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Wednesday, August 26, 2009

School Starts Means Great Fishing in S. Fl.

First of September around the Corner and the first hint of fall arrives this weekend as school has begun everywhere in Southwest Florida and the fishing should be about as good as it gets. Water temperatures will start to creep ever so slowly downward and fish will become more aggressive. Schools of redfish are now scattered through out the area. Look for tailers on a low tide then work the bars on a rising tide for easy strike ability.

Snook fishing is improving as these Linesider’s slowly begin their move back to the winter haunts. River mouths, island points, tidal creeks with good moving water should produce. Snook are fattening up for the winter and will take most offerings if presented correctly. If the fish you have found are meticulous eaters, try tackling down and finesse fishing to entice a strike.

Kingfish should start moving south and the runs in our area should be bigger and better than last year. Start looking for water temps in the mid to lower 70’s with a good hard bottom and bait, you should have success. That magic number of 75 to 80 will produce the biggest from the pier at Sharky’s in Venice, Florida.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Beach Macks Are Back!

Armed with Strike King sunglasses and our circle hooks, tagged to a free spooled live Greenback minnow, Ed was sure in hooking it up with a Spanish darting through the black bait balls moving in abundance about the sides of the pier. Along the outskirts of a large balled bait pod was a barracuda of at least four if not five feet in length, cruising in a circular motion around and around the pod causing it to become tighter and tighter and then in a burst of speed, a flash and slash, the pod dispersed and the Cuda made its kill. Awesome! Like watching the Discovery channel in prime time live action as his line also tightened and “fish on!”
The afternoon started as Edwin searched the surface for sizable Greenies, in the three-inch range and I worked an MR-17 in search of topwater action from anything trout, reds, snook or mackerel. Working the shoreline, I managed a couple of rats, a keeper trout and a couple of spit-off snook. Keeping none, Ed was motioning he had the baits and I met him out on the boards. Changing over to a 2/0 circle hook, on a forty pound test leader of around three feet long, I too was ready for macks. Hooking the greenies just below their gills, in front of their gut line, they were tossed out to frantically swim and drift with the prevailing currents or wind on the lose line. Watching for that first twitch or straighten of the line gave hint to a strike, though with my Strike Kings on, usually I saw the flash at the bait just before the strike.
Even though the water temperatures are in the high eighties or even nineties, fast moving storms and uplifts over the waters in the form of fast moving lows will produce fish to turn on and if bait is present, it is frenzy. As was the case today. Keeping an eye to the sky for boomers is necessary and a need to remove you from harms way but other wise it is a refreshing change from the doldrums of August. The fall run on the mackerel should be a good one this year and I predict an early one, Kingfish included as the Spanish we kept for the grill were full of roe and they are starting to school up.
A new thing to remember this year here in Florida is all need a fishing license on the beach as of August 01, of this year. The new shoreline licenses cost $9, while saltwater fishing licenses are $17, for residents. Non-residents need regular licenses to fish from the shore or a boat. The new law allows exemptions for resident anglers fishing in their home counties using live or natural bait, on a line or pole without a line-retrieval mechanism. The exemption does not apply to people using nets, traps, gigs, spears or who gather seafood by hand.

To purchase Florida fishing license click here
or call
888-FISH-FLORIDA (347-4356).