Monday, August 7, 2017

August 5, 2017 Newport RI Spearfishing Report - Tristate Skindivers 7th Annual Species Meet 2017



Date: 8/5/17
Location: Southern Narragansett Bay
Conditions: Heavy Chop, Fog, Rain
Visibility: 4-10 feet
Water Temp: 68F
Notable Gear - Rob Allen Tuna 80cm Roller Speargun

The Tri State Skindiver’s Species meet was held this past Saturday, and had an incredible turnout. With 87 divers registered, it was the largest spearfishing tournament on the east coast as far as anyone can tell. Thanks to TriState for organizing the meet, particularly Mike Myer and Mike Landau.


Variety was the name of the game, and I set out with Brian Fogg to see what we could find. We opted to sleep in and stick to one location rather than moving around too much, and were in the water at 8:30am. Visibility was poor, but huntable, varying from 4-10 feet in some spots. 


I quickly located a school of bass, but found nothing large enough to shoot for over an hour. I saw small bass on probably 80% of my dives. 



Luckily, the scup were easier to find. I started the day with a quality scup, around 12.” It was swimming with a few tog, but I was able to pick it out of the school with my Rob Allen roller. Shortly thereafter, I found SCUPZILLA, and quickly put him on my stringer with another shot at the edge of my visibility. At 2.8 pounds and 17,” this was easily my largest scup on a spear, and ended up being a new TriState Club record.



A few dives later, I came across a shelf at 20’ that was loaded with small bass. I took a few drops and was lucky enough to find a keeper in the mix, adding a 31” bass to my stringer. Not a monster by any means, but the pressure was now off to find a tournament size striper. I moved on and quickly took my limit of tog in no more than 15’ of water, the third and largest being a 24” 8.3lb male. 



Unfortunately, this was as diverse as my haul would get. I dove for another couple of hours searching from 10 to over 40ft for black seabass, bluefish and fluke, but had no luck. I couldn’t find triggerfish in the shallows either, and we decided to call it quits in the early afternoon. It was a great day on the water, and the weigh in was an awesome way to end the day. Nearly everyone weighed fish, and quite a few divers had some really impressive stringers, showing the abundance of talent in our club.
With tog and seabass open, it’s going to be a great end to an already awesome summer.



Dive safe,

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