Join host Marvin Cash on The Articulate Fly for another exciting "On the Salt" segment with Captain David Blinken. In this episode, David shares his recent adventures, including a trip to Martha's Vineyard where he enjoyed some quality time with family and friends and managed to catch some elusive striped bass on the flats. David discusses the challenges of fly fishing in saltwater, especially with the low numbers of striped bass in Long Island, and shares his experiences of catching large bluefish using small poppers and gurglers.
David also provides valuable tips on handling and releasing fish to ensure their health, emphasizing the importance of using barbless hooks, heavy lines and proper release techniques. He even touches on the occasional encounters with gray seals that sometimes steal the catch! Additionally, David answers a listener's question about maintaining fish health during hot weather, offering practical advice that every angler can use.
Whether you're a seasoned saltwater angler or just love fishing stories, this episode is packed with insights, tips and a bit of humor. Tight lines!
To learn more about David, check out our full length interview.
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Marvin: Hey folks, it's Marvin Cash, the host of the Articulate Fly,
Marvin: and we're back with another On the Salt with Captain David Blinken. David, how are you?
David: I'm great, Marvin. Missed your company the past few weeks.
Marvin: Yeah, it's kind of funny. It's been a month since we last spoke,
Marvin: and I've been traveling all over the place.
Marvin: I've been up in Virginia with family for the fourth.
Marvin: I was in an OWA event, and i was at icast last week but i think the last time
Marvin: we spoke you were getting ready to head up to martha's vineyard for the holiday weekend.
David: Yeah i headed up there um was up there with my wife and my best buddy and and
David: uh we had some some great great cooking some good wine,
David: and uh every morning i was uh taking walks along a flat there in martha's vineyard
David: and having some fun with some old friends called Striped Bass,
David: which we don't seem to have very many of them left here in Long Island.
Marvin: You were telling me that it's been since the end of June that you had a client
Marvin: on your boat catch a striper on the flats?
David: Yeah. I mean, it was the very end of June before I headed to the vineyard and
David: had a client out, got a really nice one, got a 30-inch plus a striper and about a foot of water.
David: It was quite exciting. We got to see quite a lot of backing get peeled off the reel.
David: But otherwise, we've seen a few bass since then in shallow water.
David: But, you know, as we all know in fly fishing, especially in saltwater,
David: it's kind of the law of averages.
David: And if you don't get a few shots a day, you know, it's really,
David: really hard to hook up a fish.
David: And when you're only seeing three, four fish a day in shallow water and you
David: don't know what direction they're coming from, it's kind of hard to,
David: it's kind of hard to, you know, you know, get them to, to eat,
David: you know, or get, or let alone get a cast to them.
Marvin: Yeah. And so have you been chasing other species on the flats or have you had
Marvin: to kind of go a little bit more offshore to get what you're looking for?
David: I'm going a little more afield. We've been having a lot of fun with bluefish,
David: and there's been some rather large ones.
David: I've been having days where we're catching blues from 30 inches to 36 inches,
David: and it's about all a 10-weight can handle.
David: Bluefish are really tenacious fighters.
Marvin: Yeah, you got to tell the client to hold on to the rod, right?
David: Oh, definitely. Hang on tight. and we've mostly been using small poppers and
David: gurglers which is a huge amount of fun. It's...
David: You know, nothing strikes it quite as viciously as a bluefish on top water. It's really fun.
Marvin: Got it. And so are they busting bait or are they being just attracted to the,
Marvin: to the gurgler or the popper?
David: They're, they're being attracted. And in fact, um, we're finding,
David: you know, these big, huge groups of laid up bluefish and you just see them kind
David: of finning with their, with their dorsals and tails out of the water,
David: swimming along or just kind of huddled up.
David: And, you know, you just kind of throw a fly right along the edge of them and
David: you just start pulling it and, uh, and don't just come up behind it and smack it.
David: And, uh, uh, today with a client, he just flopped a fly in the middle of him.
David: He didn't even get the first strip and a bluefish came up and hammered it. It was, it was great fun.
Marvin: Yeah, that's pretty neat. And got an interesting question for you.
Marvin: It seems to be kind of the time of year, you know, if you're a freshwater guy,
Marvin: you know, it's so hot, people are really concerned. But Brenner wanted to get
Marvin: your thoughts on tips for fighting and handling fish to keep them healthy once you release them.
David: Well, that's a great question. Let's start with the hook.
David: If you really want to handle your fish well, and if you want to make it easy
David: on the fish, let's all fish barbless.
David: That's that first and foremost. Yeah, you might lose the occasional fish,
David: but if you're maintaining pressure when you're reeling the fish in,
David: I think you won't lose too many fish.
David: So barbless is so important because when it comes time to release the fish,
David: the hook just slides right out.
David: So that's the first thing. The second thing is try to catch a fish with as heavy a line as possible.
David: The reason why is the sooner you get the fish in, the sooner you can release
David: it and the happier the fish is.
