Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Jack City Dec. 18th; Trout City Dec. 19th

Hi,

The never-ending stucco job is almost through. Hallelujah!! Now the challenge is the wind!!! The trout have been hard to find. They haven't been at Walton where I usually wade until Friday (I did catch 5-- total -- in 5 or 6 trips there and my neighbor Jim caught about a 25" trout shallow- an awesome fish.

We (Jim and I) went out in the boat and caught about 15 trout on the East Side (North of Herman's and South of Bear Point), I caught about 12 of those. The next day we caught about the same but I only had 7 but one big one about 27".  I also caught a 25" trout wading North of Herman's last week.

As for snook, about two weeks ago the big snook came back in the lagoon. I've been catching 20-24" snook shallow but only one slot since late July. I caught 7 snook one day (two slots) plus a bunch of jack in a brutal Northeast wind. Then I went with Ken Turner and caught my second 50" snook. I didn't have my camera but it was measured on my fishing rod and it was just over 51" - my other big snook was much heavier and a whopping 54" (over 25 pounds). Since then (10 days ago), the big snook have disappeared.

I'm recapping two recent trips.

Jack City: Walton Scrub Friday Dec. 18th about 11:00 AM low tide incoming- very little wind. Some scattered bait. 1/8 oz. jig with a paddletail- white and sparkle.

Jim and I went at low tide. The tides in general have been higher and the wind has been blowing hard. Today the shallows were too shallow and no wind. We went deep and there were two boats fishing on either side of us. I caught six jacks all medium small (2 lbs) and Jim caught one. The people in the boats weren't getting bit and they left. We headed North, fishing around patches of bait. Still no wind!!!!

I caught three more jacks and we made it to the first pier. Too shallow and dead to fish the pier. I started catching a jack on almost every cast- it was unreal. I caught about 10 as we got to the second pier. Jacks are the hardest fighting fish- they turn on their sides and just pull and they rarely come up after being hooked. Then they swim around you in a circle. My biggest jack I caught last May- about 18 pounds and it took almost an hour to land!!!!

The 18th was Jack City -- I caught way over 30 jacks in two hours- whew-- my right arm ached!!!

The trout are back!!!! Walton Scrub-- Saturday afternoon (Dec 19) about 2:00 low tide incoming- Windy but out of the west so I had no problem casting- the waves were big but no whitecaps on the west side. I fished a 3/8 oz. jig with a sparkle paddletail. I was expecting jack City but it wasn't all jack today.

It was only 2 1/2 feet deep on this side of the sand-bar but there was some wind. The tide was coming in and the wind was swirling- rain was on the way. On my first cast I caught a 20" snook. Then fishing North I hooked a bigger snook- around 24". I went deep past the sandbar and hooked a 23" trout- 3 fish and no jack!!!

Then I stared catching Jack- one nice on and two medium before I hooked my second trout- it came up but I didn't get a pic of it before it jumped and threw the hook. I headed North toward the post where I caught trout during the summer. I saw a school of baitfish (pins) jumping across the water and cast deep to them- fish on!! It came up and I saw it was a trout- not what I was expecting. I took a pic and released it. Next cast- another trout on- they're back- finally the trout were back. I caught 10 trout and 4 jack before the bite slowed. I headed back in - rain clouds were coming. I caught another snook and a trout shallow before the rain started. I went up the hill and jumped in my car with my waders on- it was pouring!!!

My totals: 3 snook, 12 trout (4 over 20" and I lost at least 8 trout) and at least 10 jack. A great day on the water!!!



Thursday, November 12, 2015

Update October- November

Hi,

I've almost been fishing a year in the lagoon and also in the surf. Since I started working on my house I stopped blogging- sorry. I'm just going to recap some recent trips.

The snook fishing stayed hot in early October. I had two plus 5 snook days fishing shallow at Walton Scrub along the lagoon shoreline and hitting the docks as I went. My neighbor Jim caught a nice redfish on one trip.

Then the beach got crazy and Jim and I fished Joe's Point (the beach access named after Joe's Point Rd.- about two accesses North of Tiger Shores). There was so much bait and so many birds and fish -it was crazy. I couldn't cast at all some times because huge flocks of gulls, pelicans and other birds were dive bombing the bait. The first time, October 12, I caught 30 bluefish, 20 ladyfish and 2 mackerel. I went through 2 packs of of paddletails, 2 jigging spoons and got my line cut four times. Jim and I kept about 20 bluefish and two mackerel. There were tarpon swimming everywhere and fish busting the surface and flying out over waves. Just crazy. The next day the fish were still there. We caught fewer fish but we still kept about 20. Bluefish are a little bit oily but still good eating.

By November the snook weren't as active in the lagoon but you could still catch 2 or 3 every trip shallow. But the Jack were back. And I mean back!!!! Catching a dozen jack with a few over 5 pound has not been extraordinary. Today Jim caught a jack that was around 14 pounds on a Mirror-lure.

The biggest mystery is: Where are the trout??? They have simply disappeared. The water in the lagoon was very high for about a month- most of the grass was now gone except for a few patches. The trout are not where they were because the water level and vegetation changed. I pray that the excellent trout population has not been hurt. My theory is that the extreme high water killed a lot of the grass since it couldn't get sunlight. Trout feed in 2-4 foot of water so their normal food sources weren't there, the water was too deep in their normal feeding areas so they moved. Hopefully, with some stable weather, they will return to their normal fall patterns.

In 4 recent trips I've caught just two trout. One was in a regular spot and one on the shoreline. Some of the members of the Stuart Fishing Club have said how bad the trout fishing has been. So it isn't just me. The jack, however, are everywhere.

Still fishing some---


Saturday, September 26, 2015

I'm Back- Sort of :) and the Snookorama

Hi,

I'm back. Not permanently but at least occasionally. I've been stuccoing my house. Anyone that thinks it's easy well. . . think again. To stucco or not to stucco-- that is the question. Whether 'tis nobler to suffer the slings and arrows of endless 80 lb. bags of concrete. . .

My friend is helping me (I'm really helping him :)--we're not done yet but for now let's talk snook, lots of snook, jumping, cavorting, splashing vertically, horizontally and every which way!!! Snook, snook snook!!!

Fishing Report 9-26-15 4:50 pm Walton Scrub, low tide to incoming tide, warm water. Windy out of North east, water choppy and fairly clear. Using 1/8 oz. jig with plastic DOA baits.

It's been almost 7 weeks since I've been in the lagoon (I did go out for about an hour 2 days ago before it got dark- that's when I found the water was so deep I couldn't make it to the sandbar!!). So why seven weeks? I got another infection, then got cut up working on the house and decided not to wade with cuts. I fished the ocean, caught snook then ladyfish, then jack and bluefish, and even went shark fishing with Al but finally made it back to the lagoon to fish for awhile. Was it different- woah!! Nothing was the same. The water was two feet higher-- I was barely able to make it out to the sandbar- at low tide!!! What!! Everything had completely changed.

I went out and saw some bait (not a lot), mainly small silver mullet, I cast to the bait once but they were swimming north and I didn't follow. I should have. Instead I went out to the sandbar. I was fishing deep for trout, but nothing. A nice snook swirled at my jig- it missed. I headed South and noticed the weedbeds were slimy and deep. I guess all the rain had raised the water level and the grass had suffered. I fished out from the first pier and caught a small jack that hit near me (no camera today- sorry).

