Thursday, June 11, 2026

Uncle Ned

   


   When I fish for Smallmouth Bass one of my go to lures has always been a grub on a one eighth ounce jighead. I've been using this lure for years. I keep the colors simple and have used Green Pumpkin and the light purple made by Mister Twister. For the last couple decades, I have only fished for Smallmouth a few times a year. Most of the time was spent fishing for stripers (then finding birds) so I really did not attempt to learn new techniques. 

   Since I hadn't really concentrated on freshwater bass for two decades, I actually had to learn about new ways to catch them when I got hired at Bass Pro. Different ways to catch bass had been invented (or become popular) while I was fishing the surf. So at night after work, I would do a lot of research. Besides learning about these new lures, I'd spend time reading product reviews on rods, reels, and rain gear.

   If I didn't have a good excuse (stripers, albies, and birds) I'd be embarrassed to admit I had to learn about Ned Rigs. A Ned Rig is a soft plastic bait on a jighead. It differs from my go to grub on a jighead in two ways. First is the jig itself. A typical round ball jighead will lie flat on the bottom when at rest. A Ned head is top heavy and will stand up when dropped to the bottom. You can already tell that this will appeal to a fish. Since the plastic will not be lying flat on the bottom, instead swaying in the current it would be very enticing for a fish that sees it.

   Secondly, while anything the right size can be put on a jighead such as a grub, shad body, crawfish, fluke...etc, the most common Ned soft plastic has almost no motion. The most popular soft plastics for bait on a Ned head look like half of a straight tail worm such as a Senko. For whatever reason, three inch straight tail worms are the most popular plastics for Ned Rigs by far. Most companies make them from Yum to Bass Pro Shops. The come in many different colors.

 


 Laat year while smallie fishing in New Hampshire I caught my first fish on a Ned Rig. Ironically, my fist fish was a Rock Bass but I did catch a number of Smallmouth. I knew this was something I wanted to get good at so I bought twenty packages of Ned baits from different companies in different colors. Some are even made of different material. While many feel like traditional plastic worms, some brands such as Z man make them with elastic in them. These baits can be stretched like an elastic and are extremely tough.  You can catch dozens of fish on one bait and you are probably going to get it caught on the bottom long before you would have needed to change the plastic. 

   As for the jighead, I decided not to use lead. Since lead is illegal in Mass, NH, and Maine, I figured I may as well start with tungsten from the beginning. Ned heads are expensive anyway (as opposed to traditional round heads) so the extra cost of the tungsten wasn't very much more.

    I bought my heads from a company called Nako. They specialize in non-lead products. I had ordered from them before so I knew that they have a 20% off sale near Christmas along with free shipping over fifty dollars. So, like I did at work with the bodies, I bought a bunch of packages last December. I bought all sizes from one tenth to one quarter ounce. However, if I could only buy one size it would be the one eighth ounce with a 2/0 hook. You can choose the hook size on most weights. I wish I would have bought less of other sizes and more of that size. Despite having ten or so Nako packs in different sizes, I'll probably order more of that one size again in December.

   This year when I did my annual smallmouth trip, I used Ned rigs. I made a point to fish them instead of the traditional grub on a round head. The truth is, I don't know if I caught anymore fish with Ned jigs than I would have with the grubs, but I figured that learning something new was a good idea. At the very least, it was fun getting hits on something I really never used much before.

  I bought Ned plastics from many different companies. Bass Pro made an elastic plastic that for some reason they discontinued. When I realized this, I bought all of them up that we had left in the store. So I got colors of black/blue, Pb&J, brown/orange, and an off white. I bought the Z man green pumpkin and the Yoga Pants. I bought some of the Rapala Ned BLT and the Missile baits Ned Bomb. 

   Obviously, I did not try all of these brands and colors while fishing for a couple of days. However, of the ones that I used my favorite is the Missile Ned Bomb in the Goby color. Ned Bombs are not shaped like the others. Instead of being a half a plastic worm the end is shaped like a beaver tail. So it sways a little in the water. I felt as though this little bit of movement would entice fish. And again, do I know if I caught more fish with this than I would have if I stuck with the Rapala BLT in brown/ orange ( looks a lot like crawfish color)? I don't know. But I do know confidence is key when fishing. and I was confident in this bait. 

