with a 20 yard cast that surprised me when he took. Strong fighting fish. I picked up another shortly after, probably around 28". He was deep hooked as he took my fly on the drop, so I judged it only fair to snip off the fly. This broke my heart as it was my last one and I had to resort to more common patterns that just will not work out there, especially late season. I had hundreds of targets and I could elicit follows, but the ending was the same. After six hours of fishing with a half dozen fish, which is certainly respectable by my own standards, I called it a day. Definitely one of my better days out there. So this is the spoiler bit. Since becoming parents my wife and I have not been out too much -- not yet to the movies. However, having grown up (scared ****less) listening to Jeff Wayne's 70s double LP concept album of War of the Worlds, I just had to see the movie. Have not yet met an American who has heard of that LP, so it must have been a British thing. After a good day's fishing there is nothing like dinner and movie with the better half. Anyway, I just wanted to share probably one of the most superb bits of acting I have seen in recent movies. Tom Cruise, who plays this delinquent dad, had just got his pre-teen daughter through a day of dreadful, horrific events no child should ever see. She is in a basement trying to sleep and she asks him to sing a lullaby of a name I forget. He says he doesn't know that one. She names and another and the reply is the same. The close-up stays on Cruise for a long time as you see the struggle in his eyes to try to do something, other than be the failed father. He eventually sings her the first verse of Little Deuce Coupe. Damn classic moment. Damn good movie. Regards, Gary |
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GaryM wrote:
snip After six hours of fishing with a half dozen fish, which is certainly respectable by my own standards, I called it a day. Definitely one of my better days out there. Sounds like a blast, my friend. So this is the spoiler bit. snipped spoiler Damn good movie. I enjoyed the entire movie very much, except the last three or four minutes. I guess I'll have to wait for the DVD to see the alternate endings. -- TL, Tim --------------------------- http://css.sbcma.com/timj/ |
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