I fished the pier and nothing. A guy came down with two poles, bobbers and live shrimp and fished off the pier- so I left. I went back deep- nothing. Then I went to the third pier and caught a small snook. It flipped off when I reached to release it. Perfect.

I went back deep, nothing. I noticed two guys fishing in the shallow water so I headed shallow to fish the 5th pier. When I say shallow it's not shallow anymore. It's 4 1/2 feet deep on the inside if the sandbar!!! And it's 2-3 feet deep near the shore!!! And... this is almost low tide!!

The two guys came closer. They were fishing live mullet -- casting them with a single hook. Then I saw a school of small mullet running close to the shore. This was a big school and about 40 yards long. The guy with the beard hooked a nice snook about 3 lbs by casting to the school. As I fished the pier the school was headed my way. Snook were busting through the mullet- leaping into the air. Sometimes two or three snook would be levitating at once-- crazy.

I made my first cast when the school of mullet came near the pier-- fish on!!! I pulled it up expecting a snook-- it was a big lizard fish-- only the third one I'd ever caught. I quickly released the 14" fish and started casting into the school. Wham!! a nice snook grabbed my jig and leaped into the air. I pulled it around to me and it headed for the pier- it wasn't big enough to make it-- I slowed it down. It turned and came to me. After I released the 3 lb snook I started chasing after the school of mullet which was headed North at about 5 mph. Snook were just leaping into the air left and right- bait was flying. The two guys were chasing them with me. The short guy hooked a nice snook and the bearded guy caught another one-- snookorama!!!

I went around the 4th short pier and it was dug out on one side-- over 6 feet deep!!! I was walking under water for three steps!!! Even though my waders filled up, the snook were on the prowl and I cast into a school and hooked another nice one. It was about 3 lbs too and I pulled it up and released it. So far none of the snook were slots (28"-34") but there were a few bigger ones bursting through.

I was ahead of the two guys casting mullet now and they fished a second smaller school. They had caught 4 snook now while I was with them. When I got to the third pier, snook were jumping everywhere and mullet were flying from the water trying to escape. I caught my fourth snook near the 3rd pier, another 3 lb fighter. I quickly released it and went under the pier, headed North. I lost a fish near the first pier when it jumped and went under that pier. The bait had spread out and was perpendicular to the shore. I hooked another nice snook and released it. My DOA paddle tail was torn up. I had pulled off the head and was already fishing with the tail. There was only 2" of tail left. Some bait was swimming around the sandbar and I cast to them and wham!! my biggest snook- about 4 lbs grabbed the bait and came to me. It jumped and I wheeled it around and it jumped again. Nice fish!! I reached down and lipped it. Almost a slot!!!

I was back to Walton Scrub and it was getting darkish- my waders were full of water so I went in and climbed up the bank. The mullet just kept heading north -- with snook after them.

My totals: 6 snook (all nice but no slots), 1 small jack, 1 lizard fish. Where are the trout?? Dunno, but it was great day on the water.


Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Life's a Beach IV Shark! Fishing Report 8-11-15

Da- dun- da- dun -da- dun- da- dun -da! dun! da!! dun!!

                                     My first shark!!!! A five foot spinner!!! (click pic to enlarge)

Went to Tiger Beach Access with Al and caught my first shark on a chunk of ladyfish. It put up a 15 minute battle before Al helped me beach it. Then I caught another spinner 30 minutes later. We didn't fish long.

Thanks Al!!!

My totals: 1 ladyfish and 2 spinner sharks-- a beautiful night on the water!!!


Saturday, August 8, 2015

Life's a Beach III Brief Fishing Report 8-8-15

Hey,

Not much to report tonight. Went fishing with Jim and met Al and Ken at Herman's Beach access.

I caught two snook here's a pic of one:


      My 2nd snook--a nice slot (click pic to enlarge)

No big snook tonight but the weather was beautiful and the sunset divine. There was some bait around the shoreline. The tide was low- outgoing. I was lucky enough to catch two snook, the second pulled drag several times. I got two other strikes, one took the tail off my paddletail. No one else had much luck-- Ken hooked a ladyfish. TY, Ken for taking that pic!

So the old saying goes: Life is a beach, and then you die :)

My totals: Two snook, two missed fish. A beautiful evening on the water!!!

Friday, August 7, 2015

Life is a beach II Fishing Report 8-7-15

Hi,

We went down to Herman's Beach Access and I caught another nice snook-- Al took a great pic for me-- it even has a rainbow!!!



My snook- not my rainbow :)
     (click pic to enlarge)

I'm not making a fishing report in detail tonight. I saw the snook swimming in the shallows and I made a cast to her and caught her. It was my second cast of the evening. The battle lasted about 5 minutes, she ran North then South and I eventually got her in shallow.  Jim, my neighbor, helped land her. Al went and got his camera and took the pic. This snook was well over 40".

I had a slot-sized snook on later in the evening but it threw my lure. Al had one strike. There wasn't much bait today.

Still, it was another great day on the water!!!

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Life is a Beach -- Fishing Report 8-6-15

Hi,

I've been off the Lagoon for almost a week now-- another infected cut. It seems like I've been accident prone lately. I did get some waders and I need some boots or shoes to go with them and I'll be back on the water.

I did go fishing on the beach tonight with my neighbor, Jim,  and caught three nice snook. Here's a pic of the largest:

 
My biggest snook of the evening (click pic to enlarge)

Fishing Report 8-6-15;  7:00pm, ocean access across from Hermann's; Wind from Southeast, tide low outgoing; waves moderate. Water temp mid 70s, water clear.

I've just been surf fishing a few times and the most snook I've caught were two and today I caught three and a nice jack. I use the same set-up as in the Lagoon but I use a 3/8 oz weight with a 4" paddletail.

I just throw out looking for baitfish and burn the lure back in. It's hard enough for the snook to find the bait in the waves and wind so I just keep it in straight line. I do cast at an angle to try and bring the lure horizontally through more of the strike zone-- an area around the first cut (closest breaking waves). I've caught snook in 8" of wash in front of the first cut and within 30 feet of the first cut. You just don't want to cast out as far as you can- unless there's a bait pod deeper with feeding fish.

Jim and I went to the surf across from Hermann's and there were schools of bait all along the shallows breakers. I saw one fish feeding and cast repeatedly over a school of bait-- wham, hard strike, the fish missed. Two casts later, fish on!!! This wasn't big but it fought-- it was a 3 lb jack. I released it and kept casting to schooling bait.

Jim had fished North and came back to where I was. "Nothing going on there," he reported. He headed South and was moving fast, walking along, looking for bait and stopping to cast. I moved South 100 yards until I found another school of bait. The water was very shallow on the cut - maybe 1-2 feet deep max. There was a deeper troth back about 10 yards and the bait was swimming up and down the shoreline.

I was standing in a foot of water and burning my jig through the bait. I cast at an angle North, wham, fish on!!! The snook jumped completely out of the water and headed South toward me. This was a nice fish, a small slot around 28", I pulled him into the cut and waded out about 15 feet to get him. I took me three tries to lip him and lift him up. My neighbor was way South didn't look over at me. I released him and adjusted my paddletail.