David: And when you're releasing your fish, try to release your fish while they're
David: in the water. And having a barbless hook certainly makes it easier to do that.
David: If you have a barb in the hook, then you've got to remove the fish from the
David: water. You've got to handle it a lot.
David: And that taking the fish out of the water is never that good for the fish.
David: So barbless hook, as heavy a line as possible, as heavy a rod as possible if you want to do that.
David: Who wants to catch a 20-pound bluefish on an 8-weight? That's just no fun because
David: then you have to baby the rod so you don't break it.
David: So if you're going for bluefish that you know are going to be 10 pounds and up, use a 10-weight.
David: Use a 10 weight use 25 or 30
David: pound test because they don't really they're not that they're not
David: leader shy at all get that fish in quick use a
David: barbless hook or popper and um and
David: release that fish from the water if you can uh there's
David: these uh great little tools that you
David: can use that uh you just slide the tool right
David: down the hook and you give it a little twist and out it comes and you're not
David: endangering your hand with a fish like a bluefish and if it's a striper you
David: can just keep them under the water uh you know put their thumb on the lower
David: jaw keep them in the water slide the hook out and just let them swim off and
David: you know there's so many different fish you can do that with yeah.
Marvin: And i was going to say too you know even though you may lose a few fish on barbless
Marvin: you get more hookups because you don't have to pull and set the hook hard enough
Marvin: to get the the barb to push through right.
David: It's very true uh as long as you maintain a really sharp point on your fly you're
David: going to get you're going to get much,
David: you're going to get penetration much more effectively because it doesn't have to go over that bump.
David: And so that's a very true statement.
David: And so you do get a lot more, you get easier hookups, certainly with barbless hooks.
Marvin: Yeah. And where you are, do you have to worry about sharks chasing things down
Marvin: like you would say in the Bahamas, where, you know, if you see a shark,
Marvin: you got to break the fish off?
David: Very very occasionally what i actually have
David: to worry about are these big gray seals and every
David: so often they get a little bit uh they get a little bit crazy and you'll be
David: reeling in a large bluefish and the fish is between you and the beach occasionally
David: gray seal seal will come along and just grab your fish and just swim off with
David: it um and uh we've learned just to instead of breaking
David: breaking the fish off or breaking the fly off and stuff we've learned to let
David: the gray seals just eat the fish and then when they're done eating the fish
David: they uh they spit out the head and you get your fly or your lure back if you're spin fishing,
David: and and over comes a nice head of whatever fish you just caught but at least
David: you get your tackle back um it doesn't happen that often but on occasion when
David: it does happen you just have to to kind of,
David: you know, kind of go with the flow, so to speak.
Marvin: Yeah. And, you know, folks, we love questions on the Articulate Fly.
Marvin: You can email me or DM me on social media, try to make David's life easier, as I always say.
Marvin: And if we use your question, I will send you some Articulate Fly swag,
Marvin: and we're going to enter a drawing for the Royal Wolf line of your choice.
Marvin: And I think if you go back and listen to the last report, David and I tell you
Marvin: guys how much we like fishing with Royal Wolf lines.
Marvin: And, you know, David, the next time we talk, you're actually going to be in
Marvin: Campeche, Mexico. We're going to try to make that work for everybody, right?
David: I am. I'm going to be in Campeche, Mexico, and I'll be there with Steve Ramirez,
David: who was one of your guests recently.
David: And maybe I'll bring Steve in on the call with us.
Marvin: Yeah, we'll see how good the internet is down in Mexico. And it's interesting, folks.
Marvin: We just released that interview with Steve. It's my second one that I've done
Marvin: with him about a week ago.
Marvin: You should check it out. We really spent about an hour just talking about lessons
Marvin: from the river or the ocean too.
Marvin: But I always love my conversations with Steve, and I hope you enjoyed that one.
Marvin: So you ought to check it out.
David: Yeah, it's a really good one. I got to go back and listen to it again.
Marvin: Yeah. And so, you know, I wish you safe travels. You know, I'm just,
Marvin: I knock on wood, I got home on Friday with the computer bug.
Marvin: So hopefully everything goes smoothly for you and Steve down in Mexico,
Marvin: and we'll be able to have that call.
Marvin: And, you know, folks, as I always say, you owe it yourself to get out there and catch a few.
Marvin: Tight lines, everybody. Tight lines, David.
David: Tight lines.
Guide
David Blinken owner and guide has taken the time to observe the environment in which he guides, and he sees things that others might not, this ability is what separates him from the pack. His clients benefit from this, which allows David to provide them with an experience that they can take home and remember until their next trip.
North flats began as an idea in David’s discussions with friends, “why get trapped in an office” they used to tell him, you need to explore and make your passion your business.
Davids’s passion and desire are what allows him to give people a lasting and fun experience that not only connects them with fish but to the environment in which they live. This not only gives his clients a better understanding of where to find the fish but also a better appreciation of their environment and how to preserve the very thing they love, flyfishing
There is not just great fishing to experience but a passion that brings people together, which is why people keep coming back year after year.