   

Rock Bass on a Ned

One thing that surprised me is how many actual hook ups I got with the bait. I missed very few fish that struck  the bait. I can assume it is because of the bait standing on its end. If I fish hits it, the hook is already in its mouth. There were plenty of times that I didn't feel the hit and when I tightened the line, I had a fish on. This is typical of Ned rigs because you will hook fish on the drop or as soon as it hits the bottom. 

  Despite having twenty packs of various Neds, I bought four more packs of the Missile Bait in the Goby color when I got home (with an employee discount and gift cards). Will I ever use all twenty packs of baits sitting in a shoe box...no. Will someone get use out of them when I die someday? I hope so.

   You may be asking why they are named Ned Rig? Why Uncle Ned? Well, the inventor of Ned Rigs actually was a guy named Ned Kehde. He was a midwestern fisherman and he invented this finesse type of fishing in the early 2000's. So, I think we can all call this guy our Uncle Ned (a term first used by my old boss Marc at work). It is a fun, very successful way to catch fish

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Herps and Butterflies

 


  Over the last few days Laurie and I have been out looking for herps and butterflies. I usually get really bad seasonal depression in June. When May migration is over I go into a funk that takes me some time to get out of. The crash after the high of May is hard for me to overcome. The past few years I actually planned vacations in June so I'd have something to look forward to. This strategy worked to a T. However, Laurie and I are planning a long trip to Florida in October so I don't want to use any vacation time.

   On my days off, we have been spending time looking for snakes, turtles, and butterflies. Besides looking at the ground to find snakes, we've been bringing a butterfly net to try to capture some butterflies for easier identification. This time in the field has really been fun and I have not been seasonally depressed. 

   Laurie has really been into this hands on nature viewing. Neither of us are any kind of butterfly expert so we have been taking a field guide with us.

   In terms of herping, we have had quality over quantity. Over the course of my life I had seen a total of three Eastern Box Turtles in New England. Of the three, two of them were at BioBlitz where hundreds of eyes would look at the ground. However, over the course of the last three days I have seen two additional Eastern Box Turtles. Laurie found both of them while we were out hiking for herps. Thanks to her keen eye I have some fantastic photos

Below is the first one that she found. Many pictures and more text below it.






Of the seven species of butterflies that we identified the last few days this is the best photo. The species below is a Red Spotted Purple


  Today's Eastern Box Turtle was at a different location. It did not move when we saw it. We did wait for it to move into tall grass out of the view of possible poachers.





Monday, June 8, 2026

Pelagic Boat Trip


    Despite saying a couple years ago that I had retired from pelagic boat trips I keep finding reasons to go on one. Last year, I went on one because I still needed a species of Shearwater that had been split from another species (Scopolis).

   This year when a pelagic was being planned I asked Laurie if she wanted to go. My logic is that she had never been on a dedicated pelagic and she loves boats. Last year, when I went, I saw hundreds of dolphins. I was hoping this trip would have dolphins and whales to make Laurie happy. 


   The purpose of these trips is actually to see birds. Thirty or so birders charter one of the whale watch boats of the Francis Fleet. You really can't see any of the Shearwaters or Jaegers from shore so taking a trip out to see them is the only way to count them for the year. As many of you know, Laurie is not a birder so she was hoping to see whales.

   The birding was pretty good. We got four species of Shearwaters, a Jaeger, and Wilson's Storm Petrels. Birds were around the boat most of the trip. There was one whale seen. Unfortunately, only myself a couple other people saw it. It was a small whale so it was almost certainly a  Minke. The non-birding highlight of the trip were Ocean Sunfish. These large fish can reach up to six hundred pounds. They will float on their side at the surface. I personally saw three of them. 

With a couple hours left in our trip we took the long way back around the west side of Block ISland. The scenery was terrific. We saw both North Light, Southeast Light, the cliffs, Southwest Point and seals hauled out.

   All in all, if you were a birder it was a pretty good trip. If you like mammals, it wasn't very good. I wish it had been better for Laurie. No pelagics are like any other. Some are great and some can be duds. This one was somewhere in the middle

Below are multiple photos Paul Miller took of the Ocean Sunfish. His photos are way better than mine and by far the best I have seen. Below his photos are a few more of mine from the trip.


This photo and the following three  below were 
taken by Paul Millert











My photos below



Seals off of the North Rip




North Light


Southeast Lighthouse


Sunday, June 7, 2026

One Fish, Two Fish, Three Fish, all small fish


    During the days after Memorial Day I went up to New Hampshire to do some Smallmouth fishing. I went up to an impoundment on the Connecticut River. I'm just now getting a chance to write about it. Laurie went up with me so I spent the mornings fishing while she explored downtown Littleton and a covered bridge. The afternoons were taken up by picnics, waterfalls, a little trout fishing, and a couple of mountain lakes.

