by Alec Newell
The North Jetty March 14, 2013 - photo by Newell |
Most of the fishermen in North East Florida have seen the tee shirts and bumper stickers that say, " A Bad day of Fishing is Still Better than a Good Day at Work," and most of the time, it's true. If the boat gets back to the ramp with all the fishermen and most of the boat in one piece the trip has been a success. When you bring back fish it is a bonus, but when your catch is worth more than what you've already spent on ice, fuel, bait and tackle, you've had a banner day. Most fishing trips fall into a category that can be best described as a 'good news - bad news' joke, with the obligatory punch line about the fish that got away. Saturday's trip was no exception.
Toadfish - photo by Newell |
The North Jetty 12/12/2015 - photo by Newell |
Matt Evitt with 'endangered' snapper 12/12/2015 - photo by Newell |
By the early afternoon we had made a few more stops and thrown a couple of trigger fish, some sea bass and few sheepshead in the box, but the bite had slacked off and we were getting covered up with a rash of sharks. I was spending more time untangling lines and tying on new tackle than I was fishing. I had only put one sea bass in the ice chest, and with time becoming an issue, I was getting frustrated. I knew that my wife Kathy was expecting fish for dinner, and I had begun to suspect that even with the flounder in the refrigerator, I might still have to run up to the fish house for enough shrimp to round out a decent meal. When you're hot you're hot, when you're not - you're not.
Random reinforcement is bait that that keeps compulsive gamblers at the table, and fishermen at the rail when the fish have stopped biting. The hook is in knowing that on the next cast, the next roll of the dice, your luck can change and you could still go home a winner. There is also this thing called schadenfreude which is a fancy word that means 'misery loves company.'
Diamond Diver - photo by Newell |
"Diamond Diver, this is the Marissa D, come back."
"This is Diamond Diver, what's up?"
"Hey, did one of your divers shoot about a 40 pound cobia today and lose his shaft?"
(pause - static) "Yeah, why?"
"We got it."
"You got what?"
"We got the fish...We got he cobia, the shaft was still in it."
"Can we get it back?"
"Yep, sure."
"I mean, what are we getting?"
"Just a sec." more static and another pause, "Diamond Diver, we keep the fish and you get the shaft."
"Yeah, that's about what I figured."
Capt. George Strate's Mayport Princess returning to the dock 12/12/2015 - photo by Newell |