

During this time and all the way up to 2007, Dwayne was still being credited in films as “The Rock” or “Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson”. His appearance in film and WWE was simultaneous for about 5 more years but ultimately he set his sights on the rocky road that is the American film industry. As it turns out, this was just the beginning of the volcano for this rockstar, going on to become a globally known film presence following his rocky start in 2001’s The Mummy Returns. After going undrafted to the NFL in 1991, he began to take on his new name and persona: The Rock. Before his extremely successful career in WWE, Dwayne was a championship defensive end for the University of Miami. Not bad for a few hours of fun.Known most prominently for his extensive history in WWE, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson is and always will be an unstoppable boulder rolling down the hill of mediocrity and into the valley of triumphant victory.

We ended up with sixteen black sea bass and one lobster. depth, 55 degrees on the bottom, 71 degrees on the top, 20-20' viz, a slight current, no surge, and lots of black sea bass! on this dragger was only 20', which is still great for an in-shore wreck. We had to keep this one short since Captain Rob had afternoon plans. This was one of the best fishing spots I've ever seen, and we cleaned up! I lit up where he wanted to hunt, he shot, and I bagged. I brought my spear gun down, and once I got to the hook, I noticed that the tip on my speargun was gone! I lost two tips! I left the speargun at the hook and became Anthony's light & bag man. It is nearby, but not with the clamming boat.

Actually, this dive was on the dragger that came off the boat as it sank. depth, 36 minutes runtime, 54 degrees on the bottom, and 70 on the surface.ĭive #3 was on a clammer that sunk many years ago. I brought only one sea bass to the surface, but Anthony cleaned up with six. We spend our entire dive in this one area. We entered the water to find the same conditions as dive #1, and where we hooked was a great spot. Our intention was to go down the anchor line to the hook and turn right to the main section. This is an old broken-up barge in 71' of water. Luckily I had a spear gun as a backup on the boat for dive #2.ĭive #2 was on the Brick Barge. At the surface, I realized I lost my spear tip. depth, 38 minutes, 54 degrees bottom temp, 70 degrees surface temp. After a 38 minute runtime, the dive was over. He also played with a few other lobster, but only one came to visit us on the surface. Anthony and I bagged one bug as a team near the end of the dive, and I hit one black sea bass. Clearly this wreck was hit recently and someone cleaned it out. We set off hunting, but didn't find too much.
#The bay 2012 runtime full
We had no current, no surge, great visibility, and full tanks. Thirty feet of viz on an in-shore wreck! Amazing. Once we dropped through it, at about 50' depth, the wreck and the sand, which was still a good 30' below us, was clearly visible. What the fish finder thought was fish was actually a dense thermocline, which lasted for about 20'. and the temp dropped from 70 degrees at the surface to 54 degrees on the bottom. We entered the water with no current and 10+ feet of viz on the surface. The fish-finder/depth finder showed a load of fish over the wreck.or so we thought. Anthony and I each brought our JBL pole spears with paralyzer tips. It was Lake Atlantic!ĭive #1 was on the Yellow Flag, which is an unidentified wooden schooner, sitting in 82' of water. Once we got out of the bay, the seas sat down to 0' waves. It was a clear sunny day which began pleasant enough, since we left the dock in Barnegat before 7:00 am. The weather report was calling for 1' seas every 10 seconds. Too bad Jeremiah Hupka had to work! Surface conditions couldn't have been better. His friend Rob Captained the boat for us so we could dive as he fished. and I hit three wreck sites today (7/3/12) since we both have some time off.
