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  #11  
Old 07-23-2019, 03:34 PM
bunker dunker bunker dunker is offline
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Default Re: Singing The Blues

it was the 70"s when they left.we have always had good and bad years with bluefish.i can't believe this is because of rec fishing.
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  #12  
Old 07-23-2019, 04:31 PM
bulletbob bulletbob is offline
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Default Re: Singing The Blues

Simple -they became commercially viable at some point.. they are for sale in white plastic trays wrapped in clear plastic up here all over.. Some even look pretty fresh... Don't see fillets, but I can buy them all day long in the round, in the 1-2 lb class.. I agree with those also that say we were too greedy years ago.. everyone taking garbage cans full of them home and dumping them in the garden.. It happened, and a lot of us need to realize that it can't happen again... bob
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  #13  
Old 07-23-2019, 04:38 PM
Fun King Fun King is offline
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Default Re: Singing The Blues

The link posted by Mr Dakota is interesting. It shows that blues were booming in the 80's, kind of how I remember it. I used to catch so many that I stopped going on the party boats, I didn't want to deal with a hundred pounds of bluefish. Every fish was gaffed. The link also shows that in the 80's stripers were almost non-existent, also how I remember it. Strict regulations, like one fish over 36", led to the recovery of stripers.

Last edited by Fun King; 07-23-2019 at 04:41 PM..
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  #14  
Old 07-23-2019, 07:42 PM
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Lightbulb Re: Singing The Blues

I thought the guys sharking the Glory Hole recently said "we can't get away from all these blluefish !!!"
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  #15  
Old 07-23-2019, 08:23 PM
Billfish715 Billfish715 is offline
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Default Re: Singing The Blues

Way back when.........there were sand eels inshore of the MudHole on the high pieces. Those inshore sand eels attracted and held bluefish for weeks or months. The inshore sand eels also held a population of sizeable yellowfin tuna. In both cases, a profitable and prolific fishery was supported by the desired baitfish. Where there are sand eels, there are gamefish. There have been huge amounts of sand eels 30-40 miles out for a few years now. They have attracted bluefins and bluefish and the rest is history.

The amount of rainfish in those same areas has been so thick that even whales are attracted to the scene. We have bunkers by the acre inshore, but no blues around. We also have a resurgence in the smaller pelagics like bonito and Spanish mackerel but they are not bunker eaters so, perhaps some of the sand eels or rainfish are moving inshore a bit. Early, in the first part of the seabass season, those fish were spitting up sandeels when they hit the deck. We were using AVA's to catch them.

These are only observations and not scientific by any stretch, but I do see a correlation.
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  #16  
Old 07-23-2019, 11:21 PM
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SaltLife1980 SaltLife1980 is offline
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Default Re: Singing The Blues

Quote:
Originally Posted by a-baum View Post
How can not correlate your experience and memories with the downfall of the fishery. Boats stacked up like a city at night, people filling burlap bags full of bluefish, and then the next line is "Hey what happened to the fish?"

Seriously?
He was being sarcastic......
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  #17  
Old 07-24-2019, 08:01 AM
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NJ219bands NJ219bands is offline
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Default Re: Singing The Blues

I tagged more than 2,200 bluefish in NJ and they were recaptured from the Cape Cod Canal to Atlantic Beach, NC. 3 were found dead in a December Oyster Creek fish kill. One was found in a NC fish market.
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  #18  
Old 07-24-2019, 09:48 AM
Billfish715 Billfish715 is offline
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Default Re: Singing The Blues

Congratulations on the tag returns. It's always fun to get one of Jeff's Goldfish Patches in the mail and to find out where the fish you tag have been recaptured. The information is shared and used by other agencies and helps in understanding migration patterns almost exclusively.

Not too many people are tagging bluefish probably because their teeth can be so threatening when you get your fingers close by. I know from your reports that you tag a lot of mature blues in the spring as they migrate north. Unfortunately, the tag returns only show where the fish were and not how many there are. If there were more of them, I'm sure many of us would tag them but they seem to vanish as the summer approaches and only a fraction of them hug the beaches on their way south in the fall.

There were some monster blues in the Sandy Hook surf in the late spring albeit at night on most occasions. Tagging a 10# bluefish at night is not something I try or like to do. Still, they seem to have left, despite the abundance of bunkers almost everywhere. However, the number of snappers has been very healthy for the last several years as well as the appearance of more and more taylor blues. As for the gators, I guess they have decided to vacation in New England waters.
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  #19  
Old 07-24-2019, 10:34 AM
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Fluken-Around Fluken-Around is offline
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Default Re: Singing The Blues

Use to make me sick when I would pull in to belmar to launch the boat and look into dumpsters and see the wrath from the night blue fishing trips. Tons of uncleaned bluefish that were kept on boat but then tossed in to dumpster before heading home! People still treat the species like crap, especially the snappers this time of year! Catch 15 of them put them in your bucket for bait and they use one and toss the other 14 back dead.
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  #20  
Old 07-24-2019, 10:59 AM
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Capt. Debbie Capt. Debbie is offline
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Default Re: Singing The Blues

There was a 10 fish limit since the 1980s when I ran charters.

More like migratory patterns have changed. But that's a theory too- as good as anyone else's guess I suppose.

I remember being in that night fishing fleet fest. Lights ablaze covering a city block awash in chumming.




Quote:
Originally Posted by dakota560 View Post
Fishery was over-fished recreationally and never rebounded. Prior to possession limits being implemented, burlap sacks of big bluefish cooking on the deck without ice killed the fishery. Fishery never rebounded. That and to a lesser degree fillets in the supermarkets the color of cardboard wasn't helping. Check the attached link for historical landing and destruction of biomass. You'd think we'd learn. No fishery no matter how healthy it appears in today's day and age of technology can't be wiped out in a matter of years.

http://www.asmfc.org/species/bluefish
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