Sand Sifter
Active member
For those of you on the East Coast planning to rock the beach after the coming nor’easter, I’d like to get your opinions. I was fortunate to book a 3-night stay at the beach just after the nor’easter, so I’ll have 2 days to hunt. I’ll be taking my Dual Field PI and my BBS SMF Sovereign Elite with 12x10 & 15x12 SEF coils. With those 2, I should be well armed to go deep in shallow water, wet sand, or the dry.
Low tides in early morning so need to arrive early, as my top priority is hitting shallow water with my PI during low tide, working my way back up the wet as the tide comes in. I wasn’t initially considering hitting the dry, but I’ve been thinking that after the tide comes in, spending some time working the dry might not be a bad idea, so this is where I’d like to get everyone’s opinion.
Beach cams are showing the water rising up higher and higher on the dry. Weather reports in DE & MD are warning of flooding and indicate that water would rise up so high; it will cover about a foot of the coastal highway. I’ve seen that years ago during another storm. Just thinking, if the water reaches that far up to cover the highway, the dry will be totally submerged under water for some time. If that’s the case, I’m assuming there’s a chance that rising water might deposit targets all throughout the dry. When the water recedes, it might strip sand from the dry, putting targets within easier reach.
Hitting shallow water and wet sand are my 2 “go-to” areas, we all do that. But I’d like to get everyone’s opinion about hitting the dry after it’s been flooded by incoming water from a serious storm, then potentially being stripped as water recedes back into the ocean. I’ve read some reports from others who mentioned that hunting after a serious storm; they discovered the storm left a “towel line” of targets in the middle section of the dry.
Any thoughts, opinions, or experience hunting the dry after a nor’easter or other serious storm?
Low tides in early morning so need to arrive early, as my top priority is hitting shallow water with my PI during low tide, working my way back up the wet as the tide comes in. I wasn’t initially considering hitting the dry, but I’ve been thinking that after the tide comes in, spending some time working the dry might not be a bad idea, so this is where I’d like to get everyone’s opinion.
Beach cams are showing the water rising up higher and higher on the dry. Weather reports in DE & MD are warning of flooding and indicate that water would rise up so high; it will cover about a foot of the coastal highway. I’ve seen that years ago during another storm. Just thinking, if the water reaches that far up to cover the highway, the dry will be totally submerged under water for some time. If that’s the case, I’m assuming there’s a chance that rising water might deposit targets all throughout the dry. When the water recedes, it might strip sand from the dry, putting targets within easier reach.
Hitting shallow water and wet sand are my 2 “go-to” areas, we all do that. But I’d like to get everyone’s opinion about hitting the dry after it’s been flooded by incoming water from a serious storm, then potentially being stripped as water recedes back into the ocean. I’ve read some reports from others who mentioned that hunting after a serious storm; they discovered the storm left a “towel line” of targets in the middle section of the dry.
Any thoughts, opinions, or experience hunting the dry after a nor’easter or other serious storm?