Tag: Wildwood fishing
Kensdock report: Jims’ bait and tackle Mako tournament/flounder fishing update
Kensdock report: Tuesday flounder update
Kensdock Report: Back Bay flounder update Monday 6-15-10
Kensdock report: South Jersey Shark Tournament 2010
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2010 Winner
For the Base Prize:
For the Base Prize Daily, Day #1:
For the Base Prize Daily, Day #2:
For the Overall Calc. A:
For the Overall Calc. B:
For the Daily Double , Day #1:
For the Daily Double , Day #2:
For the Mako Mania:
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Kensdock Report: 6-9-10 Flounder fishing trip
We were ducking the salt water being thrown over the starboard side of the skiff as we headed across the back waters. The wind was creating unfishable conditions for flounder in the open water so we headed back up to the wood line for cover.Sure enough we found flounder stacked up, the down side was they were all between 16″ and 17.5. Total shorts 21. We did find one 20″ keeper flounder.Our fishing trip was cut short due to engine issues. Total fishing time not including run time was 35 minutes. The water temperature was 62 degrees. The water clarity was an 8 on a scale of 1 to 10 with 10 being the clearest. The amount of effort to find the flounder was a 5 on a scale of 1-10 with 1 representing the least amount of effort. Kensdock report: Back Bay Flounder 6-7-10
Kensdock Report: Flounder fishing update
Kensdock Report: The bite is on!

This guy can catch fish!
Kensdock report: The conservation/fishing United States president.
Fishing buds laud ‘conservation president’
By JOE HOLLEY
April 20, 2010, 10:31PM
From left, Robert Rich Jr., a writer and fisherman; Andy Mill, a tarpon angler; Paul Dixon of the Anglers Club of New York; and Johnny Morris, founder of Bass Pro Shops, share fishing stories as a photograph of former President, George H. W. Bush, is displayed with a tarpon.
Now that he’s 85 and his days in the stream are behind him, several of the president’s old fishing buddies decided to come to him Tuesday night. In a program at the George Bush Presidential Library at Texas A&M University, they helped him relive a few of their many fishing adventures.
In brief remarks to an audience of about 500 at the library auditorium — old anglers, Boy Scouts and the general public — Bush himself, a self-described “fishing fanatic,” recalled hooking a chipmunk while fishing at Kennebunkport, but more often than not, said his friend Robert Rich Jr., founder of Rich Foods, the former president knew what he was doing. He was unfailingly modest, though, Rich recalled. After a day of fishing, he’d occasionally report that he was up against “Saddam Hussein fish — they always close their mouths when I come around.”
His father taught him to fish and he kept it up through his presidency and until just a few years ago.
“It means a lot,” he recalled in a film clip made while he was still president. “I like to get away and I like to be totally isolated — no telephones, no TVs.”
“The Secret Service — he used to drive ’em crazy,” said Bass Pro Shops founder Johnny Morris. “If there was a hurricane coming, it was a good sign. He’d go fishing.”
Perhaps Bush’s favorite game fish was the tarpon, creatures that weigh up to 300 pounds. Andy Mill, a former Olympic alpine skier and a Bush fishing buddy for more than 20 years, recalled the former president tangling with a 6-foot-long, 135-pound tarpon off the Florida Keys in 2008. Bush landed the fish after a 45-minute struggle.
“This tarpon was a huge thrill,” Bush said in a film clip.
Morris lauded his longtime fishing buddy as the man who had more to do with bringing back the striped bass than anybody.
“He’s our conservation president,” Morris said. “People would be amazed about this, but President Bush established more national wildlife refuges than any other president, including President [Theodore] Roosevelt. He established 56 new wildlife refuges in America. President Bush restored and protected 3 million acres of wetlands during his tenure. …”












