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On Sun, 31 Oct 2010 12:45:42 -0400, jeff wrote:
realizing my 60th year...a milestone birthday some say...caused me to seek a longer diversion from the surreal world of work activities. so, rachel, gia, and i packed up and headed off to harkers island on the coast of nc for 3 weeks. my big day was the 12th, rachel's birthday was the 21st, and gia's...well every day is a new celebration for her. Ah...so Rachel's a cougar...well, at least she seems to have good taste in toddlers...truth be told, sometimes I didn't realize you were even 11...oh...wait...60th....you mean dates, not ages...nevermind.... the vacation idea was to chase false albacore offshore along the coast every day the weather permitted, and, otherwise pursue puppy drum from boat and kayak. i'm developing an interest in sal****er flycasting and fishing since my nc trout streams are more than 6 hours away. we had rented a nice place, so our off-the-water life would be comfortable. close friends who also enjoyed fishing were visiting for portions of the time, making it an even more pleasant. for those wandering, 60 is pretty much like 50. no epiphanies...but good to get there with enough health to continue normal activities and, when able, full days of fishing. one thing i can advise with certainty...old man days are fractions of time compared to those i remember of my 20s and 30s. as in my mountain trout pursuits, there are things to be seen in the coastal sal****ers that amaze and capture me. one is "shark island". it really caught me this time. my friend joe was an unwilling witness/victim. shark island is a part of the cape lookout shoal, a shoal that juts out finger-like into the ocean for about 12 miles. it attracts baitfish, that attract the bigger fish, including a variety of sharks ...especially on its east side. fishermen go there and its surrounding waters for the drum, bluefish, flounder, spanish mackeral, false albacore and whatever else will give sport. rising and falling tides are a favorite time. as most nc sand barriers in the ocean, the island migrates and changes its configuration each year. when i first began visiting, it was about 4-5 miles off the shoreline of core banks and relatively small. this year, it's about a quarter to a half-mile from the surf fishermen who appear in their surf vehicles at the point of the banks. the island has a small cove...with deeper water (appearingly so) banks... sheltering an anchored boat from the ocean waves. the red drum frequently school and circumnavigate the island's shallow waters in and around the breakers and in the sloughs. on our first day out, joe and i ventured to shark island on a lark, with no real purpose other than to visit and see if there were any fish about. we had our puppy drum rods and lures, but nothing for serious surf fishing or trolling or flyfishing. in the ocean, the tides aren't as apparent to me as in the bays and on the beaches of the area, and, frankly, i wasn't thinking about them as i anchored the boat in about 3 feet of water. turns out, i had anchored us in a tidal flat about 30 yards from the deeper water. i moved the boat and anchor once, but not enough...way, way, not enough. 20 more yards and there'd be no embarrasing adventure to tell. so, anyway, we strike up a conversation with some fisherman, and there's a report of drum schools and drum caught, just over the ridge of the island, about an 1/8 of a mile from the boat on the opposite shore and out of sight on a downslope of the beach. off we go with our inadequate rigs...but, we sight the drum, 3 fishermen hooked up... 45 minutes later, i return to the boat to look for a heavier lure. as i cross the peak of the ridge... uh oh...uhf'ingoh! the boat is in 5 inches of water, hard aground, and no moving it. tide is still going out. we're now on an 5-6 hour unplanned island vacation. tides move in about 6 hour increments from low to high. so, though most fellow boating fishermen take pity on fools, and attend to re-anchoring in the fool's absence...our island "neighbors" that day were a group of young college kids from charlotte, and their parent/captain who was over fishing with us. he anchored his boat that extra 30 yards away. there was a time they could have saved us by moving the anchor and boat, but too late upon my return. some other folks still had enough water under them and were pulled off their mishap/grounding to deeper anchorage. couldn't be done for us. oh well, there are worse places to be stranded for 5 or 6 hours. around 7 pm, i watched as the water began returning and the sun disappeared into the ocean to the west. as it had dropped, the water returned surprisingly fast. we got off around 7:30 pm, but wind and waves required a slow pace and it was dark. a beautiful clear star-full night sky...milky way and all. gps worked fine, but the light of it temporarily blinded me when returning my gaze to searching for the buoys. i never go out in the rivers or ocean at night...never. it's a different waterway at night. there are a lot of confusing lights, and the buoy system for the return to harkers island is confounding even in the daytime. lots of shallow water, some oyster heads, and marsh islands. the rock jetty buoy is an easy one...but the red flashing buoy for the entrance to barden inlet is now behind the hook of core banks as you enter from the rock jetty buoy side. plus, i never knew how many red lights...some flashing...were visible in the dark on that approach. also, the channel and the buoys change frequently. it's not a maintained channel. things a gps doesn't help with. still, no problem navigating around the cape lookout hook...but, from there, neither the gps, nore the flashing buoys are of much assistance. plus, the lookout lighthouse...constructed in and operational since the 1800s...shines a blinding and disconcerting, not to mention disorienting, light in the navigational eyes of one trying to get a fix on location for the turn to harkers. long story...too long, i know...short, we putted our way in a haphazard manner to calico jack's at the tip of harkers island, in a more direct manner than appropriate in daylight or according to the buoys (most of which are unlighted), somehow avoiding another grounding on the numerous shoals, though hitting shallow water, and scraping an oyster or two. rachel retrieved us at 10 pm or thereabouts. gia, the ever happy golden retriever, bounded to the dock, but was wary of any more to do with her humankind. she refused to get into the truck with us, and cozied up to some passing strangers. her travails had just begun., but she was the best of partners for the entire trip...even after the slicing of her paws on oyster shells while careening about other islands we visited...but that's another tale. saw spinner sharks, drum, bluefish, an octopus, conch, uncatchable black drum, heron and gulls, magnificent sunset, incredible starry nightscape, lots of lights on the mainland otherwise invisible during daytime ocean meanderings, and intermittent night hallucinations. but, nothing as welcoming as my own rachel waiting to retrieve us at calico jack's with a hearty grin and good humor. all in all, another fine episode in pursuit of the great mystery, and new lessons learned. alas, i'm now a 60 year old fool instead of a 59 year-old fool. but, as foolishness goes, it was a decent chuckle and another of life's voyages. oh yeah...it was also the night the refrigerator at the rental home died, not to be resurrected until the day before we returned home. not so amusing when the kitchen is 2 flights of stairs up...i now own a few more coolers. still, caught false albacore and bluefish on flyrods, saw more spinner sharks in their skyward pirouettes, saw hundreds of porpoise in a herd-like swim session, saw sharks on the surface in baitballs competing with false albacore (and eating a few we hooked), even visited shark island without incident on several other occasions, caught some puppy drum, enjoyed the company of friends we love, and had as fine a time as this a silly geezer ever deserved. i've posted some photos on abpf... hope they provide some grins and guffaws for y'all. my sal****er flyfishing efforts are still, well, efforts...and ever-humbling. but, i'm progressing. jeff (october's crusoe) Nice read. And FWIW, I strongly suspect that you'll easily make it to 70, even 80...why, shoot, I sorta figured you had...Rachel and Gia, not so much... TC and Happy Birthday, regardless of daily reoccurrence on the part of one, to all three of ya, R PS - if tidal movement is an issue, set a cell phone alarm or buy a el cheapo digital watch w/ alarm, if your current boating/fishing kit doesn't already include such - obviously, also useful in fishing, too... |
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