ROFFS™ Fishy Times Newsletter – 60th Edition – Updated Videos, Catching Big-Game Pelagics, NOAA Rejects Sanctuary Request in Atlantic & Blue Water in Norfolk Canyon NEWS
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How to Use Your Boat to Catch Big-Game Pelagic Fish Article courtesy: sportfishingmag.com by Jim Hendricks | originally published 9/14/2014
A heart-throbbing scene unfolds on the deck of a sport-fisher as a marlin pops up in the trolling spread, dorsal flung high and pectorals aglow. With powerful, staccato sweeps of its massive tail, the billfish bursts toward the right flat line. All hell breaks loose as the billfish attacks. The crew scurries to action. A rod bends double. A clicker screams. Line melts away in a high?speed blur.
It is what offshore anglers live for.
Yet when it comes to big-game fish, this scenario seems to repeat more for some boats than others. Such “lucky” sport-fishers seem to possess mythical powers, raising innumerable fish from the depths as if by tractor beam.
But do boats really attract offshore species such as mahi, marlin, sailfish, tuna and wahoo? Are some boats more apt to raise offshore fish than others? And if so, what is it that causes fish to home in on such an unnatural object as a boat?
These are the questions to which I sought answers from a variety of offshore-angling experts who have fished around the world, from Hawaii to Cape Hatteras to Guatemala.

NOAA Rejects Sanctuary Request in Atlantic Article Courtesy: floridatoday.com by Ted Lund | originally published March 1, 2015
A North Florida non-profit proposing a National Marine Sanctuary for Northern right whales and Oculina coral that would cover more than 7,000-square miles of ocean from Jacksonville to Fort Pierce is headed back to the drawing board after having its initial application rejected by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
St. Augustine-based Friends of Matanzas requested Sanctuary status in hopes of placing the region off-limits to seismic testing and other forms of oil and gas exploration. The proposed Eubalaena Oculina National Marine Sanctuary would gets its name from the whales (Eubalaena) and corals (Oculina) it would protect.
Calls to FOM were not returned Friday, but the group has since reworked its application according to NOAA’s Southeast Regional Director of Sanctuaries, Billy Causey.
“We are expecting to receive the new application with revised boundaries and additional supporting information,” Causey said. “The footprint proposed was enormous and some of it is already protected under the Magnuson Act.”

Good chances for tuna, swordfish, mako sharks and wahoo action in the blue Gulf Stream (65°F-67°F) water that extends over the 100 fathom curve from Norfolk Canyon southward over “Foul Bottom area and further southward towards Oregon Inlet, as seen in this 24 hour composite of high resolution infrared SST satellite images from this past weekend (Saturday AM through Sunday AM).






