larry

Fishing Report – Bings Landing 6-29-13

Sat. June 29, 2013
Weather:  Mostly cloudy with rain/thunder storms passing to North and South
Wind: moderate east winds, 8-10mph, light near dark
Pressure: 28.9
Major Feed: 5:25PM
Water: Water is still pretty dark though it was fishing an out going tide

Target Fish: Redfish, Trout
Fish caught: (1) Flounder,  (1) Ladyfish, (3) Jacks, (3) Mangrove Snappers, (2) trout hooked/lost

I fished out of Bings Landing this afternoon. Though the weather was threatening I went ahead and took a chance and launched. There was actually a big storm on both sides of me but they skirted around and moved out over the ocean.

My plan was to fish some live mullet until late afternoon and then finish out the day with some top water action. I staked down along a deep bend in a creek drain and hooked my first fish within seconds of getting a bait in the water, a nice Snapper by just short of being legal. I did not have to many small finger mullet and the snapper were biting so fast I started cutting up larger mullet to save my livies. A fish would be on the bait within 30-45 seconds of it hitting the water! They just weren’t quite large enough to keep.

I had several hard strikes on live finger mullet that didn’t hook up. One completely scaled a 5″ mullet.

One thing that was different from the last time I fished here was that nothing would touch a fiddler crab? I caught some up on the way in but could interest a fish of any kind in one.

Finally, about 8:00pm with the tide still on the out going, the top water bit started! It was like you flipped a switch. My first clue was some surface striking. It was obviously a school of small predators by the multiple strikes happening all at once. I figured it was a school of jacks but quickly grabbed my top water rod and offered up a 5M18 MirrOlure. It immediately drew attention and a nice jack boiled up on the plug. I ended up getting three of them to the boat.

I did have two trout on but they managed to tear off which is not uncommon on top water. I probably had another 10-12 good strikes that did not hook up or were on only briefly.

I picked off another nice ladyfish that really put on a show. Once I got her up to the boat she almost jumped right up into my face. It would not be the first time I’ve been seriously hooked by one of the hyper fish. You really need to be careful with them when multiple hooks are involved.

Within about 35 minutes it was all over and the waters calmed. Not even a mullet disturbed the surface after that point. The only fish I brought home was a 15″ flounder.

Though the trip was not that productive……that 30 minutes of hot top water bite made the paddle worth the effort.

OH! Almost forgot……on the way over I scouted the beach……Pogy pods everywhere!! Every time I stopped I could see schooled up pods as far as I could see with my 10×32’s. I did not see any action in them though. If work allows, I’ll check this out one morning this week.

Larry S.
longscreek6-29-13

long creek lady 3

New Tarpon Regulations Approved for Florida Waters!

Tarpon: “Megalops atlanticus”

Tarpon Alongside My Kayak

 The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission  recently voted to approve new regulations classifying tarpon and bonefish as catch-and-release-only in State Waters. 

Strength, stamina, and fighting ability, make the tarpon (Megalops atlanticus) one of Florida’s premier game fish. They inhabit both inshore and near shore waters and have the ability to live in fresh water as well. Also interesting is their ability to survive in oxygen depleted water. The Tarpon has a primitive lung and can gulp air from the surface, allowing it to inhabit waters that most fish could not. Tarpon are dispersed throughout the states coastal waters during the summer months but most will move to the warmer waters of south Florida during the winter. The Florida State Record Tarpon weighed in at 243 lbs. and was caught near Key West.
 
The current regulations will remain in effect through the end of August 2013.
 
Current RegulationsGulf State Waters & Atlantic State Waters : Two per person ($50 Tarpon Tag Required for Harvest   No Minimum Size Limit 

Gear Requirements:

  • Legal Gear: hook and line, seine, cast net (NEW: Gear will be hook and line only starting Sept. 1, 2013)
  • Snagging, snatch hooking and spearing is prohibited (NEW: The use of a multiple hook in conjunction with live or dead natural bait will be prohibited starting Sept. 1, 2013)

NEW: Effective Sept. 1, 2013, tarpon will be a catch-and-release only fishery. One tarpon tag per person per year may be purchased when in pursuit of an International Game Fish Association (IGFA) record. Vessel, transport and shipment limit will be one fish.

