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From: "Jeff"
| http://www.cnn.com/2005/TRAVEL/DESTI....ap/index.html | | EMERALD ISLE, North Carolina (AP) -- Pick a pier, any pier: Each of the more | than 20 fishing structures that extend hundreds of feet from the North | Carolina coast from Kill Devil Hills to Sunset Beach offers a cross-section | of anglers and their prey. | | "You can see the different classes of fishermen as you look along the pier," | said Emerald Isle fishing guide Richard Ehrenkaufer, who publishes a Web | guide to pier fishing under the pseudonym "Dr. Bogus." | | "The spot and flounder fishermen are in close. A little farther out you get | the bluefish and Spanish mackerel and at the end you get the big game | fishermen," Ehrenkaufer said. "I've seen a 150-pound tarpon caught off the | end of a fishing pier." | | For many, a trip to the pier stirs memories of a first fishing trip with Dad | or other relatives, when they gazed through the boards at the ocean below or | held the rod as a struggling fish was hauled up. To Ehrenkaufer's way of | thinking, the piers offer an "average Joe" experience for every one -- from | experienced game-fish anglers to wheelchair-bound fishermen closer in. | | On a recent day at 1,000-foot-long Bogue Inlet Pier, equipment being used | ranged from discount store rod-and-reel sets to specialized surf gear hauled | in special carts with cooler racks and bait-cutting boards. | | Mike Stanley, whose family has owned the pier since 1971, said an average | summer day draws about 200 paying customers, while the busy fall season can | bring crowds of 500 or more anglers to the pier. | | For folks who love to fish but lack the resources to buy or charter a boat, | piers are the way to go, he said. | | "Everybody gets access to be able to walk over the water," Stanley said. | "Boats are good because you can go to the fish if you know where they're at. | The pier is like a conveyor belt and you try to pick what's on the belt." | | And for many beachgoers, a day on the pier is the best kind of vacation. | | "Everybody talks about coming to the fishing pier," said Clara Flowers of | Kingston, N.C., as she sat on a bench at Bogue Inlet Pier, her rod propped | on the railing as she waited for a bite. "It's worth the drive to get away | and relax." | | Flowers gets nostalgic as she remembers a day at Bogue Inlet that was so | good she "was pulling them in two at a time." | | Regular Dale Collins enjoys the camaraderie among the pier anglers and said | he turned down a chance to go out in a boat that day. "When the fishing's | good inshore (within 3 miles of shore), you stand as good a chance as | fellows on a boat," Collins said. | | Many piers charge a modest permit fee for anglers but are free to those who | just want to take a stroll or snap a family picture. Nearly all sell food, | drinks, fishing gear and bait and there's almost always someone willing to | help a novice looking for advice on technique. | | For those family members not interested in landing fish, the beach is close | at hand. | | Piers are "popular culture in North Carolina because they've been around for | decades," Ehrenkaufer said. "You can fish for anything from pan fish right | in the surf all the way to game fish at the end of the pier." | | Ehrenkaufer worries that the days of fishing piers are numbered, as coastal | development makes the land they occupy so valuable that owners have little | choice but to sell. Before 1996, there were as many as 31 piers along the | North Carolina coast, he said. Storm damage and developers' high-dollar | offers have shrunk the number; along Bogue Banks alone at least three piers | have come down in the last decade. | | And Stanley is concerned that a new salt water fishing license being created | by the state will require anyone who wants to fish from a pier to pay a | license fee, driving down business. He said the only way he sees the new | system working is if pier owners are allowed to pay a one-time license fee | that will cover all their customers and that they can recover through | admission fees. | | At the end of the pier, Collins rinsed a bait bucket attached to a long rope | and lamented that his only catch of the day so far was a flounder too small | to keep. He brightened, though, recalling the day he paid an extra charge to | go to the special section of the pier where fishermen get more room to | battle game fish and landed a 43-pound cobia. | | Asked how often he comes to the pier, he had an easy response: Any day "that | my wife doesn't have anything planned for me." | I love Spanish Mackerel ! My biggest was 31" and boy they are good eats ! Too bad they aren't abundant here on the Jersey Shore. -- Dave http://www.claymania.com/removal-trojan-adware.html http://www.ik-cs.com/got-a-virus.htm |
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