Sky Diving Indoors
Kayak Fishing Massachusetts: Milk Island Off Rockport
Hello there fellow fishermen and sea kayakers. I'm Adam Bolonsky. I live in Gloucester, Massachusetts, on the northeast coast of the US one hour north of Boston. I'm a kayak fisherman and writer.
When I'm not fishing the waters of Cape Ann during striped bass and bluefish season, I'm often underwater, examining the waters I fish. Not for any reason in particular except that the colors and textures of the nearshore ocean bottom are an unusual world rather unlike what's above it.
For those of you who don't know, bluefish are an aggressive migratory fish that travel and feed in large schools. They have a wholly-undeserved reputation for oiliness. It's too bad so many guys - fishermen, mostly who would rather target the more glamorous striped bass - continue to spread the false rumor. The problem must have started after one diner too many ate bluefish that had spoiled. They turned their noses up and wrote the fish off, helping spread the tall tale that bluefish are inedible. And now it's become fashionable to dismiss bluefish.
Too bad for everyone. If you haven't eaten fresh bluefish, you don't know what you're missing. Well, they are inedible after four days, just as any fish is, and even after just a day or two if they are not well-taken care of after capture. They are on the one hand a fish lovely to look at -- their distinct sky blue tint, their large yellow eyes with angrily-focused black pupils. And they are on the other hand truly homely son of a guns, with an ugly overbite and downturned mouth that broadcasts decidedly humorless and misanthropic expression.
But they are a good fish to pursue, not only for the most excellent sport of their fight and the challenges of bringing them aboard without getting bitten.
I like to pursue them from a 17 foot long sea kayak rigged as simply as possible. I prefer a closed-deck sea kayak over a short and stubby sit-on-top fishing kayak for the sea kayak's speed and range, and its stability in rough water -- sometimes bluefish have to be chased when they are feeding in a school on the surface, and it's helpful to have a fast boat when they begin ranging and roaming in pursuit of balled-up schools of bait.
Add in a simple spincast reel on a short two piece rod I can break down and store belowdecks, and that I can secure from getting dropped overboard and sinking to the bottom, and I'm pretty much done.
Oh yuh -- and a simple clasp knife too, for bleeding the fish as soon as I land them and for cutting back frayed fishing line to re-attach steel leader and lure.
Here's a lure I've had a lot of good luck with: a broken-back diving and swimming lure, called a broken-back swimmer, with the distinct green and white zebra pattern of mackerel and two treble hooks. Truth to be told, though, it's more this lure's swimming action when trolled, at 10 to 12 feet, than its color which makes it effective. It's the bluefish's habit to strike whatever it detects in the water column, regardless of the color.
A migratory fish like this has to be indiscriminate and opportunistic Just imagine how quickly you'd starve if the only color foods you ate were green peppers and, come fall, you migrated each year to a region of the world where all the food was red. I like this lure and others like it for a bunch of reasons.
They're heavy enough to cast from a kayak to set up for trolling twenty or thirty yards off the stern. And they float, so if I lose one to broken or frayed line, there's a good chance I can pluck it from the water if I keep an eye it. And just as important if not more, they're often free --- at the tail end of the fall fishing season here in New England, plenty of these floating lures wash up on the shorelines of our east-facing beaches.
I'll beachcomb the sands and the high tide line for lost lures as the dreary days of fall begins its long and ponderous push of a New England winter into our lives and psyches, and dumps many feet of snow onto our roads, highways, driveways and woods. I also paddle and fish in summer without a pfd, also known as a lifejacket, which gives me ample opportunity to enjoy the weather here.
I don't do this because I'm dumb, but because I enjoy the freedom of movement. I do keep my pfd handy, though, in case I'm approached by the local harbormaster or the occasional Coast Guard patrol out on routine safety inspections.
Well, here we go. I'm trying to land a bluefish right here - that I trolled up from about 12 feet of water as I was trolling a broken-back lure a couple dozen yards off my stern in water a hundred yards or so west of a low rocky island a half mile off Rockport, Massachusetts. As you can see, the water was remarkably calm: one of those still, hot and humid days, no wind to speak of, that grip August afternoons off Massachusetts in a hypnotizing doldrums, the hazy horizon the same hue of the water.
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By Dave Williams - Outdoors writer Dave Williams lives in Arlington, Massachusetts.
things to do in summer? outdoors? CRAZY STUFF???
i am veryyyyyy adventerous and LOVE doing outgoing things, i'm 16 and jobless though so its not like i can go to another country this summer... bummer.
I was hoping some people on here could give me some ideas..
heres my summer list as of nowwww!!
-mountain biking
-camping
-trips to the beach
-horse back riding
-kayaking
-sky diving (indoors, some place in my city)
-hiking
-canoeing
-muesems
-white water rafting
ideas? join me?
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turning 14 birthday party ideas... july 1st!!! help!?
So last year it was just like hang out w like 12 girls and we slept in my cottage or guest house that is on our lawn. we played on the tramp with the hose and just hung! for dinner we had fondue cheese and dipped things in it and for dessert same but chocolate!! yumm mmmm :) So this year i need to top it. i decided hott air balooning in the morning after the sleepover!! how frickin fun? right... well it was 175 dollars per person so w 12 peeps nope. my paretns said mayb next year if i get good grades yada yadda. So i want something that stands out like that and an activity. not games but like lazer tag or something. swimming nah. these things have already been done... hotel sleepover fear factor mall scavenger hunt bowling (actually fun!) pool party. so any advice or what you or your fave parties had? im gonna probably have some guy friends hang for a bit but idk yet... so i have a tramp a guest house on our property a hott tub. i want a main activity where you have to go somewhere. it can be expensive just not tooo expensive like 175 per person haha. something like sky diving indoors lazer tag hott air balloon or ya. im repeating myself so byeeee
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