 

New Management Update:

The FWC Commission approved several changes to how tarpon is managed at the June 2013 meeting in Lakeland. These changes will go into effect Sept. 1, 2013, and include:

  • All harvest of tarpon will be eliminated, with the exception of the harvest or possession of a single tarpon when in pursuit of an IGFA record and in conjunction with a tarpon tag.
  • Tarpon tags will be limited to one per person, per year (except for charter boat captains).
  • Transport or shipment of tarpon becomes limited to one fish per person.
  • One fish per vessel limit is created for tarpon.
  • Gear used for tarpon will be limited to hook-and-line only.
  • People will be allowed to temporarily possess a tarpon for photography, measurement of length and girth and scientific sampling, with the stipulation that tarpon more than 40 inches must remain in the water.
  • Tarpon regulations will extend into federal waters.
  • Tarpon tag cost will remain $50 per tag but tag validity will change from July through June to January through December. Tags purchased from July 1 through Dec. 31, 2013, will be good through Dec. 31, 2014.
  • Prohibit the use of a multiple hook in conjunction with live or dead natural bait to harvest or attempt to harvest tarpon

Personally, I have a hard time understand the need for most of these new regulations for several reasons: The fact that a Tarpon has no food value means there is almost no commercial or recreational harvest of this fishery as it is. This means the average person has no reason to keep a tarpon and would not spend the $50 for a tag to make it legal anyway. Why does a fish that goes virtually unharvested, need to be protected….from harvest? Additionally, what does this mean for species that are being harvested?

I feel that given the naturally, extremely limited harvest by sportsmen, the Tarpon should have no problem maintaining its population without further regulations placed on the fishery. If there are some other factors that are affecting the population then that would be another matter but I am unaware of any problems or reports of declining numbers of Tarpon.

While I truly do enjoy doing battle with a big Tarpon, most of the new regulations do not seem necessary or appear that they would provide any significant benefits that the Tarpon are not already enjoying.

See ya on the water!

Larry S.

Big Tarpon in a Little Kayak

Larry Stephens with Tarpon caught off Flagler Beach in 2011.

Fishing Report – Ormond Beach Night Fishing

Sat. May 26, 2013
Weather: 79 deg. at launch, Mostly clear
Wind: moderate southeast winds, 6-8 mph
Water: Water stained from runoff and muddy, light chop.
Target Fish:  Trout
Fish caught: (1) Ladyfish, (13)  Trout ,  (1) Mangrove Snapper

I went on a night op with my brother Darin last night to fish some dock lights in Ormond Beach. The night before he caught about 20 trout fishing a live shrimp under a cork.

It was a little windy to suite me but there was one pretty sunset going down.

Sunset on the Intracoastal

Fishing against a Painted Sky

We stopped at some open water structure to do some plugging. I was throwing one of my favorite search plugs……a ghost minnow. It is a shallow running lip bait and a suspending twitch. I think it’s really a fresh water plug but it has held up well in the saltwater. I have caught a pile of trout on this thing and you can cover water pretty quickly with it.

The first fish of the evening turned out to be a nice ladyfish that struck right at the boat…..so close that when I set the hook I skipped her right into the boat and out the other side.

 

It was about another 10 minutes before I caught the first trout but the bite turned on like you flipped a switch. I caught about 5 fish back to back, nearly every cast. Darin was fishing a live shrimp and caught a small mangrove snapper but couldn’t find a trout. Finally he tied on a blue/chrome lipped plug and managed to land two trout before the bite petered out.

Keeper Trout

Croaker caught on a ghost minnow

Night Time Trout

Darin with  Keeper Trout

Ormond Beach Trout

Pluggin for Trout 6

It was getting dark so we headed off to fish some dock lights.

