Archive for February, 2009

Had to return my camera.

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

Well, I had to send the new Nikon D90 back last week for an exchange. Nothing major wrong with it but I was still in the return period so I figured why live with it being imperfect. I hate being without a camera though. Last week we got some good redfish and I didn’t get to get any pictures for a report. Hopefully my clients will send in the pics that they took.

It’s going to be a little windy this week but thankfully it’s supposed to stay in the 70’s all week so the fish should chew pretty well. Redfish and trout are the targets this week. The reds have been everywhere in the Dunedin/Palm Harbor areas. Some days they have had lockjaw but I think that was due to the full moon we had last week. They should eat better this week. Stay tuned, I’ll let you know.

I had a day off… So I went fishing with my best clients!

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Cade and ClaireYesterday, my wife had to work and I had the day off. So I was in charge of watching my two awesome children. My 4 year old son Cade and my 2 year old daughter Claire. Cade has been fishing for 2 years now so he’s a seasoned vet but Claire hasn’t shown much interest in fishing until yesterday. She had a “game on” attitude.

We first started by heading down to the neighborhood lake armed with Zebco reels and white bread for bait. I first put Claire’s bait in the water and it wasn’t long before I heard the impatient cries of… “I can’t catch them… they won’t eat…. help me daddy!” Just seconds after the first complaint, “FISH ON”! Claire was hooked up! She didn’t immediately understand what to do but she hung onto her Barbie fishing pole just fine.

First fish over the rail was a healthy bluegill. Then Cade’s bait hit the water and he handled himself like a seasoned pro. He kept telling me, “You just have to wait.” I reassured him and it wasn’t long before he had a nice bluegill.

We ended up with 8 or 9 bluegill before the kids started eating the bait and we soon ran out. Claire caught her first fish and Cade caught the biggest bluegill I had ever seen.

How could a man have more fun? I don’t know. My greatest loves participating in my greatest love with me. Life doesn’t get any better.
Claire

Claire

Looks like the weather man might be right (for once)!

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

Last week’s freezing temps are gone. Today’s weather was awesome! Looks like more of the same the rest of the week. I can’t wait. The fishing should be great!

It was a tough week but next week’s weather looks AWESOME!

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

Man, I heard somewhere that this past week was the coldest week we’ve had here in the Tampa Bay area since 1982. I Haven’t checked to see if that’s true but I don’t really need to. All I know and all I care to know was that it was COLD! It got down to 22 degrees at my house one night this week. I’m not going to fluff things up for you at all. The bite this past week was tough. Very tough. the water temps dropped into the high 40’s (something I have NEVER seen) and the fish had lockjaw bad. We saw plenty of redfish. Hundreds of them in fact but getting them to eat anything was tough. We did manage a few keepers in the upper slot and a few trout but that was about it.

THE GOOD NEWS….

Sunday
Mostly sunny. Highs 71 to 76. Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph.

Monday
Mostly sunny. Highs in the mid 70s. East winds around 10 mph.

Tuesday through Friday Night
Partly cloudy. Highs 75 to 80. Lows 57 to 62.
partlysunny

Saturday
Partly sunny with a 20 percent chance of showers. Highs 76 to 81.

I’m loving this forecast. The fish have had lockjaw for about a week. They’ve got to be starving and this warm weather could cause them to put the feed bag on. Look for next Saturday and Sunday to be great. By then the water will have had a week to warm up and the fish should be happy.

What’s the best time of year for…?

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

I get asked a lot about what the best time of year is to fish for certain species of fish. I usually say, “Anytime you can go”. But the truth of it is, there better times of year for each species. Times of the year when the bite really shines. We’ll go species by species here to give you guys a good idea. I’m also working on a chart for this for the site as well.

Redfish: Oct.-July.
Now we catch redfish all year long but the best fishing is during the fall winter, spring and the first part of summer.  During the hottest months of the year, August and September, the bite really needs to happen early before the heat gets to bad.

Speckled Sea Trout: Dec.-March.
If you want to get into your limit of large trout. This is the time to do it. We catch trout year ’round but The winter months really produce the big fish and the most fish.

Snook: March-July and Oct.-November.
The state is always adjusting the “season” (times we can take some home for dinner) so check with your guide if you plan of keeping one. We catch snook pretty much any time other than the really cold parts of the year but the Spring and first part of summer really is snook time. We also get into them pretty good when the water begins to cool down again in the fall.

Tarpon: May and June.
If you want to land a tarpon, this may be your best bet in the state. I run these trips during these months in Boca Grande, Tarpon Capitol of the World. Then in Tampa Bay in July we still have pretty good tarpon fishing here from July to the first part of September.

Spanish Mackerel: April-September.
These toothy marauders are slashing through the whole Tampa Bay area during these months. We do get into the rest of the year but not like we do in the summer time.

Cobia: March and April.
These brown bombers cruise the flats of the Tarpon Springs area during these months. It’s prime site fishing opportunities if you want to catch a 25-40lb fish in less than 3 feet of water.

The Best of the Rest: All Year.
We catch all kinds of things and many of them cooperate all year long. Grouper (shallow water), mangrove snapper, sheephead, bluefish, sharks… there’s no limit to what we might catch on a charter. There’s always something to keep our lines tight and smiles on our faces.