Well, striped bass are overfished (for 11 of the last 13 years) and overfishing is occurring. If you haven’t read our summary on the current state of striped bass and background on its management authority, the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC), check out this link. The ASMFC’s Striped Bass Management Board met this past August to vote on several items, including Draft Addendum VI, which was initiated back in April due to the 2018 Benchmark Stock Assessment finding the stock to be overfished and experiencing overfishing. The Board approved the Draft Addendum for public comment–this is a step in the right direction. However, the Board is still not considering any motions to rebuild the stock within Amendment 6’s 10 year requirement.

The public will have ample opportunity to comment on the Draft Addendum’s various options in the coming months. This public comment period will be crucial for the fate of striped bass. And guess what: every comment–whether it be in person at state public hearings, email, fax, or mail–makes a big difference. I can say this from being at the August 8th meeting; many of the Board members spoke about the volume of emails they were getting about striped bass. Before you send a comment though, it is important to understand the multitude of options within the Draft Addendum.
The Draft Addendum, which can be found here, includes three options to reduce fishing mortality (F) to the target level in 2020 and a circle hook provision. The mutually exclusive options to reduce F are: “(1) status quo; (2) an 18% reduction in total removals where the desired percent reductions are applied equally (proportionally) to both the commercial and recreational sectors; and (3) an 18% reduction in total removals where the commercial sector takes a smaller percent reduction than the recreational sector.”
Of these three options, Option 2 is the clear choice for rebuilding this shared resource. However, there are more sub-options under Option 2:
Sub-Option 2-A: Ocean Recreational Fishery

Sub-Option 2-B: Chesapeake Bay Recreational Fishery

Out of the sub-options, 2-A1 and 2-B1 are the most commonsense and potentially-effective routes toward lowering F. 2-A1 (1 fish at 35″ and above) was successfully employed to recover the stock after the 1980’s near-collapse. Additionally, the effectiveness of slot limits has been called into question: a slot limit essentially would place increased pressures on a few age-classes, be limited in effectiveness because of conservation-equivalency, and would not assist in rebuilding the female spawning biomass. For these reasons and at this time, 1 fish at 35″ appears to be the best option to lower total removals.
For the Chesapeake Bay, the 1 fish at 18″ makes sense. The Chesapeake Bay recreational sector, on average, overfishes striped bass by 218%. So, the restrictive sub-option 2-B1 is warranted and, in theory, will bring Maryland’s recreational harvests in check.

Now that you have some background on the Draft Addendum’s options, share your opinions with the Board. You can comment in person at the various state public hearings–more information on dates and times can be found here. Also, you can send electronic comments by emailing comments@asmfc.org with “Striped Bass Draft Addendum VI” in the subject line. The electronic comment period will end October 7, 2019 at 5:00pm. As stakeholders, our voices must be heard to protect and conserve this amazing resource for future generations.
https://theflylords.com/2019/08/06/the-state-of-striped-bass-overfished-and-subject-to-overfishing/
https://theflylords.com/2019/04/08/virginia-considering-cancellation-of-spring-trophy-striper-season/
So, anglers who use floating lines in the surf can be placed into two groups. Those who have trouble staying in contact with their fly. And those who don’t. One is a dead-end, a self-fulfilling prophecy of you can’t. The other is full of wonder and possibilities. Which group do you want to be in?
Last summer, I fished on Block Island twelve hours before Hurricane Arthur hit. Anyone who is familiar with advance hurricane swell in New England knows that the breakers can be impressive. Even so, the waves that night were not what surfers would call gnarly. When I arrived at my spot on the southeast side, the swells were a very manageable three feet, with occasional four-foot sets.
Flash backward several years. Same island, different wave conditions. Our plan was to fish all night, and the trip started poorly. A ferocious north-northeast blow turned the harbor of refuge in Point Judith into a maelstrom of foam and chop and weeds. The ferry was pitching and rolling even before we cleared the breakwater. Once safely ashore, the normally sheltered Great Salt Pond provided no relief from sustained winds of twenty miles per hour. That banshee howled all night; it’s the only wind I can ever recall that made my ears hurt. One keeper bass was all I could manage. By five in the morning, beaten and bowed, I wearily trudged across the sand to one of the west side beaches for a desperation look-see.
It was an all-out blitz. Sand eels were spraying in desperation, their flanks reflecting the orange of sunrise. Seagulls excitedly chattered overhead, seemingly more stoked about the carnage than I was. And somewhere underneath, there were stripers. Untold numbers of them, rolling on the bait as they gorged themselves on an all-you-can-eat breakfast buffet.
I quickly swapped out the full sink for the floating line and a seven-foot leader. I don’t know how many stripers were in the school. I suspect it was hundreds. They ranged in size from eight to over twenty pounds. The blitz was taking place about sixty feet off the beach, and the wave chop beneath the floating line was substantial. Yet, for two hours it was bass after bass after bass. I caught them on the strip and I caught them on the dead drift. I lost count after the first dozen. The only reason I left is because I had a ferry to catch.









After we decided what the product was going to be, we began to start prototyping. We ordered 3D printed models and taught ourselves about injection molding by reading “Injection Molding for Dummies seriously. For the clips on the back, we tested quite a few materials and shapes. I actually drove to dealerships testing out our clips on vehicles in the showroom. The conversations I had with the salesman were pretty awkward.






We know that the landing strip at Sandy Point in Southern Abaco is open and the cell tower is functioning. The crew at Delphi was able to push through a flood on the Great Abaco Highway and made it into Marsh Harbour early this morning, opening a potential route for aid to reach Northern Abaco. Chris Allen from Air Flight Charters is stockpiling supplies in Fort Lauderdale and flying 





















