Several years ago, October found me drifting over Napatree Point in Watch Hill, Rhode Island, hoping to find one of the stripers that frequent this rocky point. As I imagined the falling tide washing my eel pattern along, making it pulse beneath a heavy Teeny line, I was just getting oriented when BANG!! I was firmly hooked-up, but this fish suddenly tore off line in a peculiar way and at an alarming rate. I cursed myself for not having retied the knot to my backing . . . by now more than forty yards from my rod tip. Ten minutes passed before my first glance at the fish: a stunning, green torpedo racing around the boat. I was astounded at the tackle-trashing power and speed of this fish. I felt like I had brought a knife to a gun fight!
When I landed the fish, I took a picture and referred to my grandfather's copy of McClane's Encyclopedia and settled on Euthynnus alletteratus, commonly known as the little tunny, false albacore or simply "albie."
In southern New England, albies rarely appear before September and are typically preceded by the Atlantic bonito. Their presence coincides with a smorgasbord of bait for the albies to feed upon, including: butterfish, anchovies, sand eels and silversides. False albacore have a larger mouth than bonito and as a result, seem to feed on larger baits. In fact, the hottest albie action involves blueback herring. As with other pelagics, albies and bones must face into a swift current or swim very fast to cause enough water to pass over their gills. This is a pertinent fact when evaluating the most effective fly fishing tactics.
There are three different methods (not including chumming) that are used to hook-up with false albacore:
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| Doug Baz' first False Albacore |
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Ed Mitchell points out in his excellent book Fly Rodding The Coast that this " up and down" feeding behavior contributes to the impression that albies are "picky" He goes on to explain that the momentum of these fish makes it difficult for them to change direction quickly. As a result, the angler who knows he is in the fish but is not getting strikes then mistakenly believes the fish are "picky. "
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| Don Avondolio with 13 pound false albie, caught aboard Capt. Ken Turco's Lucky Strike |
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I once watched an albie intercept my butterfish pattern at a 90 degree angle as he sped past the boat. The iridescent streak closed his mouth on the fly but the hook did not sink home. Typically a bass or blue that had taken and dropped the bait would turn and strike the same bait again. This bird's eye view proved for me how difficult it is for the albie to change direction. Many anglers use a fast, hand-over-hand retrieve, but this makes the fly a difficult target for the speedy albie unless you are retrieving your fly directly ahead of the fish. The a wet fly swing or slow strip, on the other hand, keeps the fly in the strike zone as long as possible.
The perception that the albacore is picky also causes some anglers to use small streamers and long leaders to fool false albacore. Though most of my fish have fallen to 3- to 4-inch Rhody Flat Wings and Deceivers designed to imitate young blueback herring, I have landed albies on a variety of flies some as long as an eight-inch eel and as bulky as a five-inch slab side. I prefer the Flat Wing because the albies seem to strike from behind and then up and through the bait. Kenny Abrames' design, with the tail feathers tied horizontally, maximizes the profile the fish sees from that perspective.
In the Watch Hill area the albies arrive around Labor Day and stay through October. In years with warm, fall temperatures the fish may extend their annual lay over. They seem to depart as water temperature drops below sixty degrees. At that temperature, the remaining fish are spread out and therefore more difficult to hook.
In the North Carolina area, the false albacore is known as "Fat Albert. " A friend of mine summed it
up irreverently by saying "albies are pigs! " Are you as disrespectful? Before you go fishing for "fat
albert" be sure to check all your knots!
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