   I fished two mornings and caught a lot of fish. All of my fish were caught on  Ned Rigs and a couple on topwater lures ( Zara Puppy). The problem I had was, I wasn't looking for a lot of fish, I was hoping for a big fish. I knew I could catch plenty of small males. It was the trophy female I was hoping to catch.

 


 Alas, it was not meant to be. My biggest fish barely cracked fifteen inches and was just under two pounds. I tried shoreline areas and I tried deepwater dropoffs but without any luck. I've caught well over a hundred fish in this lake and I have never cracked three pounds. I think I have to accept that this lake has a lot of fish but no (or very few big ones).

    A few days after I came home, I was talking to a customer at work who fishes the same lake.  He told me he did a tournament up there and they all had the same problem. None of the fish that were weighed in were very big. I think it is time for me to branch out and try different ponds. A four pound Smallmouth has eluded me for too long. 

Rock Bass

   On  the bright side, I did hook up with Rock Bass and a  Black Crappie. I even had a pike follow a small jerkbait. 

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Black Billed Cuckoo

   As I said in the last post, the birding highlight of my three days away was a  Black Billed Cuckoo that was just amazing. I've only seen a handful of Black Billed (and for that matter Yellow Billed) Cuckoos. Mostly, I get partial views of them hiding in trees. The bird deserved its own post

   While walking along the road at Plum Island a group of birders were standing at a road crossing of a trail. One told me that a cuckoo was in the bushes. He showed me where to look and sure enough there it was. It was partially obscured by foliage but a step to the right or left and a slight bend and you could see the whole bird. I was quite happy to see it.


                                                  Below is the view I first got of the cuckoo.


  After a few minutes I decided I'd move off and let others get the same view of the bird. I sat on a guard rail and hoped that when it eventually flew it may land in the tree in front of me. Well, it did. It landed on an exposed branch and sat there about thirty seconds. I started shooting my camera hoping the light was good.  The photos below are what I got. I feel very grateful for the experience









   Below is one of the photos cropped. I prefer to post my photos without any enhancements. Even if I could post a nicer photo if I crop it or edit it, I'd rather post the raw honest photo. However, in this case I figured I'd quickly crop one of the above photos. 

Cropped


Friday, May 22, 2026

Three Days in May

 

Eastern Musk Turtle

    I had three days off from work this week. I took a vacation day and had my regular two days off consecutively to give myself three consecutive. The first day I hung out with my friend Charles in Rhode Island. He had moved to Brazil two years ago and this was his first time back in the states. The other two days I birded Plum Island. I stayed at the campground at Salisbury Beach on Wednesday night.

   Charles and I (and Laurie) had objectives on Tuesday. We met at Miantonomi and birded early. Next we were going to stop at a reliable spot for Musk Turtle From there we were going to look for White Ibis which would be a Rhode Island state bird for me. We would look for more birds in southern RI before heading north to hopefully find him a Black Crappie. Both Eastern Musk Turtle and Black Crappie would be lifers for Charles. 

  We met at around 7 am but birding was slow at Mia so we were out of there by 9:30. We quickly found a couple of Eastern Musk Turtles and Charles couldn't have been happier. I didn't get the White Ibis. The tide was really high and it was easy to scan the area and it was devoid of a large white heron shaped bird with a pink curved beak

   We went to a place that has breeding Hooded Warblers. Charles and I found three along with many other nice nesting birds such as Baltimore Oriole, Louisiana Waterthrush, and Eastern Wood Peewee. Charles was again thrilled. The highlight other than the Hooded Warblers was a loud Wood Thrush singing right out in the open.

   We then headed north to try to catch a Black Crappie. I failed in this quest. I landed two sunfish and broke off a big Chain Pickerel. We also saw Golden Shiners spawning. We dropped Charles off at a motel in Mansfield so he could take the train and a bus connection back to Newport the following morning. 

   

Wood Thrush

   Wednesday and Thursday Laurie and I went to Plum Island. Birding was okay. We saw good birds but had to work for them. They weren't dripping from trees. I got less than ten species of warblers both days. We did see five Blackburnian Warblers and I saw a Bay-Breasted. However we dipped on many of the rarer warblers like Canada, Wilson's and Cape May. 

