So the heat has continued here on this coast and to add to it, no rain has fallen in almost a month now I think. Today there were some showers in the area and we heard thunder but not a drop fell on Wolf Ridge. It was mostly west, off toward the river at Escatawpa. I'm sure Seaman's Cove got a shower. It always does when it thunders there. Always. Daytime highs have been in the 90s and last far into the evening. The UV index has been off the charts. Melanoma weather is what I call it. I avoid too much exposure to the sun this time of year.
The big yellow and black swallow-tailed butterflies are still here, along with a bevy of hummingbirds. I enjoy the little fellows dogfighting and zooming about, while the giant swallow-tails just glide like the song of a singer. With no rain, I've see exactly TWO naked ladies heralding the fall. I suppose they're waiting on one drop of moisture before they put on their show. The cypress vines are also dying and the red flowers the hummers love are going to become scarce soon. It's like nature (and me) are holding our breaths, waiting on the cool and a little breeze out of the north. There has been a consistent NE breeze at dawn and it has been tolerable, but by 10 am it is already getting to hot for this old guy.
I've considered another go at the fish under the lights. I had also considered a brill-net outing to see if we could catch some shrimp, but so far I haven't located the net. It must have been swallowed by the mists of time or something, because I quit using bait a long time ago. I'll have to admit that there is nothing like seeing the shrimp under a cork jumping to escape hungry jaws. You know things are fixin' to get reel then :)
A net saves a whole lot of money with shrimp at today's prices. It also allows one to catch bull minnows and small mullet, both of which are excellent bait. And menhaden too, although I like the later season, larger fish when I fish them. There are certain places that are conducive to catching enough shrimp for food too. That's kind of fun, sitting around throwing the net after baiting a place up with rabbit food, and what my intent with the net was. A beer is usually involved because throwing a big net can become work and it is supposed to be fun. So far I can't convince my better half to bring herself and her pistol with me, just in case. I feel real safe when she's around and has her purse. She told me she didn't want to wind up like Calvin and Charlie, being poked by aliens after THEY went fishing at night ;D
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pascagoula_incident
...And the kids like to be present throwing the net too, digging around in the wriggling mass once you score. You have to teach them how, because EVERYTHING ( but a menhaden)has a means of inflicting pain. Being stabbed by the tail spine on a big white shrimp is no joke. Those big white shrimp are gathering I know, so there's reason for finding the net.
They get big enough that the word shrimp doesn't quite describe those big ole "cobs". As in describing a the diameter of a cob of corn, which is pretty accurate for a big, white hopper, to use the other name I know for them. Two words ingrained here if you know the lingo and are keyed into this life. A really big white shrimp can jump almost 20 ft in the blink of an eye. They have huge antenna feeling the murky waters, and a have a florescent green accent on their fins. Really, they're not as good table fare as the brown shrimp, but so fun to catch. I do love to grill 'em too!
I'll not soon forget that night a friend and I hit a bonanza. Once I threw the net and the edge of it landed next to a BIG one. It launched itself with that tremendous tail, and became a missile, and with two more flicks, was gone in the darkness. Big honking shrimp!