I went back shallow to the shore and cast South across a big school of bait- wham, a snook slammed it-- spraying water across the surface. It went North fast and was bigger than the last fish pulling drag for 30 yards. I went after it as it went shallow and didn't get back past the first cut. It went along the wash with its dorsal fin stick out of the water-- another nice slot maybe 32". It was hooked perfectly through the top lip and I didn't lift this one up- just grabbed him around the middle and popped the lure out. Wow, two snook on two casts!!!

I walked back South to the same spot. Jim was very far away South and he hadn't looked my way. I waved to him but he didn't see me. I walked a couple yards South and the bait was still everywhere. I cast out at an angle South- nothing. Then I cast at an angle North - big strike, big splash, fish on!!! This was big, my drag was whining and the line was going out. He was headed North and I was losing line. He pulled out 80 yards of line and I started along the beach after him. I'm using 8 lb test so I need to be careful. I stopped him and he turned back south really motoring even faster than before. I walked along the beach South for over 200 yards after him. Jim was now getting closer but he was still so far away-- he didn't see me. I walked a couple hundred more yards more and the snook was tiring. I turned him and he decided to go out deeper but this time I brought him straight to me.

As luck would have it, a girl was walking down the beach with a cell phone- taking pictures with her camera. I called over to her and she and her friend stopped. I asked," Would you mind taking a photo of this fish for me?" She said, "Sure." I waded deeper and got to the tired snook who I'd battled for 15 minutes. I tried to lip him but he shook his head and my hand popped out of his mouth. he swam about 12 feet away and I pulled him back. I tried again, then I grabbed him with two hands. I lifted him and turned back to the girl. After I walked in a couple steps-- she took a couple pics. I gave her my number so she'd send the pics to me. I quickly released the fish. He seemed slow to move so I moved the water through his gills and off he swam to fight another day.

I walked several hundred yards South to where Jim was fishing- and told him about the fish. It had already grown longer and fatter but after looking at the pics it was just a nice snook over 40" long:

                                                      my snook (click pic to enlarge)

Jim and I fished our way back and he caught a nice ladyfish. We saw some other snook feeding but they didn't get hooked.

My totals: 3 snook, 1 jack. One of the snook was well over 40". A gr8 day on the water!!

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Gnu Spot- Fishing Report 7-30-15

Hi,

No, this isn't really about a gnu, a stocky ox-like animal or about fishing in Africa. No, a gnu spot is not a type of fish. When you say gnu, the "g" is silent so it's pronounced, "new." So I tried going to a "new" spot in the Lagoon just South of Walton, so I'll call it Walton South. This "gnu" spot is near where Al lives so we met at Walton and I followed him down Indian River Road about 1 1/2 miles. There, I caught the most snook I have caught in a while- even tho they were small --it was fun!!!

Fishing Report Walton South 7-30-15. 6:30am. Tide medium low, incoming. Water clear, breeze out of Southwest, not much wind. Cloudy and overcast. Fishing 1/16 oz Cal jig with paddletail. Al was fishing a hard plastic imitation shad lure about 5" long.

When we got there, I went out on the pier and watched a huge bottlenose dolphin going under the pier in 3 foot of water only 40 feet from the shore!!! What!! I got off the pier and waded out and started fishing the pier. Al headed North, fan casting across the shallow flat. Another bottlenose dolphin, chasing a small school of mullet, swam under the end of the pier where I was casting. There were over a dozen dolphins in the area and some of them were shallow.

We headed North fishing piers and casting as we went- nothing, not much bait, no feeding fish. Nothing, nothing and more nothing. I went deep most of the way up trying to find trout but the dolphins were just out of casting  range and it seemed that they were already having a trout breakfast.

We went around a moored sailboat and I cast out deep- wham!! hard strike and miss. At least something happened. Then we started seeing bait shallow so I went shallow with Al and cast around a bait pod-- wham fish on!!! I wasn't big but it was fighting. After a few seconds I knew what it was, I grabbed my camera and took a pic.


      My first fish, a jack (click pic to enlarge)

At last, some action. I followed the bait schools under the pier and cast along the shallows while Al fished deeper. The next pier was low to the water and old. I said to Al, "This looks like a good pier." On my third cast wham!! fish on!! The snook soared out of the water and took off away from the pier. After I turned it, the snook came right at me faster than I could reel and ended up behind me! I pulled it up to me and it flipped off. Not bad, around 3 lbs.

Al watched then went around the outside of the short pier. I cast to the shore, glass minnows sprayed the top of the water trying to avoid my lure. Wham!! Snook on! Another under slot sized snook crushed my paddletail and leaped almost hitting the pier. This snook was a little bigger and it pulled drag and headed South away from the pier. I turned it and it came to me then leaped again- throwing my paddletail flying in the air. I have to admit that wasn't really a catch, even tho I had him on for a good 15 seconds or so- I couldn't have netted him. Still it was my second snook and I was pumped. I cast shallow to the South away from the pier- I had a bump but nothing took it. Next cast- as soon as it hit- wham- snook on. This one was the smallest so far, it jumped once and I wheeled around and remembered to take a pic:

                                             My 3rd snook (click pic to enlarge)

I looked for Al who was pretty far away. I went under the pier and called out to him, "Three snook!" He kept heading North. The glass minnows were now on the other side of the pier where I was. The water was about 3 1/2 feet where I was standing and the bottom was mucky. I cast under the pier and some minnows popped out when my lure hit. Half-way in wham! fish on! It came up and shook it's head.



                       My first trout

I was surprised to see a small slot-sized trout on the end of my line. I caught it next the pier in shallow water. Must have been the glass minnows!!! I cast back to the same place and wham, another trout came up and jumped:


                 Slot sized trout leaping

This was a nice trout about 17". After jumping again he opened its mouth as I pulled him across the water to me. I caught a small trout then wham another nice trout inhaled my jig and took to the sky:

                                             My fourth trout- all in the same gnu spot!!!

I caught another trout- then I saw something feeding North and cast over- wham snook on!!! My fourth snook came out of the water and pulled drag as it headed for the pier. It was small so I turned it and grabbed my camera:


            My 4th snook, a 2 1/2 lb pre-slot

When I left the pier I had caught 4 snook and 5 trout --most of the trout were slots. They were all in some skinny water around the pier near the shore- go figure!! I guess fishing around bait is king!!

I headed after Al who was a speck in the distance. He was wading North and was near a long pier. I finally caught up to him. I had a couple hits by something small, probably snapper, around the pier, but I couldn't hook them (no catch 'ems!!!). I fished that pier and headed back. Al, who hadn't had a strike was still throwing his shad lure. I was now near where Walton proper starts, and a long way to go to get back.

I fished back to the other spot and hooked a small snook by some bait, very shallow. The snook took off, jumped and turned and went to me. I pulled it up and it jumped and flipped off. It was small like the third one. That's 5 snook. Past the pier in very shallow water I hooked another nice snook. This one was well hooked and I had to release it.