  Despite being slow, a rarity shows up at Parker River each day. Last week while we were there a Wilson's Pharalope was in Bill Forward Pool. On Wednesday a Hooded Warbler showed up that most everyone  was trying to see it. For me, birding in RI, Hooded isn't super rare. Thursday, a Tricolored Heron was in the same pool as last week's Pharalope. We also saw a Yellow Crowned Night heron, Orioles, an Orchard Oriole, and Purple Martins. We didn't go to the ocean or saltmarsh but we ended up getting fifty one species. 

   By far, the highlight was a Black Billed Cuckoo that hung around for ten minutes on Thursday. I had never seen one out in the open for so long. It was special.

Veery cute bird
   Besides the birds, I tried shad fishing in the Merrimack but didn't catch any. Wednesday night after supper Laurie walked to the mouth of the river and watched nine Harbor Seals haul out on rocks. It was a relaxing way to enjoy the evening. 

  Thursday was cool (after two scorchers) but we tried for Blanding's Turtle for a third time at Oxbow NWR on the way home. We struck out. The best we could do was finding two Garter Snakes and a Veery. 

   All in all, my three days off were not truly amazing, but we made some good memories and it beat the hell out of work. It was good medicine for my gypsy soul. 

American Toad



Wild Geranium


Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Mount Auburn Cemetery

 

Summer Tanager

   If you were to look up some of the best places in the United States to see migrating warblers you would find Mount Auburn Cemetery (MAC for now on) in Cambridge on that list. MAC is an open green space in a sea of urban development. When migrating warblers see the sun coming up, if they are over the ocean they look for the nearest land. From the ocean they can see the hills in Cambridge and head in that direction. Once at the cemetery the birds have seventy foot oaks, flowering trees, and shrubs to hide, rest, and feed in. As a matter of fact, during migration, Mt Auburn will have one of the highest total of warbler species on average seen in the entire country on any given day.

   I had never been to Mt Auburn Cemetery despite the well earned fame. I could never bring myself to deal with Boston traffic. Instead, I have always taken the much longer but much easier drive to Parker River NWR on Plum Island. Rarely have I been disappointed on Plum so I always try to make it back each year. 

   Dan Berard, whom was the Ocean State Bird Club president for many years was leading a walk at MAC on Mother's Day and reached out to the OSBC for members to join him. At first I thought about all of the reasons why I didn't want to go but then I realized this was a golden opportunity. We had to meet at 7 AM so despite my hatred of getting up early, I knew I wouldn't have to deal with traffic on a Sunday morning. I was birding with my friend Nicole from Connecticut and of course, I dragged Laurie along. A couple other Rhode Island birders Chris and Su also joined the walk. 

   We met just inside the gate at 7 AM and to my surprise our group was only about ten people. We walked around the huge cemetery for the next five and a half hours. In that time we walked a variety of landscapes. There is a very tall hill with a tower that was rumored to have a Summer Tanager. There are a couple of small ponds. There were dozens of flowering trees along with the already mentioned seventy foot oaks.

 


 Dan is the best birder I know. He can hear birds from distances that no one else can hear. He knows all of their calls and the subtle differences of ones that look almost alike. We ended up identifying twenty four species of warblers!!! Twenty four!! I did not hear or see all of them but as a group that is the number of warbler species that we know were in the cemetery. I have never been on a walk with anywhere near that number of species. I think the closest I've ever gotten was eighteen (twice). 

   The best warblers that I actually saw were Blackburnian, Bay Breasted, and Blackpoll. The best bird of the day was a Summer Tanager. Though I usually see at least one a year, it was a lifer for many of the people on our walk. We had multiple Baltimore Orioles, a Bald Eagle, Broadwing Hawk, and a Least Flycatcher along with dozens of species.

   I didn't take a ton of photos because many of the birds were really high up and most of the day was cloudy. Still it was great having so many migrating species around. I truly understand what makes Mount Auburn so special.

 


 A few notes. The place is huge and there are a lot of cemetery roads. I would have gotten lost if I were not on a guided walk. If I went again, I would download a map before hand or pick one up at the entrance. This area is named "mount" for a reason. It is very hilly. Some of the paths and roads are steep. Parking is allowed on any road that doesn't have a green line down the middle. From Norton on a quiet Sunday morning it was a fifty three minute drive. It is about fifteen minutes (maybe slightly less) from the  Mass Pike without traffic on a weekend morning. There is a bathroom near the main gate but that is the only one. There were a lot of birders at the cemetery (it is famous) and I had a ten minute wait to use the bathroom.