I started fishing at age 7, first trip was for Boston mackerel out of Pt Pleasant NJ, I caught nine and had some of the meanest bird's nests one could imagine.
From there I went on to fly fish for trout, and then began bass fishing. I caught my first 5lb largemouth in SC in 1982. I fished in club level and national bass fishing tx's in St Lawerence Seaway, Lake Champlain and the Potomac. I fished Esopus Creek mentioned above and up and down the entire length of the Hudson for striped bass and black bass. The Champlain Canal near Deb's house was one of my favorites. I've also fished numerous lakes in FL, Lake Anna, VA, Lake Fork TX, Columbia R, Wa, Snake R, ID, and countess other places. My all time favorite lake is Lake Stilwell on the West Point Military Academy, when I was a member of the WP Bass Club. I got to fish it 100's of times.
I've surf cast in Baja for jack caravelle and rooster fish, the 2 winters I lived there on the beach in my truck. I spear fished daily in the Baja and the Bahamas as well. I caught my first Marlin out of Cabo w my soon to be wife in 1992 on our 2nd date.
When I lived in NY one of my customers owned a 31' Bertram out of Point Lookout and we fished at least once a week beginning in March on through December. I became a regular "crew member" on his boat for about 10 years until he died. We fished for mackerel, sharks, tuna, giant bluefin tuna, bluefish, false albacore, stripped bass, black fish, fluke, and flounder as the seasons progressed. We fished the Hudson Canyon on overnight trips that were 80+ miles offshore. One night we caught a tiger shark that was about 12' long!!!
Our honeymoon was a trip to Tropic Star Lodge, Panama, we've fished Hawaii, and the Bahamas, fly fishing for bone fish, and bottom fish, both guided and unguided. At tropic star we caught marlin, tuna, jack cravelle, sailfish, amberjack, mahi(aka dolphin fish), rooster fish, and various near shore species as well.
My last few trips to Guatemala were fly fishing for sailfish, which I would say is the best combo of fun and excitement that I've experienced . Fighting marlin and tarpon and tuna can be completely exhausting, and demoralizing when you lose one, but sailfish seem to offer the best combo of seeing the fish take the bait and a decent but not too hard a fight with lots of spectacular jumps. The flies are about the size of a chicken and you actually see the fish at close range take the fly. I love topwater!
This is a pic of me on the
Ebbey Slough out of Sitka, AK on a trip w my wife in 1996, probably hooked up on a halibut. (I had more and darker hair in those days!). Looking back on my fishing career it fits my lifelong theme of "anything worth doing, is worth over doing!"
