Striped Bass Fishing - Monomoy Rips, Cape Cod, MA
Learn more about this video at including recommended tackle at from Northeast Angling ( Free saltwater fishing video, tips and techniques, fishing spots, destinations, news, fishing reports, product reviews. and much more! In this video: Captains Andy and Rich join Capt Mitch Mills of the Helen H Fleet to hook up with striped bass in the famous Monomoy Rips.
2013 101st Airborne Division MA Veteran's Fishing Trip
- Fellow Army veterans enjoyed the second annual 101st Airborne Association of New England fishing trip for veterans and wounded warriors of the North Shore. On board the fishing charter were veterans from Amesbury, Newburyport, Beverly, Boston, New Hampshire, and Connecticut. Some of them seek shelter at nearby veteran home. But the trip was not all about the fishing. It was about the bond the veterans share regardless of their age and experience in the Army.
The event was coordinated by Dick George and Dick Kelley, two veterans who served in the storied division and are active in the association. Local businesses and private donors on the North Shore funded the trip.
Excerpt from Veterans gather to cast a line on the high seas, by Terri Ogan, The Boston Globe
Provincetown Cape Cod in great place known as Ptown
This video is the 1st of 4 video clips taken of Provincetown Harbor on February 25, 2011. It was a beautiful and bright sunny day in Ptown with a little wind. The video shows the Harbor from the view point of the beach at the end of the Johnson Street Parking Lot. You can see MacMillian Wharf and the local fishing boats docked.
Whales off Cape Cod
Hi Friends,
This is Bonny from On Wings Of Care. Sorry these videos are such poor quality, but the humpback whales you'll see in them are so stunning that we thought you'd appreciate them all the same.
These videos were all taken between this past July 5 and 12th, near Cape Cod, MA. To be more precise, most of them were taken in or very near the Stellwagen Bank Marine Sanctuary, and all between 41 and 42.5 degrees N in latitude and 069 and 070.5 degrees W in longitude.
Although we also saw Fin and Minke whales, basking sharks and blue sharks and great white sharks, and even one fine-looking leatherback turtle, we only have recognizable video of the humpbacks. You'll see them bubble-fishing, where they (individually or often in coordinated teams of two to six) would dive very deep and blow air up to the surface in a ring, scaring the fish into the center, then come up in the center with their mouths wide open, gulping fish while straining the water through their baleen. The birds were all there for the feasts, too. We have some outstanding still photographs that you can view on our website, OnWingsOfCare.org, all courtesy of our friends and hosts from the International Fund for Animal Welfare headquarters there. The best photos you'll see are almost all from the expert eye and equipment of Jake Levenson.
It was doubly exciting to watch these humpbacks with the people we were flying, as most of them have devoted many years of their lives to studying, protecting, and rescuing these magnificent animals. They have also been involved with identifying individual whales in this area, so when we got good views of the undersides of flukes, these folks would often shout ecstatically the name of that particular whale! We saw mothers and calves, in one case what looked to be a very small calf, nursing and playing and learning to slap the water. We saw adolescents practicing their maneuvers including beautiful breaches, until they literally lay still in exhaustion for several minutes. By the way, rest assured that we did not disturb the whales in any way. We were careful to keep appreciable altitude, both for the whales' sake and because of all the fishing and recreational boats in the vicinity. We also spent several flights searching for whales that had been reported to be entangled in fishing gear, in order to help local rescuers as well as the Coast Guard find them.
Enjoy!
baby seal stranded at Sachuets Point Wildlife Refuge in Newport RI
My friend and I were walking on the rocks when we stumbled on this guy. He looked like he was in rough shape but some how got the energy to push himself past the rocks and into the water. It was an amazing thing to see it all unfold because we didn't think he was going to make it.. With a little fear( of us) and moral support it managed to push past the rocky obstacles and into the water. Very heartfelt and inspiring