Monday, July 8, 2024

Brian Cronk Reaches 47 Birthday Celebration on Rippin' Lips

Brian Cronk's 47th birthday celebration on Eddie Mackin's Rippin' Lips pontoon--a fun time for all! I realized, as I left the parking lot where I live...to get there just on time, that my whole anticipation of Sunday involved worrying about the weather. Completely unconsciously, but I had.

Look at that blue sky in the photo. That's Gen Wong in the foreground, Ken from the region of Manasquan Reservoir behind him on the left, Max Wilson in the back, Brian Cronk on the right in the back, and Mark Licht with the great smile. Eddie Mackin was at the wheel, Joe Santiago behind me, Brenden from Ridgewood behind me. 

Brian had told me a few of the guys "on" Mayhem would be there, so should I take it that means they're staff members? I said so in a Facebook post, carefully framing my words with "from what I understand," and was trenchantly questioned, to which I replied, having pointed out how I framed my words with "from what I understand," that I don't take it Mayhem is a drug.

Mayhem is short for NJ Multispecies Mayhem Fishing on Facebook, and the New Jersey Multispecies Podcast. Joe Santiago is the Mastermind. Gen Wong and Max Wilson are onboard with him, in whatever capacity that is, be it staff or something else.

As for myself, when I was on the board of Round Valley Trout Association, I wasn't staff, so being "on" Mayhem may signify membership in some special way that's simply recognized and need be no more formal than that. So I say more here on the blog than I did on Facebook, though I don't care to go into edit function and revise my remarks on Facebook. 

Feel special if you've read these words. Everyone in America should fact check by reading Litton's Lines.

I don't know what capacity on Mayhem!

Except that it's some sort or other among more than the two who appear on the Podcast by what I understand! I may be mistaken.


Even at our first stop--Pickerel Point--a fish got caught. Smallmouth bass of maybe a pound and 3/4ths for Mark Licht, who let his live herring swim freely. Naturally, we hoped for a hybrid or plural of them. I've been in the same boat before, when I live-lined herring with my son during summer, and instead of catching hybrids (or possibly walleye), we caught a number of smallmouth bass. 

Second stop--a smallish smallmouth for Brenden. I lost what I believe was a crappie.

Byram Bay--as dusk began to gather, the catfish came alive. Just as Eddie had said they do, back when we fished Pickerel Point under intense sun and heat. Must have been four or five catfish caught, including a black bullhead of about 14 inches for me. I'm not entirely certain, but that might have been my biggest ever. I have caught yellow and/or brown bullheads of 16 inches. Apropos to Brian's birthday celebration, I caught those big bullheads in one of the Princeton Day School ponds. I fished those ponds through my teens more than I fished anywhere else. Brian was born in 1977, shortly before I abandoned them for the most part, going on to college and Long Beach Island commercial clamming. He fished those ponds obsessively during the 1990's. (I did then a little, too--we almost crossed paths.) Virtually no one else fished them. The syncronicity is spooky.

 

And...little white perch got caught. Little crappie. 

Summer is really here, my friends. When the Lake Hopatcong boat traffic resembles the traffic on the Manhattan grid, go with the flow and it feels fine! Made me want to buy a boat for the lake. Not just to fish and shoot photos from, but show my wife the sights! Can always bring a friend and his wife along, too.  

Eddie Mackin at the Wheel

Mark Licht & smallmouth.

Brenden from Ridgewood and smallmouth.


 

2 comments:

  1. Hi , just found your site and planning on taking my 6yr old son to round vally tomorrow afternoon. Any advice, really just looking to help him pull in a few bluegill.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sorry I'm getting back to you so late. Round Valley is tough from shore even for bluegills. Especially with all the flooded vegetation. But you can use worms and bobbers. Suspend the worms over flooded vegetation, but don't set the worms too close to the surface. The fish are down there in that stuff.

      If you're lucky, you might catch a largemouth or smallmouth bass.

      Hope you keep reading the blog.

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