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February 26, 2012 Charter

2/27/2012

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_We headed out with a group of 5 from the New York/ New Jersey area to show them just how good the fishing can be down here. Pulled away from the dock a bit after 5 am and cruised in following sea to the first stop about 40 off. The guys were avid bottom fisherman and jiggers and had little interest in trolling so we hit the AJ's , blackfin and hubcap triggers hard throughout the day. Despite two of the crew suffering from previous back injuries, the crew toughed it out and caught aj after aj after almaco after blackfin throughout the day, and then stuffed the brine tank with about 60 absolute stud triggers.

I had a blast with the this crew, and was amazed after putting it on the triggers, they were ready to jig some more.
I ran down the break a bit, found some good marks and it was on with drop, jig once or twice and hang on aj fishing. Some of the crew was literally kneeling on the floor, but still cranking on fish. I love spending a day on the water with guys who just have to fish !!

The water temps were in the upper 60's and looked like crap, however, there was a beautiful rip pushing hard towards the big rock last evening, so, I imagine those who head out that way today are gonna kill some fish. We also had a group of gaffers come up to the boat, but we fumbled and jumped one of them off and that fish took the rest of the school with him. I believe this spring season is gonna be a good one !
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February 4, 2012 Charter

2/5/2012

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_I had Ed, Sam, Alan, E-Man, and Dan join me for some jigging. I threw a pair of 50's on for some high speeding between spots, and we headed out in nice seas for the waters south of Beaufort inlet. The plan was to find some pompano and cobia hiding amongst the amberjacks. First stop about 45 miles off resulted in a boat load of people with sore backs and rubber arms. The aj's were big, mean and plentiful and hook ups were almost instant. We tried slow mechanical jigging to entice cobia and pomps, but the aj's ran blocker for them, and it turned into a nonstop trip on the "pain train".
We made a few moves to try and get away from the aj's with no luck.

Made the decision to push off deep for big triggers, so we threw out the high speed stuff and got hammered at 18 kts. We pulled the hooks on that one.

Found the triggers in 210 feet. Dropped anchor and landed right on the mess and soon enough the guys put a nice catch of 60 or so jumbo triggers in the brine tank despite setting sideways on the rode with strong current and stronger than forecast winds.

The conditions for bottom dropping got worse so we pulled anchor and worked back in and had a nice mid forties hoo eat a small green machine / bird combo on mono. He made it too the gaff and we crammed it into the brine tank for a nice finish to the day.

It was a fun day with a fun crew and everybody got a pile of fish for many tasty dinners. The weather wasn't as pretty as it was supposed to be, but the fish were chewing. We managed to not lose a single jig, although one of my high speed lures got fubar pretty bad. It will be replaced with one of Capt' Bob's HooDoos, those things are gonna kill some hoos.
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    Author

    Captain John Cawthern is the owner and primary Captain of Procastinator Sportfishing based out of Beaufort, North Carolina. Captain John is married to his lovely wife of 30 years and has two sons Stephen (daughter in law Bekah) and Seth and two granddaugthers, Addie and Waylynn. Captain John holds a 100 ton Masters Coast Guard Merchant Marine License.Fishing has been a large part of Captain John's life from an early age and absolutely loves his time on the water sharing his passion.

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