The bite was pretty slow under the docks we fished. We saw a few trout strike under the light but only managed to catch 5-6 in several hours of fishing. All of those took a like shrimp except one that I caught on the ghost minnow.

Short trout

TROUT 5

Trout on 1

We called it off about midnight and headed for the launch.

The river seems to be full of trout right now. They are now large so down size your equipment. We only kept 4-5 of the 13-14 we caught.

TROUT 4

Pluggin for Trout 9

Good Luck,

Larry S.

P.S. Here’s a short video of the trip……….

Fishing Report – Mosquito Lagoon 5-25-13

Sat. May 18, 2013
Weather: 74 deg. at launch, 88 at landing Mostly clear to partly cloudy later in the day
Wind: moderate east winds, 8-10mph at launch, 15-18 +/- at noon
Water: Water has turned to a stained tea or brown color. I expect it’s due to the brown tide issues.
Target Fish: Redfish, Trout
Fish caught: (1) Ladyfish, (4)  Redfish -mid- slot

Sunrise on the Grass Flats

After the action he had last weekend at the lagoon, We couldn’t resist going back for more! We had a pretty good crew this morning and I was joined by Rick Edwards and Dr. Theodore DeRoche (TR). That was about all our little hot spot could support fishing.

Unfortunately, the wind was forecasted to be 10 mph at 6 am and building to 16 mph by noon. We decided to go ahead and chance it and hope against hope the the forecast would be wrong.

It wasn’t!

We caught some live bait in a little creek on the paddle in, mostly pin fish, a few mullet and misc. others. We fished a few spots quickly on the way but were anxious to get to the honey hole.

Unlike last weekend, when we arrived at the spot we found the water to be pretty dirty and had to set up differently due to the wind direction. I expect the stained water was from the brown tide that has been an issue for the area.

I had a not so good feeling about reproducing the results of last weekend and that would turn out to be right. As a matter of fact, it got so slow about mid morning that two of our party actually dozed off.

Asleep in the Kayak

Most of the fish were caught later up in the morning.

We caught a total or (4) mid slot redfish and one small lady fish all morning. The three reds I caught were on live pin fish and mullet and Rick caught his on a Gulp shrimp again. I had (2) others on but only briefly.  The finger mullet were a little larger than I prefer, about 5″. One fish I lost probably just hadn’t gotten the whole mullet in his mouth when I set the hook. I think Rick missed one as well. TR on the other hand was having a real off day and did not manage a strike. The conditions were difficult with the chop, making it difficult to see the sandy area.  Having fished it last weekend we did have an advantage  over TR.

On the plus side, all the redfish were quality mid-slot fish and all gave our line a good stretch.

We fought it all morning and decided at noon that we had best start the dreaded paddle back which would be a mile and a quarter straight into a 15+ mph wind! It was no fun but we made it…just a little wetter than we started out.

Here are some more pics from the Trip:

Fish On!
Mosquito Lagoon Redfish
Redfish up-close!
Pulling a Red out of the water
Kayak Redfish on the Flats
Back to Back Redfish
Beautiful Grass Flats Redfish
Redfish Colors!
Sandy Kayak Landing
Catching Bait
Fish On!
Mullet on the flats 1
Redfish fight
Scouting the flats
Redfish by Kayak
One Pretty Redfish
Paddle Back in 15 -20 mph 1
Tight Lines,
Larry S.
.
.

Readers Catch of the Week!

Len's Black Drum Daytona Beach, Fl.

Recommended Reading

 
Surf Fish Any Beach, The Quick Start Guide Though this book is not kayak related, if you are looking for some exciting fishing without a boat, this book cover exactly that.
 
Sportsman's Best Kayak Fishing This book covers everything you need to know about kayak fishing. The best part is....I'M IN IT! Check out page 180-183 on Tarpon fishing.

Florida Fishing Reg.’s

Moon Phase

CURRENT MOON

Pellicer Flats Weather

Mosquito Lagoon Weather

Mosquito Lagoon

SailFlow Wind Forecast!

Florida’s Designated Paddle Trails

Florida's Designated Paddle Trails2