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THE FISHING LINE
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July 2008
Now that the snow birds have gone north, the
fish, flats and the guides are starting to catch their collective
breath and settle down. As folks leave the Keys, the fish sense
that the pressure is off and prowl the flats. The migration of big
tarpon has thinned out leaving lots of smaller tarpon in the bays
and channels around Florida Bay. When the conditions are calm and
the tides are strong, the big tarpon make another appearance in
the backcountry.
Though it’s early August, we are enjoying June-like weather
of calm, hot days and afternoon showers. I’ve been getting
on the water early to hit the bonefish flats before the sun gets
high. Later in the day I target redfish, which are more tolerant
of higher water temperatures.
Permit and snook are also being caught daily in the backcountry.
Hotter days mean fewer people on the water and less pressure on
the flats. Robbie Ames and I fished the RedGhost Stalk tournament
again this year and we had an enviable day of fishing. First, Robbie
caught a tarpon out of a school of about 40 fish. Then the redfish
got active, tailing and waking (pushing water) on the flats. He
hooked up on 5 out of 6 casts, catching a total of 5 redfish. Then
he caught 2 nice snook and lost one big one. Next came several shots
at a tailing permit that just wouldn’t eat the live crab we
were offering. We found another tailer that ate on the first cast.
After a 10 minute battle using 10lb Sufix braided line, we got the
fish to the boat for a quick photo and release. It weighed in at
15 pounds. At the final minutes of the tournament, we had a school
of bonefish swim right in our crosshairs. Robbie put a great cast
in front of the school with a live shrimp. A fish darted out and
ate the shrimp before it hit the bottom. But we soon realized that
it was a yellow jack schooling with the bonefish. But at the end
of the day, Robbie caught 2 snook, 1 tarpon, 5 redfish and 1 permit.
Not bad!
We should expect this kind of great fishing action to continue
throughout August and into September. Until then, tight lines,
Capt. Steve

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