Posts Tagged ‘bottom fishing’

Offshore Fishing Report: Time For Vacation

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

I went to Colorado this past week and visited a good client and friend.  Since the Keys are like a graveyard I took some time off to go fishing.  I just can’t get enough, and when I travel I always go fishing.  Most of us captains vacation around this time because it becomes very desolate this time of year.  From kids going back to school to hurricanes forming in the Atlantic, people just don’t seem to start coming down till November.  But if you do come down the hotels cut you a break — sometimes you can stay for almost half price!  This is also a great time to fish down here.  You can catch tuna, dolphin, wahoo, loads of bottom fish, and some sails are already starting to show up.  Cobia are starting to show up on the gulf wrecks and permit is showing up, too.

On my vacation, I went to see my buddy Dave Rogers who operates many businesses in the Denver area.  He is the one who designed my web site, which I get many compliments from all of my clients.  His son Tucker took me fly-fishing on the dream stream.  This is a world famous stream with rainbows, browns, and cutthroat and cutbows, which are a hybrid, mix of a rainbow and a cutthroat.  Tucker runs one of the Orvis shops in the Denver area and is an expert fly fisherman.  Tucker is an amazing fly fisherman with skills beyond the pros.  He used to guide, but being a manger for one of Orvis’s best stores, he has no time to pursue his guiding career.

I was a little rusty casting flies, but as the day wore on I seemed to pick up where I left off a year ago, the last time I picked up my fly rod.  Fishing for a living I just don’t seem to get enough time to play with my fly rod.  My first fish was a rainbow about two pounds, but looking at the photos, it looks smaller.  That’s why I hate getting into the photos because I just make fish look small.  Tucker taught me to look for rising fish which are active fish feeding on the hatch.  It is really important to match the hatch, and as the day goes on you have to change your flies to what flies are hatching.  It was raining and cool so the hatches were small.  But as the day heated up more and more bugs started to emerge.  After a long day of catching trout, I went to Wyoming for a couple days of walleye fishing in Glendo.

Glendo is a small town of 229 people, but people travel all over this country for its excellent walleye fishing.  As fishing goes it was slow, but we did catch a few and some carp and catfish.  I got to vertical jig, trolled, and we used flee flies, clackers, and cranks baits of all sizes and colors.  I learned that walleye fishing is hard and lots of work when the fish aren’t biting.  Switching back and forth between colors and different styles we covered it all with little success.  I had a great time spending time with my friends, though, and that’s what really counts.  Catching fish was a bonus.  I have been told that last year during this week it was off the chain and people were limiting out in a few hours.  But this year just like down here in the Keys, the fishing was all mixed up — fish showing up late and leaving early.  We had a great year, but it threw us a curve ball, and made us captains work a little harder to find the fish.

I will be fishing this next week as long as the storms aren’t too bad, so give me a call.  I still have a few days open, but days are slowly filling in.  Don’t forget to consider fishing in the off-season — the fish don’t know that there are less people down here!  So come on down, beat the crowds and save some money coming during the fall.

Offshore Fishing Report: Dolphin, grouper and snapper mean red hot fishing.

Monday, May 10th, 2010

MARATHON, Florida Keys — Dolphin, dolphin, and more dolphin. It still isn’t a full-blown dolphin bite, but there are days which you can be proud of.  It seems to be good one day and slow the next.  I fished every day this week, but only one day was devoted to dolphin, and it was a little slow on that day.  There were some fish caught around 12-15 miles from the beach, with a few big fish in the 30-50 pound range.  I even heard of someone getting a 70 pounder…now that is a fish of a lifetime.  Most of what I had seen and heard, schoolies have been scattered just about anywhere.  Any day now we will see lots of large fish pouring through somewhere, I hope it is tomorrow.

While you’re out offshore, you might as well drop a few times for some snowys and other bottom fish.  The bite has been great, but I wouldn’t know personally…I have been stuck on the reef catching my share of the yellowtails and groupers.  The spots I have been fishing range from 75-98 feet of water.  Finding a good big yellowtail spot isn’t hard to do right now…it’s their time to do the wild thing so they are very aggressive and hungry.  I have been fishing this one spot where three bull sharks have taken up residence and occasionally a hammerhead or a tiger shark will show up to get their fill of these yellow delights.

The grouper bite has been great ever since it opened back up on May 1st.  Hitting the wrecks and fishing the reef has produced a bunch of nice black groupers from 15-30 pounds.  I have landed many goliaths from 30-150 pounds this week.  We hooked many fish that I didn’t even slow down.  I use a simple leader rig with 80-pound main line with 100-pound leader.  Even with the drag locked down, I still can’t stop some of the fish before they get into the structure.  I am thinking about going up in test, there are some slobby groupers out there.  I am still looking to beat my 63-pound black grouper I got a few years back…one of these days, I can feel it!  To fish for these dinosaurs, I like to use large yellowtails, up to 2 pounds, and grunts bigger than your hand.  Even small-but-legal grouper can eat either of these baits; they have a voracious appetite and a mouth to match.

The swordfish bite was red hot, from what I heard from the boys.  Summer time isn’t the best time to get a lunker, but there are lots of them out there.  Even though you still might get lucky and get a 500 pounder, most of the big fish are on their way back up to the North, where they’ll be harvested by long liners up off of New York and Boston.  Strip baits still seem to be the best baits along with squid.  When you use squid you can sometimes end up with an oilfish, escolar, or even a pompfret.  You just never know what you’re going to get when you drop a bait down 2,000 feet.

Good luck, and make sure you got all of your paper work onboard. Law Enforcement has been out in full force, especially if you are diving…those dive flags seem to attract them.  Make sure you are abiding by all the new laws, or it could cost you.