Saturday, November 4, 2017

Scales of Inspiration

While the earth sleeps, we wanderers will come awaken to scatter over the sands of the shore, seeking to consort with the ancient silences of night.  Individually, aligning ourselves a part of littoral locales held dear to heart, or simply fortuitous by nature, for that ceremonious slice of time shaped intimately when our own living amalgam of liquid and salt draws nearest to the rhythmic cadence of a saltwater hiss lulling like an enchanting siren from the ever-falling wave collapsing upon the interest of our feet. 

And even more so, for that purposeful realization, that instant both abrupt and unmistakable, when a tugging connection is suddenly confessed from below the rippled surface of a vast undersea-world’s inky-colored secrecy.  Perhaps only twenty-five yards out, but out of eyesight’s detectable range, fountains of splashes are heard escaping from the inescapable blanket of darkness your dilated pupils have grown dark-adapted.  Beyond the mute black band of an encroaching wave are November’s singing stripes of color, those ribboned in black over iridescent silver and green, piercing the water’s movements of silence with resounding scales of her signature score.  Orchestrated are her percussive, sweet-sounding surface-thrashes of tail, plucking at the watery life-element being thrust upward into night’s cathedral reaches.  The emotional rush of the measure.  The watery-music’s cast-spell of concentration and uncontrollable horripilation.  The unwilling compromise of surrender between man and fish.  This engaging performance of the evening, a large fish’s raining opus of striking-strain and swirl of surface, builds towards crescendo before suddenly submitting in nighttime melody to an intensifying bow of graphite aching to silence all further scaly-sounds. 


Ferried by way of wave to sand, is the impassioned fish below inspired angler.  He offers his best standing ovation.

































Exposures - October 2017 - II

Jack, tight into an Albie.  It took his epoxy Bay Anchovy imitation.  He later gifted me three of his flies to offer against the finicky fish that morning.  

An abundant stock of Atlantic Silverside (and Anchovy) happened to be strewn upon the beach at times this month.

Saltwater, sand, and sunset - simply striking..



A healthy showing of juvenile, backwater Stripers was made in Oct.  With hope, November will bring their aggressive, southbound-migrating matriarchs and forebearers tight to the surfline.

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Trick or Treat?

....TREAT!! 
Like a wide-eyed child dressed in holiday costume, enlivened with excitement at the choice of his favorite brand of candy.  That was me tonight. Out after curfew, grateful and happy to see my favorite-looking candy free for the taking on Halloween.

Friday, October 20, 2017

Exposures - October 2017

This happens more times than not.  I could be perched high-and-dry on stone or sand, somewhere bending graphite, scanning and retrieving, observing and listening, whether in the brightness of day-light or under the frailty of moonlight, or even halfway submerged in moving saltwater with this same rod held in hand, when suddenly I feel as though I'm at odds with myself.  Sometimes, I feel as though I'm letting something beautiful slip forever away.  A frame of reference.  My very own perspective.  Something that my eyes have laid rest upon, whether enticing and uncommon, or a sight so common that I have at once viewed it in an instance or juxtaposition or scenario of lighting made strikingly uncommon, so as to make me pause at bringing to life the possibilities of a tugging tautness of line, to the connection of an outstretched occasion of hope swallowed within waves of water and salt to unseen raised fins and thrusts of splayed tails I am habitual of seeking.  For casting to come second and wait while I first... remove a point-and-shoot camera from my surfbag.

I blame Nature.  She distracts me in my thoughts and motions.  Everywhere I turn.  Her striking silence of light.  Her bronze colors of twilight that smolder into darkness.  Her ombre tones of indigo that slowly wash away into daylight.  Her exhalation of reddish colors she paints upon the heavens.  Her over-spilling roar of waves that hiss upon the endless thirst of sands.  At dreamy-looking water and wind-driven whitecaps.  At star-heavy skies.  At the taste of her salty breath.  At her kingdom of children - those finned, feathered, furred, or shelled.  Her body of flora. 

Although it's not exactly easy to refrain oneself in ripping metal through an emerald green-colored school of False Albacore suddenly erupting, slicing and slurping in sound at a melee of baitfish within short casting range at one's immediate twelve o'clock, or hold-off at flinging-out a winning cast to a terrorized school of bay anchovy or peanut bunker or silverside or mullet spraying airborne like torrential raindrops striking the water's surface only a rod-length away, I cannot ignore some desire aching within me at capturing with the click of shutter what I'm made privy of witnessing as a surfcaster.  To fish or not to fish, that sometimes is the question.  For me, it's always about fishing, but it's not always about fish.

At least such a "dilemma," as it may be fancied, does not happen more times than not.  But the paradox is that when it does, I'll want some satisfying taste of some suitable balance, found only somewhere between my straining slingshot genuflecting before the giving sea and a photo of the ensuing event(s) consummating in the victory of a catch made from shore.

The viewing of a photo can be thought of as a two-dimensional resuscitation of experience. A turn-key for unlocking the past.  And often times, I'll reason that it is some wordless photo that inspires a world of words to assemble.  But without any new words to contribute to this blog of late, I feel obligated at the least to share a selection of exposures I captured through the fish-eye lens that is October's bringing.  Fortunately, some even contain fins and scales. 




Sandy Hook's "Fisherman's Trail."  A 3/4 mile length of sandy solitude leading to the therapeutic apothecary of an awaiting sea. It's a demanding hike over soft sand, but it leads to well-known and productive, fast-moving water, both to fishermen, and fish.






Anglers amble homeward under October's waxing gibbous rising only two nights shy of beaming completely full.

An angler, casting from the most northern fringe of Jersey's miles of wet sand, who is as physically close as he can get to the Marine Parkway Bridge or the air traffic control tower of JFK miles away over open water.  What lies between and beneath however, are the prized fins of his waking dreams.

Migrating Sanderlings forage the tide's wrack line.

Moonrise as captured through dune grass (Ammophila).

The swirling tide of Sandy Hook's "Rip" makes it evident as to why fish find this water agreeable to hunt throughout. 


Tight to a cocktail Bluefish.





Proximity.


"We wait all-summer-long for her arrival to our near-shore salt-brined amphitheater."


"...that special fish masked by those unmistakable black pelvic dots of four or more, her football-shaped form dressed in a seemingly scale-less ultra-hydrodynamic luster, one revered, reputed, and acceptably understood amongst the morning parlance of tailgate nomenclature."


"...this mackerel posing as a member of the true-tuna genus Thunnus, however well-disguised in her flawlessly verdant brilliance and flashes of pink, silky-smooth iridescent sheen, one painted in the sighted-signature pattern of upper-dorsal squiggles crowned by a row of free-swaying finlets."



"For the reeling revelation of having received Euthynnus alletteratus."







Shoulder-to-shoulder metal-slinging Albiemania in full-effect.






Bay Anchovy





Albies going-off.  "Those targets of piscatorial passion rapidly racing to assault the many hapless Anchovies and Silversides they prey."