I headed back casting some as I went. There were several manatees in the shallows and I waded within several feet of one of them in 3 foot of water. The sun was starting to come out from behind the clouds and it was getting hot.

My totals: 6 snook (one got off pretty far away) 5 trout and 1 jack. A gr8 day on the water!!!

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Here, There & Everywhere; Fishing Report 7-29-15

Hi,

One of the first songs I learned to play on the guitar with my first teacher was Here, There and Everywhere by the Beatles. The trout today were here, then there, and at least one time- they were everywhere. I couldn't even reel in without catching a fish- if one missed you'd get another strike until one grabbed it. One broke my line because I hooked a trout and another trout bit my line in half- it struck the line moving through the water!!!

Fishing Report 7-29-15 Walton proper 6:15am, right before sunrise. In coming tide, moderately high. Water temp in the low 70s, air temp in the upper 70s to mid-80s, overcast. Cal jigs, paddletails.

I met Ken Turner at Walton/Indian River intersection (Walton proper) and my new fishing buddy Al was parked a couple hundred yards South. We went down the hill but I fell because of my bad shoes (that have fallen apart from wading) and slid down the bank a ways before righting myself. I got a slightly skinned knee and that was it. We went out to the sandbar and stopped. There was some bait and a few fish feeding plus a giant manatee was right in our spot! She didn't want to move but eventually did. I didn't know if she scared the fish- but nothing bit- at first.

HERE. I got a strike after 5 minutes and pulled a nice slot trout up. She splashed on the surface and threw my lure, 0 for 1. Ken was throwing a white fork-tail and he started moving- I told him to wait a little while more. I hooked another trout- it came up and threw my lure, 0-2. As I was pulling it up a trout struck right by me- it flipped off, 0-3. I cast to my left, hooked a small trout and brought it to me , it flipped off right by me, 1-4.

Ken got a strike and pulled up the biggest trout of the day, a slot around 18". Nice fish , Ken!! I grabbed my camera, just as I got ready to take a pic, I had a strike, trout on!!! Ken put his fish back in the water. I pulled the small trout around behind me. It came up and flipped off right by me, 2-5. The bite was on.

I lost two more trout after they came up, 2-7 and Ken landed another trout, small this time. I caught two and lost another one, 4-10. I hooked a small slot my biggest so far and stopped to take a pic:


My 5th trout a small slot, Ken is fishing in background (it looks like Ken caught this trout!!! haha!!!) (click pic to enlarge)

I was now 5-11 and lost and other small trout, 5-12, then missed one on the hookset. I pulled another one to me, it flipped off, this one was close (I maybe could have netted it) so I'm 6-13 and they slowed down, I finally got a last strike and it flipped off, 6-14. Ken had switched to a paddletail and we headed South to catch up to Al who was throwing a big plastic shad for snook off the last pier.

THERE. I caught one nice slot near my second spot, now 7-15, but nothing else was biting. We got to where Al was--he wasn't doing much with his big lure. I went and fished around the last pier-- nothing was going on. When I came out from the pier, Ken caught a trout and then another one in the shallow flat out from the last pier. So I went over to where he was.

EVERYWHERE- The trout were everywhere. I caught one on the first cast, then another one on the next cast, which doubled with Ken who also had one. On my third cast, I pulled it up, hit- miss, hit- miss, hit-miss, hit miss, pulled it in faster, hit- trout on!!! I pulled it around and took a pic.

                                                               My 10th trout

On every cast you couldn't pull the lure 10 feet without getting bit. Al didn't bring a jig so he was watching us catch fish. I gave him a jig and he tied it on. I caught number 11, and 12. Then a strange thing happened. Maybe because it was number 13 or maybe because the stars were out of alignment- I cast,  hooked a nice trout and while I was pulling it in another trout bit my line and cut it!!! Woah. That was a first. There were so many trout there, they were biting my white line!!! There were everywhere.

Unfortunately I had to retie and put a new leader on. I didn't have another small jig so I tied on a 3/8 oz jig and caught another trout but as quickly as they started hitting they stopped! You couldn't catch one there, if you tried- and we tried!!!

To recap the fish we had just released in that spot: Ken caught at least 6 and Al caught a couple and I caught about 6 in just 10 minutes of frenetic activity. Here, there and gone.

I went South and caught one more:


Then it got too deep and when I tried to go to the shore- it got deeper!!! I had to go back to the sandbar. I headed back North to the pier where Ken and Al were. We fished back North and nothing was biting. I got a small jig from Ken and put that on.

THERE. We were about back to where we started at Walton proper. Finally I caught another trout in shallow and there was some bait still around. The tide was getting high and it was about time to stop. Ken caught a nice trout with his forktail bait and I caught two more trout after him. Ken's line broke for no reason and he retied. I caught another trout and lost one. Ken fished a bit and got off the water.

Al and I went to the 5th pier. I put on a gold DOA shrimp and cast the posts. Suddenly, hard strike!! Fish on!!! I got a nice fish on and it started heading South. Then-- it came off before I knew what it was. It might have been a redfish, because it didn't jump. We were done there and I put a paddletail on as we fished back. I caught a small ladyfish on my last cast or so.

My totals: 16 trout (lost a bunch too) and 1 ladyfish. Ken caught around a dozen trout (one nice slot) and Al caught a couple trout. A great day on the water!

Monday, July 27, 2015

Two For the Show- Fishing Report 7-27-15

Hi,

Not much to report today. The only amusing incident was trying to get a pic of the manatees swimming around:

                                              Manatees playing (click pic to enlarge)

While I was trying to get a picture they were literally swirling against me. The only pics I got they look so far away:

         Manantee playing

I caught all the fish today withing the first couple minutes and spent some time showing my new fishing buddy Al some spots further North. One for the money- two for the show. . .

Fishing Report Walton proper 7-27-15 6:45am tide almost full then slack high , then outgoing. Windy from the South, Southwest. Water clear, cooler. Throwing Cal jig with paddletail.

It was a rough morning: I couldn't find my shoes, my nose was running, my right eye hurt and was watering. I went down the bank after sunrise and slid about 5 feet. Instead of falling I grabbed a small tree and slowed myself down enough to make it to the bottom without wiping-out.

There was bait all around the sandbar and I caught a small trout on my first cast and took a pic:
                                       My first and only trout about 12" (click pic to enlarge)

When I wheeled it around to me the trout flipped off and I quickly cast back again over a pod of bait. Nothing. Next cast, fish on!!! It jumped and went across the sandbar, it jumped again and I pulled it up and took a pic:
                                                  Small bluefish (click pic to enlarge)

I was surprised to see it was a small bluefish. I pulled it to me and unhooked it. I looked South and saw a wader. I wondered if it was someone I knew. Then I started casting-- the bait was there but nothing was biting. I saw the wader catch a trout and he headed my way so I went over to him-- it was Al. He said he would be fishing with someone this morning but his friend cancelled. We talked for a minute then started fishing the shallow flat. It was almost dead high tide.

There was nothing biting- plenty of bait, tho. We fishing there for 15 minutes then headed South. I fished a couple piers and met Al again out deep. We fished our way back. I was getting bit by small snappers that kept grabbing the tail off my paddletail. They were too small (no catch 'ems) to get hooked.

