There's a lot of preparation to go out there and catch some sailfish. Some mates will say it's a pain in the ass to work up in Stuart. Seems like it's increased a lot since back then. But to see that the amount of preparation and the amount of work that goes into it sure. What we'd pull were smaller, nobody ever put 50 mullets on a, on a dredge back then we might pull a double or something with a dozen mullets on it, or, you know, 18 mullets at the time. It was a rarity for us to pull a dredge every day until my second or third year on the bone shaker, we kind of started doing that on a regular basis. On a daily basis, we'd gather and pull a couple of squid chains. But to my knowledge, Dave was the first one that was doing that. They'd done a lot of tuna fishing up north with guys pulling the umbrella rigs and all that stuff. I remember guys rigging one on the dock before a tournament there. When I came to Stewart in the late eighties, there were a couple of guys pulling dredges, maybe Dave Berard would. "VJ Bell: Technology's changed a lot, we have good winners and we have bad winners. We've added a short summary of a conversation we recently had with VJ Bell on our Podcast. He is a business steward, big game fishing, where he does some chartering when the owner is not using the boat. VJ Bell runs a boat in Stuart called the “Unbelievable”.VJ Bell grew up in Virginia, just south of Moshe city. In this blog post VJ Bell, Anthony Pino & Nick Carullo Talk about the change of dredge fishing in different times & in different places, how Anthony doesn’t pull dead bait dredges and how other guys only pull dead bait dredges.
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