Fall is a never-ending blur, with birds, bait, fish and fishing folk in constant motion, chasing one another from sunrise to sunset and through the night. It’s a time to be dialed in to the hunt, with multiple migrations overlapping as predators chase prey, and flocks of gulls and terns and sheets of escaping bait point to the action. The choices are many: striped bass, bluefish, tuna, tautog, albies and bonito, and red drum.
Boats whiz in and out of launch ramps and marinas at all hours. Four-wheel-drive trucks comb the beaches. Rock hoppers line up along breachways and wherever glacial debris lays piled up and the current is moving.
Some years it starts slowly, before the equinox, when the fishing patterns and weather resemble summer more than fall. But…