The tide was outgoing and when we got back the wind was blowing hard in our faces. I got a couple wind knots and stopped to watch the manatees.

A slow day that had a quick start.

My totals: 1 trout and 1 bluefish. (Al caught a couple trout).


Saturday, July 25, 2015

More of the same: Fishing Report 7-24-15

Hi,

I yesterday was hit and miss, today was more of the same- mostly miss. At least finding the fish was tricky. I only found fish in one area and I met a new fishing buddy, Al, who has been fishing the lagoon for many years. The only unusual event-- there was a small school of manatees swimming off the last pier. They were just hanging out there. I've included a fishing report from my fishing buddy, Bob Murray at the bottom of the page.

Fishing Report 7-24-15, Walton proper; 6:10am Tide was almost high outgoing, almost no wind, then wind from West. Throwing 1/8 Cal jig with paddletail.

I went out just before sunrise and started casting in shallow water. I hooked a nice slot trout around 17" after 5 minutes and pulled him over, took a pic but the pic missed the fish!!! At that point I took a pic of the sunrise:

                                                          Sunrise at Walton Rd. 6:25am

Today was like yesterday, nothing was biting and I had to find the fish. I looked to the South and I saw another guy wading-- right where I was catching fish yesterday!! As far as I could tell he wasn't catching anything. He started wading South past the last pier where a small school of manatees were swimming around. I headed South behind him to see if there were any fish there today.

The guy wading went out from the last pier and I went over to talk to him. His name was Al (for Allen) and he was fishing a DOA shrimp. Al said he didn't catch much yesterday so I showed him what I was catching them on. He changed to a jig and was fishing deep and I went shallow to see if the fish were still around the last pier. The manatees had moved out from the pier and were swimming around in circles. At end and both sides of the last pier there's a shallow flat with some weeds - that's where trout have been the last three trips.

I cast shallow and on the second cast hooked a wild, jumping lady fish. After three or four jumps she came over and flipped off near me. I went down and fished around the pier for snook- nothing. I cast back to the shallow flat and wham!! trout on!!! I wheeled the small trout around to me and it flipped off. Next cast, trout on!!! I pulled him to me and unhooked him- my 3rd trout, small about 12".  I called to Al who turned and started fishing the shallow flat- he immediately caught a small trout South of the last pier.

I found a spot North of the pier in shallow where their were multiple fish. We both hooked and released several trout in that spot. I took a pic of a small trout that went South in front of the last pier:

                                            My 6th trout, about 12" (click pic to enlarge)

We caught a few more trout and headed out to try a few deeper spots. There was nothing in my favorite spot and I went deep looking for trout but found none. I caught my 10th trout as we waded back north and lost my piers trying to get it unhooked. I sat around talking to Al until after 9:00. He caught a nice Lane Snapper (they're small in the Lagoon, this was around 10") which he kept for lunch.

I headed off the water, I had to go to Orlando.

My totals: 10 trout (one nice slot, the rest small) and 1 ladyfish. Al caught some trout and a nice snapper. A slow fishing day on the water.
_________________________________________

Bonus Fishing Report from Bob Murray: 7-24-15 Fort Pierce- Surf

                                                                  Bob's bonita

I went to Fort Pierce Inlet last Friday morning at first light to fish the beach with my 9 wt. rod, stripping basket and Clear Intermediate Sink Tip Line.  As I was casting along the beach, suddenly there was a big commotion followed by a big splash only 15 feet in front of me.  Fortunately, I had just stripped in my line and was ready to cast.  I quickly lobbed the baitfish fly to where the splash was and stripped it twice.  BAM!!  When I set the hook, the fish took off for the Bahamas like a torpedo and in about 2 seconds I was watching my backing disappear off my reel.  This is the biggest/strongest/fastest fish I've ever fought on a fly rod.  According to my fish identification book it's a Little Tunny.  The book says this fish can swim up to 40 mph.  I believe it. It was a 15 minute Battle Royal that I didn't think I was going to win for a while.  I was just getting ready to break it off so it wouldn't spool me and take my line and backing, when it finally stopped and I was able to start gaining line.  It made three more runs before I finally got my fly line back on the reel.  I didn't know what it was until I beached it.  I thought it might have been a Shark, big Snook or Redfish. I never would have guessed a Little Tunny (also known as a False Albacore and referred to locally as a Bonita).  I'm definitely going to go back to the jetty soon.  This fish was the real deal!

Thursday, July 23, 2015

Hit and Miss: Fishing Report 7-23-15

Hey,

It was one of those days when everything you thought you knew was wrong. The places I caught over 30 trout yesterday had no fish- nada-zip-zero!!! But I did find some in one spot. The trout and ladyfish were hitting, but they were missing- so it was hit and miss all day.


       Sunrise, beautiful--- but no fish were biting!!

Fishing Report 7-23-15 Walton Proper, 6:10am before sunrise, water warm, almost no wind, then wind from North-west. Water clear, warm in the mid 70s. Medium high tide, outgoing, Fishing a Cal jig with different paddletails.

I went out from Walton, to the sandbar. There was little activity today. No glass minnows, no mullet flopping around. I cast in all directions for 15 minutes- nothing. I started going out deeper and noticed a few glass minnows but not many- nothing was feeding. Was I going to blank today?!!??

I cast around for 5 more minutes then wham!!! Fish on!!! This was a fairly big fish (4 or 5 lbs) and it came up and splashed, then went south pulling drag. Suddenly it came up out of the water, shook its head and threw the lure. UUUUGGGHHHH. I'm pretty sure it was a big trout but it may have been a snook. I kept casting for 5 minutes- nothing. Where are the fish???

I headed South and tried my second spot out from the spillway- nothing. I was near the last pier and thought about going over there since it was deep enough to fish. I cast South and got a strike- trout on!! It came up and jumped then came over to me. This was dink, and I decided to not take a pic.

I started heading for the pier. I cast shallow, strike, miss, strike, miss. I cast again trout on!!! This was a little bigger but not a slot (15").  Both of them were in 2-3 foot of water near the sandbar. I saw the glass minnows out from the pier and a few trout feeding. I cast to the pier, strike, trout on. this one was about 14" so I grabbed my camera and took a pic:
                                                My third trout (click pic to enlarge)

I was now in 2 foot of water and could reach the end of the pier which was a little deeper. The trout were everywhere-- feeding on glass minnow. I cast toward the pier- strike, miss strike, trout on!!! This one as a small slot and that was the biggest trout I would catch today. After releasing it I cast past the pier, strike, miss, strike, miss, trout on!!! I pulled it up and took a pic;


      My 5th trout (Click pic to enlarge)

I was getting strikes in 2 foot of water and the glass minnows were still around in areas. I caught two more small trout and tried the pier for a big snook. There was nothing biting around the pier but caught another trout when I cast back to the sandbar. I went under the pier, cast toward the sandbar and got a hard strike under some glass minnows only 15 feet away- it struck again and missed.

I went out to the sandbar and caught two more trout. I went deep and nothing was happening deep. I turned and cast back to the sandbar. Wham!!! a lady fish grabbed my lure and took to the air. She jumped several times and I got her in an unhooked her:
                                                                My first ladyfish

I caught two more small trout and then another lady fish. I was getting lots of strikes but few fish. Hit, miss, hit, miss. I cast shallow and wham!! Fish on!!! This was no dink trout and it splashed around then pulled drag and went out. It was a snook, not big, but around 20".


