At last a “how to” Vineyard fishing book that will entertain and instruct novice and veteran anglers alike. Nelson Sigelman does it all in Martha’s Vineyard Fish Tales with his signature humor and voice of experience, covering everything from gamefish to shellfish, from basics to secrets of the pros, even including anecdotes on family and how to stay married (or not) during the Derby. A keeper indeed!
Description
The focus is on Martha’s Vineyard but the information, fishing tips, and stories about Island characters—Bob “Hawkeye” Jacobs jumping off Memorial Wharf to unsnag an albie he hooked—will sound familiar to anyone who has spent time in a community of fishermen.
This informative and fun read answers the questions asked in local tackle shops, including the best spots to catch a striped bass on a fly rod—Lobsterville Beach—and rigging tackle for blues, fluke, black sea bass, false albacore, and bonito. Spin fishing, bottom fishing, and fly fishing are all covered.
This book follows the island fishing seasons: rods appear on island trucks in April, a sign that schoolies have arrived, and they do not begin to disappear until the venerable Bass and Bluefish Derby, five weeks of single-minded pursuit of fish, ends in October.
And there are tips on looking and talking the part . . . “handy phrases include any reference to a falling or rising tide and a rock, any rock, as long as you refer to it with a sense of authority so that the other person is unwilling to ask which rock for fear of seeming like a novice.”
Martha’s Vineyard Fish Tales is a“how to” book that flows with the character and personality of a fishing-obsessed island off the coast of Massachusetts.
Reviews
Nelson has a wonderful ability to describe the Vineyard’s outdoor way of life. For years, whether he was describing a Derby fisherman’s attempt to master the fine art of catching a fish or fill a bucket with elusive squid without getting inked, humor and honesty were at the heart of his stories. This book is an enjoyable read and provides a snapshot of this special way of “living the Vineyard.”