 Rocky horror show
Sunday,
July 15, 2007
BY BRIDGET WENTWORTH
Star-Ledger Staff
Everything
started out fine one fall night about five years ago.
The water off Island Beach
State Park was calm, and the north jetty of Barnegat Inlet beckoned to Paul
Hofmann and his two fishing buddies
Equipment in hand and
footwear strapped on, the three made their way out along the jetty, an expanse
of huge, heavy stones that stretches 10 football fields into the Atlantic.
It was well after dark --
perfect for catching striped bass -- and the three settled in for what they
hoped would be a bountiful night.
Within hours, they were
fighting for their lives.
"We laugh about it
sometimes," Hofmann says, "but we were inches away from getting
killed."
This isn't party boat
fishing, rod in one hand, beer in the other. This isn't casual surfcasting from
the beach, rods dug into the sand while their owners lounge around.
Jetty fishing pits man
against one of New Jersey's biggest saltwater game fish -- and that's the easy
part. The rocks, covered with algae and as slick as ice, can take a fisherman's
feet right out from under him. Some have suffered broken limbs, smashed teeth,
and concussions.
Then there's the water.
Atlantic Ocean on one side, inlet on the other, strong currents everywhere.
Waves have swept unsuspecting fishermen off the rocks and into the water,
sometimes in the dead of night.
"I've had guys freeze
up, turn around, and go back in, and there's times when I'm afraid out
there," Hofmann says. "It's nothing to be bashful about. I've gone out
for 15 minutes and thought, 'This is too much, I'm going back in.' Everybody
gets afraid out there."
But these days this slice of
Jersey Shore sports culture is disappearing. No specific numbers are available,
but Hofmann, from Toms River, estimates there are just 250 or so serious jetty
fishermen left in New Jersey.
"There's a whole
generation of people who taught me how to fish, and that I fished with, that are
either too old right now, have retired and moved, or passed away," says
Hofmann, described by another fisherman as a "top surfcaster among his
peers."
Of course, that just means
there's more room on the rocks for the old-timers -- and that usually suits them
just fine.
"We always said a bass
off the jetty is worth five off a boat, because it's a far greater
challenge," says Hofmann, a 56-year-old retired civil engineer. "It's
not just the act of hooking a fish."
BOULDERS, WAVES AND PAIN
Fishermen
have been taking risks on Barnegat Inlet's north jetty for decades.
The jetty, and another one to
the south, were built in 1939 and 1940 by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to
stabilize the inlet and establish a connection between Barnegat Bay and the
ocean. During the early 1970s, the corps elevated the north jetty by six feet
using boulders that weigh several tons each. The idea was to keep sand and waves
from passing into the inlet.
Today, the corps maintains
approximately 10 jetties in New Jersey. Hundreds of smaller man-made structures,
commonly referred to as jetties but officially known as groins, line the coast
as well.
It is in these places that
fishermen -- territorial and isolationist, with names like Fishin' Mission Joe,
Broken Nose John, and No Fish -- spend their days and nights.
On this Tuesday afternoon at
Barnegat Inlet, the water looks like a postcard from the Bahamas, and Bucktail
Joe -- Joe Dolobacs , 63, of Seaside Park -- is fishing off the north jetty with
his son, Brian.
Brian, 38, sports a large
bandage on his left big toe, hiding the fact he no longer has a nail.
"I got hurt a couple
weeks ago," he says. "I took a slide and rammed my toe into the rocks.
In the 10-minute ride back to the house, it had already turned totally
black."
Many jetty fishermen wear
"Korkers" -- sandal-like cleats that strap onto fishing boots for a
good grip on the rocks.
Sneakers or bare feet don't
cut it on the rocks, which are lined with razor-sharp barnacles. It's something
amateurs often learn the hard way.
"Sometimes you'll say
something to them, and they'll say, 'Don't tell me what to do,'" Joe
Dolobacs says. "The worst thing I've seen out there is a guy with a child
on his shoulders."
The water poses an even
bigger danger.
"I've been moved by a
wave out on those rocks," Dolobacs says. "That's God trying to tell
you something. Anyone with a brain has left fish biting when that happens."
Dave Paulick, 57, of
Allentown, has fished the north jetty for a dozen years. Last November, he was
by himself at 1:30 a.m. when a wave tossed him into the water. He saw it coming
at the last second and tried bracing himself with his gaff, a long pole with a
hook on the end that fishermen use to haul up their catch.
It was no use.
"The wave just snapped
the gaff in half and put me in the inlet," Paulick says. "Luckily, the
tide wasn't ripping out, and I was only about 15 feet into the inlet.
"That water was cold. I
lost one of my boots."
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