     My only snook, not close to a slot, it still pulled drag!

I stayed shallow and caught 3 more trout, here's a pic of one splashing:
                                                   Last trout, my 14th, splashing

I went deep, nothing. I went shallow, nothing. I had some stuff to do this morning so I got off the water at 8:30am.

My totals: 14 trout (all small, maybe two slots) 2 ladyfish, 1 snook. A beautiful day on the water!!!

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Lordy, Lordy, Look who got 40- Fishing Report 7-22-15

Howdy,

I didn't have to move around much today. I never left Walton Proper (area of intersection of Walton and Indian River). I spent the first hour in the same spot - not even moving once!! Yes, I caught 40 trout today! Most of them were dinks, not even slot size but it was still fun- except for the last one- it took almost 30 minutes to catch the last trout and even then it was on my last cast!!! I took a total of 19 pics, and of those, a dozen came out.

Fishing Report Walton Rd. 6:15am 7-22-15 Fairly low tide, outgoing. Just before sunrise, water clear and warm, 75, with gentle breeze out of the West. Lots of bait in the area, glass minnows and mullet. Using 1/8 oz Cal jig yellow with white 4" (and shorter) paddletail. [After 5 or 6 fish the head of the plastic paddletail would start tearing so I'd pull it off and then have a 3" paddletail- I did that twice.]

I went to the shallow sandbar area and stopped. There's not really a sandbar there now, it's been washed out- plus there are weeds on it. About the third cast I hooked a trout, it jumped completely out of the water and threw the hook- oh well. Not a good start.

There were small glass minnows flipping around everywhere. Small schools of mullet were passing by and occasionally a trout or snook would come crashing on the top. I cast to the South shallow and wham! a small snook grabbed my jig and skied in the air. I grabbed my camera and got a shot but it was hard to see the fish:
                                            My first fish, a small snook (click pic to enlarge)

Two casts later I got a hit, miss, then another hit, miss and on the third hit, I lifted a trout up and it splashed on the surface to me. It was small, about 12", in fact all the trout I caught (23) in my first spot were smaller than slot sized (except maybe one)- but they were still fun. I caught another small trout and then, when I hooked my third trout I took a pic:

                                                          Small trout about 12"

I caught two more small trout before a nice small snook slammed my lure and leaped in the air:

                                 My second small snook, a great fighter. (Click pic to enlarge)

The snook pulled drag twice even though he was just around 3 lbs. I went back to catching trout-- no matter what direction I was casting I'd get a strike every other cast. The trout were on a feeding frenzy eating glass minnows, but unfortunately they were all small but one. I caught twenty-three trout in my first spot and only one keeper (which I also threw back!!!). I lost at least 10 fish that I didn't count. I also caught two small snook. The sun started rising in the sky and I moved toward my next spot to the South.

The wind had picked up a bit blowing out of the West.  I wasn't getting bit deep and continued to throw shallow too. I cast toward the last pier and wham!!! fish on!!! It only took one giant leap to know what it was- a ladyfish and she(?) kept on jumping until I wheeled her around to me and unhooked her:


    She ain't no lady (click pic to enlarge) she's a fish!!!

I kept moving South, finally I started casting deep to my spot and nothing- not a bite. Where were they? I saw some glass minnows in shallow- I cast past them- wham- trout on!! This was no dink and I pulled him in and unhooked it- 16", a slot at last. I cast back again and wham!! trout on!! I reeled it almost to me, trout off- then trout on!! Another trout was following it in and grabbed the lure right in front of me!!! I took a pic:


     My 25th trout- a small slot (click pic to enlarge)

There was a school of trout feeding on these minnows and they were mostly all slots. I'd get a hit or even two on every cast!!! I caught two more, one only 10 feet away. Finally, I caught my biggest of the day:


             My biggest trout, 18"


Soon I was over 30 trout and still in my second spot. I need one of those hand counters!!! I was missing quite a few fish too. The trout were hitting it but not getting hooked. When the bite slowed I started lifting the jig to the top and letting it sink- it worked!! I got another one:

                                                    My 34th trout, small slot

The bait moved and the bite stopped. I tried fishing deeper- nothing!! I went back shallow to the North- trout on!!! I caught three more shallow. Here's another pic of the biggest:



           My 37th trout, small slot- thrashing

The bite was slowing, it was after 9:00. I caught two small trout and figured I need one more for 40. So I would catch one more and go home. I cast shallow, I cast deep, I cast North, I cast South, I moved around --nothing!!!! After 20 minutes-not even a bite!!!!

I started to wade North then stopped and thought, "I'll just go in, 39 is still good." I started to go in, I got to the sandbar where I started, it was just 2 1/2 feet deep now, the tide was getting low. I cast one last cast over my shoulder and trolled along with it- fish on!!! It was the 40th trout- what a miracle!!! I reached for my camera as I pulled it near me. I lifted my camera and  . . . it flipped off! I am going to count that one- haha.

I was tired, it was nearly 9:40am and getting hot.

My totals: 40 trout, 2 snook and 1 ladyfish (that was no lady!!) A great day on the water!!!

Monday, July 20, 2015

I'm Back!!! Fishing Report 7-20-15

Hi,

I'm back in the Lagoon after over two weeks- seems like I never left. There were still fish in the same places, and they were feeding even thought the tide was wrong. I went with my buddy Ken Turner, who, as always, provides some comic relief.

Fishing Report 7-20-15 Walton proper; 6:15 am just before sunrise. Warm around 74 degrees heating up to about 82 with a water temp in the mid70s. Wind out of South-West then mostly West. CAL jig 1/8 oz on variety of 4" plastic baits - mostly lime and white.

 We went down the steep bank at the end of Walton Rd. The sun had not risen and it was still hard to see. I didn't know what to expect- I hadn't been wading in over two weeks because I got an infected cut on my right leg.

I got a bump on my first cast, then next cast fish on!!! fish off. I had a trout but it didn't get hooked well. Ken made it over the shallow section and after two or three casts hooked and landed a nice snook (3 lbs). I forgot I had my camera on (it hangs over my shoulder on my chest) or I would have taken a pic.

I hooked a trout and got it part of the way in and it came off. We were standing just over the sandbar in three feet of water casting in a shallow weedbed. There were small glass minnows on the surface and some bigger bait splashing around. Occasionally a trout would feed, crashing through the weeds to the top, disturbing the smooth surface. I cast out, got a hit, it missed --then, fish on!!! My first trout of the day:


    My first trout, a small slot (click pic to enlarge)


The bite was on!!! Next cast I got three hits before I hooked another nice slot and pulled him in. Meanwhile, Ken had put new line on and it was snarling almost every cast. While he was busy re-tying I cast deep- fish on, and pulled a small trout across the water. He flipped off before I could unhook him. Next cast, I lifted the jig, wham!!! fish on!!! This trout jumped completely out of the water and splashing all the way to me. I took a quick pic as it was coming in:



                                               My 3rd trout, almost 17" (Click pic to enlarge)

Ken got his line straightened out and caught a nice trout- then it got snarled again! I was rolling and caught three more before the sun came up. Then I saw a splash on my left cast to it and wham!! Trout on!! This one was only 20 feet away and I wheeled it to me. Ken had got his line straight and caught another trout or so. By the time they had stopped biting I had ten and lost two.

