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Ocean Runner is an all fiberglass 36 foot Northern Bay designed
for offshore fishing. The boat is fast and comfortable. The boat's 500 hp
Volvo diesel cruise's at 22 knots. This will deliver you to the fishing grounds
in minimum time. The boat is equipped with all of the latest electronics to
ensure you have the finest fishing day on the water. Ocean Runner has 24-mile
radar, 2 Lorans, 2 color fish finders, GPS Plotter, 2 VHS radios, Auto-pilot,
Marine Satellite telephone, and much more to ensure your safety at sea. The
cockpit is very spacious to ensure plenty of room for fishing.Ê We want you
to have fun catching fish, but we want to ensure your comfort and safety if
you need a break.

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Cape Cod Striped Bass Fishing
Here are some of the species we target on our Cape Cod Charter Trips. Below
is information about striped bass and you can follow the links to the other
species.

Striped bass -- (Morone saxatilis)
Physical Description: Striped bass are the largest members of the
temperate bass family. They are primarily anadromous, which means they live
in a saltwater habitat and migrate to fresh water only to spawn. Landlocked
striped bass introduced in freshwater systems are the exception to this rule.
The body color of striped bass is olive-green, blue-gray or bluish-black
on the top with silver sides and a white belly. It is easily identified by
its seven or eight black stripes that run horizontally along its sides. Fins
are dusky silver color, except for the white pelvic fins. Young striped bass
may not have the horizontal stripes or they may be interrupted.
Striped bass also have two distinct dorsal fins. The first has seven to
12 stiff spines, which make this fin taller than the second. The second dorsal
fin has only one stiff spine with eight to 14 soft rays. Stripers also have
a forked tail.
Many freshwater anglers have difficulty distinguishing striped bass from
white bass and hybrids. The stripes on the striper are solid, unbroken and
most will extend all the way to the tail. On whites and wipers, the stripes
are faint and only one will extend to the tail on each side. Striped bass
also have a longer, sleeker body and a larger head than white bass and hybrid.
In addition, striped bass have two tooth patches on the tongue, as opposed
to one.
Range: Striped bass are found in abundant numbers along the East
Coast, Gulf Coast, and West Coast of the United States. Along the East Coast,
they range from the St. Lawrence River in Canada to the St. John’s River
in Florida. Those native to the Mid-Atlantic (Virginia, Maryland and North
Carolina) migrate north in the summer and return during the fall. In this
region, the Chesapeake and Hudson River systems are the primary spawning grounds.
Large numbers can also be found in the river systems of Maine during the summer
months.
In the Gulf of Mexico, they can be found along the coasts of Florida, Alabama,
Mississippi, and Louisiana. On the Pacific Coast they range from the Columbia
River in Oregon to southern California, with the greatest concentration around
San Francisco Bay.
There have been numerous attempts to introduce striped bass into inland
waters of the United States. Some states, such as Texas, have had much success.
Stripers have been stocked in large reservoirs and their associated river
systems throughout the Midwest and South. Survival and growth of stocked stripers
depend heavily on an abundance of food species, primarily threadfin or gizzard
shad, as well as plenty of deep water. Most inland waters lack the spawning
conditions stripers require, so they must be maintained through continued
stocking programs.
Habitat: In their native saltwater environments, striped bass are
regarded as “inshore” fish. They will not stray far from the coasts,
preferring the security of medium depths (less than 100 feet) with the ability
to move shallow in pursuit of food. They will generally travel in schools
in search of abundant open-water baitfish and are often found near piers,
flats, rocks, and surf troughs.
Although they spend most of their lives in ocean water near the coast, they
migrate to freshwater rivers to spawn. Stripers will often swim up to 100
miles into tidal rivers to find proper spawning conditions.
When stocked in fresh water, they are likely to inhabit open-water areas
for most of the year. True to their nomadic nature, striped bass will follow
their preferred prey species instead of holding to cover or structure. They
are less likely to be found near the shore unless they happen to be chasing
a school of baitfish.
Although they are unable to spawn in most cases, freshwater stripers will
still migrate into tributaries in attempts to spawn, most often in early spring.
At these times, stripers are more easily found by fishermen in coves, dams,
creek arms or the tributary itself.
Striped bass prefer water temperatures between 60 and 68 F but can tolerate
a wide range of temperatures as evidenced by their native and introduced range.
Food Usage/Selection: Young striped bass favor zooplankton and move
to freshwater shrimp and midge larvae as they grow. Adult striped bass are
known for ravenous appetites and predatory feeding habits. In salt water,
the bulk of their diet is small fish such as herring, menhaden, flounder,
silversides, and eels. They also consume significant quantities of worms,
squid, and crabs. Land-locked freshwater stripers feed almost exclusively
on large shad and minnow species, although they will consume mayflies (where
available) when hatching near the surface.
Many fishermen have found striped bass to be more active feeders during
the nighttime hours. As a result, they prefer to fish for striped bass in
low-light conditions or at night. Also, striped bass move in schools and all
fish within a school will generally feed at the same time on the same prey.
Sporting Qualities: The greatest challenge in fishing for saltwater
striped bass is determining what their favored foods are and which one they
have selected to feed on at that time. Aside from those challenges, striped
bass can be caught using virtually every fishing technique known (casting,
trolling, jigging and fly-fishing) using nearly any type of bait or lure.
Popular methods along the East Coast include surf casting, plugging from a
drifting boat, drifting eels from a boat, fly-fishing with streamers and surface
flies, jigging with feathered jigs, and trolling with sandworms.
General information: The striped bass is a schooling species, moving
about in small groups during the first two years of life and thereafter feeding
and migrating in large schools. Seven or eight narrow stripes extending lengthwise
from back of the head to the base of the tail form the most easily recognized
characteristic of this species, hence the old Indian and colonial name of
"linesider". Striped bass can live up to 40 years and can reach
weights greater than 60 pounds, although individuals larger than 50 pounds
are rare. Females reach significantly greater sizes than do males; most stripers
over 30 pounds are female. Thus, the term "bulls," originally coined
to describe extremely large individuals, has been more accurately changed
to "cows" in recent times.
Habitat: The striped bass or "striper" is native to most
of the East Coast, ranging from the lower St. Lawrence River in Canada to
northern Florida, and along portions of the Gulf of Mexico. Stripers inhabit
the whole coast surf, inshore bars, reefs, tide rips, bays and estuaries.
Stripers are particularly active in areas with tidal and current flows and
in the wash of breaking waves.
Food: Striped bass eat a variety of foods, including fish such as
alewives, flounder, sea herring, menhaden, sand lance, silver hake, tomcod,
smelt, silversides and eels, as well as lobsters, crabs, soft clams, small
mussels, sea worms and squid. They feed most actively at dusk and dawn, although
some feeding occurs throughout the day. During the midsummer they tend to
become more nocturnal.
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