After a couple of cancellations due to weather, I got to fish Barnegat Inlet with Fred today, seeking that elusive first take-home tog. I caught a 17-incher in June 2022, out of season. Today, my first hookup felt like a really nice fish, which I managed to keep out of the rocks and bring up on the jetty. Measured 16 inches, so it went into the bag. I raised issue with Fred about replacing it with larger later on, and he reminded me that we're allowed one apiece, so it's no problem. I hoped to hook a four- or five-pounder but I was just dreaming.
I hooked some nice fish I lost, but four or five pounds?
We caught 30 or 40 tog, I'm guessing that's about what it was. A lot of tog. For a species as tightly protected as this one is--but what species isn't anymore, even bluefish are limited to three, while on the freshwater side of rules and regulations you can wipe out a bass pond in a week--I couldn't help but laugh at the government. What do I know? Well, hits from tog on every cast. I know that much.
Fred had a hell of a day. How can you blame a guy who wants to bring dinner home? And so much better than cashing out at the supermarket. Tog after tog he caught measured 14 inches or better. One of them measured 14 7/8 inches. Seven or eight of them were 14 1/2 inches.
Fred's friend Jimmy
Fred's astonishment at measuring a 14 7/8-inch tog.
Inlet
Soooooo close on the keepers, but still, another great day of fishing!
ReplyDeleteThat it was. A day like that trumps the whole week on the job. I'm never going to forget one 14-incher, one 14 1/2, one 14 7/8, tog after tog just short. I'm used to that with fluke, which is partly why it made such an impression on me Tuesday.
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