We headed to the next spot which is out from the drainage pipe - in a little deeper water. I cast far and as soon as my jig hit the spot I had a trout on:


                 My 11th trout, a nice slot

I caught three more almost on successive cast before Ken hook another nice trout. It came off, but he soon pulled in another trout and he shortly after caught a jack. I didn't count his fish but that was about 5 trout, a snook and a jack.

I cast deep but as I started to lift my jig out of the water a trout slammed it. I took a pic:


             My 15th trout, caught 10 feet away!

The bite slowed and we waded South. I got a bite set the hook and thought I had one. When I pulled it up it was an 8" brown Lizard fish. Only the second one I'd ever caught. Ken hooked two trout and I also caught two more as we almost went to the last pier. We turned and headed back North.

Nothing much was happening for about 20 minutes then suddenly I saw a fish splash. I cast over it and trout on!!! trout off! Three cast later a got a strike near me and hooked a small one. When I pulled it up it was a 10" snapper, fairly good size! It flipped off before I could get a pic. We decided to head back in - we weren't far away- it was almost dead low tide.

I cast back in shallow to the spot where we first caught fish and wham!! Trout on! I took a quick pic:



       My 19th trout- squint and it will be in focus!

I caught another trout then Ken hook a bigger fish. What was it!!! It was a flounder and I took a quick pic;


Half of Ken's almost 3lb flounder. Is Ken smiling now!!!

I caught one more trout and we headed off the water at about dead-low tide. It was around 9 am and the water was starting to heat up.

Our totals: I caught 21 trout, 1 Lizard fish and 1 snapper. Ken caught around 10 trout, 1 snook, 1 jack and 1 nice flounder. A great day on the water!!

Thursday, July 9, 2015

The Ocean: Fishing Report 7-9-15

Hi,

I am not back wading yet (I've got one cut that hasn't healed completely), but I have started fishing again. Jim, my neighbor, was kind enough to take me fishing in the Ocean in his boat. So we went Tuesday and thunderstorms sent us in around noon. Today we went for most of the day.

Jim, free-lines live bait and you drift with wind and current until a fish takes the bait (usually sardines). It's you and the fish- and there are some strong fish in the Ocean.

Fishing Report: Atlantic Ocean 7-9-15. 7:15 am caught bait, started fishing around 9:15. Wind 8-10 mph SE with moderate to rough waves. Outgoing, then incoming tide. Water clear with wind causing ripples. Air temp 90, water temp around 80. Using 30 lb mono with a 40 lb wire leader and #6 circle hooks. Live bait - sardines and blue runners.

We put the boat in at 1st Stuart bridge. After going through the St. Lucie inlet we headed South to Bull Shark Reef to catch some bait. We found a few boats gathered there to catch bait and threw out our Sabiki rigs (4 foot weighted line with 6 small hooks that have a small plastic sliver that represents small minnows). We caught a few 6-9 inch sardines and a couple small blue runners and threw them in the live-well. The blue runners (which get to be a couple lbs) kept breaking off one or two of the six hooks so I only had two hooks left. We didn't have enough bait to fish so we headed North to "the hump" a shallow reef in about 45' of water. I retied another Sabiki Rig and we found a few sardines after making repeated drifts through areas that held some baitfish.

We ended up with two dozen sardines and two small blue runners- enough to start fishing.We headed East to an area that was about 120 feet deep near a sunken wreck. Jim has a few spots on his GPS and we stopped to fish a break line (between currents) on the way. Jim expertly positioned the boat so it drifted through the break area. He stopped the motor and we baited up by hooking a sardine on a circle hook to each pole. We sent one sardine out far and the other we kept in closer to the boat. There's no weight on the sardines so they just swim around as they are pulled by the wind pushing the boat.

The rods are put on rod holders on each side and the reels are set with loose drag so the fish can pull the bait out easily. You just have to watch the line and see if the fish is pulling the line out, then when the fish is on you click the loose drag off and start reeling- the circle hook goes to the corner of the fish's mouth.

Suddenly, a fish grabbed my sardine and my line started going out. I pulled it out of the holder and felt the fish then set the hook, wham fish on!!! The fish started to head North and I applied pressure- snap!!! - my 40 pound wire leader shattered!!! What a fish, broke my line!! Jim reminded me not to set the hook (since I was fishing a circle hook) and we both wondered what it was. 

I retied and re-baited. There were a bunch of bottlenose dolphins circling the boat. Jim had a fish take his bait. He got the pole down, let the fish take some line, clicked it in gear and handed it to me- fish on!!! This was a big fish and it didn't take long for the drag to start whirring. The fish had pulled 100 yards of my line and was still going!! I couldn't turn it!!! Jim started the engine and we followed the fish before I ran out of line. Then finally I started to get it coming in. I wasn't gaining much and after 10 minutes Jim took the pole and gave it a try. He was really pumping the rod. He lifted the tip up, then reeled it down, and started to gain some ground. After 5 minutes he gave the pole back to me and I tried to pull it up. After 5 more minutes we got a glimpse of the powerful fish- it was big bonita.

I pulled it up to the boat and Jim grabbed it's tail and put it on the side deck. He took a quick pic and we released it:

                                        Our first bonita- a whopper (Click pic to enlarge)

The bonita swam slowly down and was followed by a huge bottlenose dolphin and I imagine that the bonita soon became lunch. We were fishing clumps of Sargassum weeds that gathered near the current brakes looking for Mahi-Mahi or Dorado (also called Dolphin).

Jim took us to a wreck in about 120 feet of water. After we drifted by my line started whirring off the spool. I pulled the rod out of its holder and clicked the loose drag off. Fish on!!! I looked up to see a leaping Mahi-Mahi hover over the blue water. It's green and yellow head glistened in the sun. "Mahi," yelled Jim, "don't lose this one- it's going in the cooler!!" I kept the pressure on and it came up again, then went around the side of the boat. Jim gaffed the beautiful fish, pulled it on the deck and put it in the cooler on ice. We took it out a couple minutes later and got a pic:


         My first Mahi-Mahi (click pic to enlarge)

According to Jim, Bonita aren't good eating but Mahi are. So we are thinking about grilling some fillets tomorrow.

We went east another mile and tried a couple current brakes. We ended up catching 5 bonita including two at the same time. The last ones wore us out and we headed back to Stuart and the inlet.

Our totals: 5 bonita and 1 Mahi-mahi. A beautiful day on the water!!!

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Temporarily Out of Commission 7-2-15

Hi,

Unfortunately I have two bad cuts on my feet. The small cut above my ankle got infected and the one on my toe was questionable. On orders from my doctor I have been off the water until they start healing.

How long will that be? As long as it takes.

Does this mean I have to stop fishing? No. Just wading in the Lagoon. In the summer, wading with cuts is risky- and wading with an infection is out. I'm taking medication now so things should start improving soon. This is frustrating since I wanted to document fishing (wading) in the Lagoon for a year and especially in one main area- Walton Rd. This is the second time this year I've had to stay off the water-- the first time was at the beginning of April. When I got back on the water after 15 days off, I didn't know where the fish were!!!

I have fished with few results from Ken Turner's pier (one jack, one trout). I fished around the South bridge in Stuart with Ken and had a big fish break my 8 pound test with a hard strike. I've gone to the beach and fished in the surf. Today was exciting because I caught a slot-sized, over 6 pound snook in the surf on a paddletail jig. My neighbor Jim and I fished the Ocean across from Hermann's. The snook hit my lure in about 12 inches of water above the first cut (closest waves breaking) only 8 feet from shore. How shallow can they go?!!???

So I probably won't be doing any posts until after July 5 or so. I'll let you know if anything exciting happens.

Richard

Friday, June 26, 2015

Fishin' Blues- Fishing Report 5-26-15

Howdy,

Bet you goin' fishin' all the time,
Mama's goin' fishing too.
Bet you life, your sweet wife,
I'll catch more fish than you.
Many fish bite if you got good bait,
Here's a little tip that I'd like to relate,
I'm a-goin' fishin' , you're a-goin' fishin',
My baby's goin' fishin' too. [Fishin' Blues adapted from Henry "Ragtime" Thomas]

Some days you get the blues, and today I definitely did- 2 of them. The first was around 4 pounds and the second between 2 and 3. And that's not all- the big trout were back and one of them was bigger than the blues.
                               I got the blues!!!  My 2nd bluefish, about 3 lbs (click pic to enlarge)

Today was a great 40 minutes of fishing action (out of 3 hours on the water) and it almost didn't happen. A guy was fishing shallow by the last pier. I kept coming closer to him until I got to my spot on the 5th weed-bed. I cast a couple times and was going to fish the last pier- but he immediately went and fished the pier. Next cast I caught a 18" trout. That started a string of bites and of fish. The guy didn't catch a fish off the pier and after watching me catch 4 fish, he headed quickly off the water!!!

Fishing Report: Walton Scrub, 5-26-15, 6:45am Almost high tide, high slack, then outgoing. Water clear. Wind soft from South, no wind then blowing from Southeast, eventually at 10mph. Fishing Cal jig 1/4 oz then Zara Spook, then 1/8 CAL jig with paddletails.

The tide was almost high. There was no wind and patches of dead vegetation and grass dotted the water. I went out and fished quickly to the 3rd weed-bed. There wasn't enough current or wind to have good fishing. I cast shallow and hooked a nice trout. I got a picture of him splashing, and when I got him in, (took another pic but missed - got a pic of my thumb instead!!!) he flipped off:


                First trout about 17"- where is it!!!

Then I cast deep and wham!!! hard strike, fish on. It was a ladyfish and she leaped in the air twice then swam right at me. This was a big lady fish (3 lbs):

                                                    A big ladyfish, my second fish

By the time I took one pic and released her, she was tired and slowly swam away. I was relieved that I caught anything, since the water was so dead. I head to my spot on the third weed-bed, nothing. I tied on a Zara Spook and cast my way to the 5th weed-bed, nothing. I decided to put on a lighter jig since it wasn't windy- I switched to 1/8 oz jig with white-glow DOA paddletail.

I kept going to my spot and saw a guy fishing out past the sandbar off the last pier. He was pulling a bucket and probably using live shrimp, not sure tho. I figured I'd go shallow and fish the pier. He saw me move up and then he went and fished the pier!!!

As soon as he got to the pier, I caught my second trout, a small slot:


2nd trout (if you squint it will seem in focus :)

The guy at the pier heard the splash and turned to watch me release the trout. Then I cast back, tap, wham!! fish on. This was a very nice trout almost 20" and I missed the pic of it- sorry. The tide had finally changed and the water was moving. The guy fishing the pier had stopped and turned to me, I had to unhook it and released it quickly. On the very next cast I hooked another trout, this was the biggest of the day, a whopping 24" (I measure against my fishing rod) but the only pic I got was this:


        My largest trout of the day! (hard to see)

I couldn't resist, so I lifted it up to show the guy. He didn't say anything and cast under the pier. My fourth trout hit only two casts later, the only small trout of the day. It flipped off near me. I looked up-- the guy fishing by the pier was leaving the water!!!

There was a little area of ripples just South of me and I was casting in the wind. Suddenly wham!! monster trout I thought!! Then a bluefish leaded completely out of the water!! Woah!! He pulled drag twice and went around the shallow side and I got a pic:


About 4 lb bluefish ( I got the blues but I'm too mean to die!!!)

I was stoked- my first bluefish in months. I cast back again and got a strike- missed the fish, but what a strike. Then I cast East and wham, bluefish?? It jumped, no a trout!


     Big trout !! (squint to get in focus :) my fifth

I cast as far South as I could, strike. I missed then another strike, fish on! It was another bluefish, smaller but still pulling drag. I got it in and got soaked. I released it and wished I'd brought my stringer:


2nd bluefish (Got the blues and too mean to cry!!)

That was the end of that paddletail and I put a fresh one on. Cast out, tap, hard strike, hook-set, fish on. another blue?? No it was a big trout. It pulled drag, I wheeled it to me and took a close-up:


    22" trout, smile pretty thing! (click pic to enlarge)

I now had 7 trout and it didn't take more than 3 casts to get the eighth:

I noticed a boat behind me - a bit further from the shore. He saw me catch and  release the fish and went 100 yards by me, stopped, put out his trolling motor and started fishing. If I went further South I'd cast in his boat. The guy in the back was sitting and using live bait while the guy in front threw lures. I moved further South and immediately caught another trout!!

The guy in the back of the boat pointed as I quickly released the slot-sized trout. Soon I realized they were fishing North coming right at me. Soon I could cast in their boat. The guy hit his trolling motor and they went in shallower but still near me. Even tho they were casting shallow- it was crazy.

I cast toward the boat, another nice trout smacked my paddletail, I wheeled him toward me and took a pic.


                   My ninth trout

They kept slowly coming closer and I cast out toward them. Several cast later I got my 10th trout. This one they saw and the guy running the trolling motor stopped and watched.

"Catching some trout?" he called out.

"Yep, I've caught some," I replied. They hadn't caught any since I'd been there.

'"We caught 25 down on that pier this morning," he said. "On topwater."

"Where?" I said.

"Down where that pontoon boat is," he said, "on top water. This morning around dawn. There's an old sunken boat there."

"Seems kinda shallow," I said. I'd been fishing there at dawn and they weren't there!!!

" Oh they come up and get it," he said. "They love Rappalas. You oughta go down there, they might still be there."

I knew there were no trout near that pier now. The water was only 20" deep there now and not much deeper at high tide. I knew he was lying. They went around me and pulled up and rode off to the east side. I caught one last trout:


            My 11th trout and last- about 16"

Then I headed in- it was getting hot. I stopped and looked at the pontoon boat- it was sitting on 12" water. There was no way all those trout went in that shallow around that pier!!!!

My totals: 11 trout with 2 over 20" and 3 near 20" only one small trout. Plus 2 bluefish and 1 ladyfish. Another fun day on the water!!