Marathon Fishing Report: June 2015

Marathon Fishing Report: June 2015

Mutton Mania!

These past few weeks the black grouper bite was absolutely stellar and now we have entered into the mutton spawn where large bio masses of mutton snapper will be gathering on reefs and wrecks. Every trip this week has produced big muttons and happy clients.

I have been fishing wrecks and reefs from 104’-180’ of water while power drifting or anchoring. I find anchoring I am able to produce more but sometimes it is just as productive power drifting. As conditions change so do our tactics. I am always changing the types of bait I use, dead or alive, and different rigs as well because conditions change and when they do the bite changes. I generally use long 30’ leaders in heavy current and shortened leaders when the current drops off. Depending on currents I will use 3-24 oz. of lead to hold bottom.

My leader test can vary depending on what kind of structure I am fishing. I will use light leaders where the sandy spots are clean of debris, because some wrecks have broken up from hurricanes and are scattered all over the bottom around the main structure. Where the wreck has broken up I will use fifty pound floro and on the clean wrecks I will use leader as light as thirty pound test.

I mainly use fifty pound braided rods for fishing these wrecks and reefs because it shows the bite better than monofilament, and so that I can get away with as little weight as possible. I find that it is better to use the lightest weight possible because when the mutton snapper picks up your bait and tugs on the weight he will be less likely to drop it before he gets hooked as it might if it were heavier.

grouper for Marathon fishing report in JuneThis week has been great, easy fishing. Anchoring and re-anchoring, as your location is very important. When anchoring you may have to re-anchor a few times till you gauge the current and wind right. When wind and current are close to equal strength the anchoring becomes very tricky to get right. One minute you are sitting perfect and the wind could let up a few knots and you could swing 100’-400’ away from your spot. But if this happens don’t re-anchor right away because muttons are continuously swimming around the structure or up and down the reef looking for food and avoiding predators.

Sometimes if the fish are moving around a lot you may be alright with the swing, but after an hour with no bites I would adjust your location. If the wind is fluctuating a lot it may be better to power drift instead of anchoring. This week I re-anchored on average about three times in each spot I fished because of the fluctuating wind velocity. When you have four or more people onboard it may be best to anchor but with fluctuating wind speeds you might be more productive power drifting with two people.

Fish caught on June fishing charter in Marathon FL for reportI have yellow tailed this week a bit with great success. Fishing the deeper water I have been averaging two pound yellowtail and some groupers and muttons. But mainly when fishing for yellowtail I stayed focused on them to keep up with their pick habits. Yellowtail snapper can be some of the pickiest eaters when the water is clean and warm.

Using plenty of oats and chum we can lead them to believe they are safe. But in fact they were not, as my anglers were pouncing on them by changing bait constantly and following the school. Sometimes to get the bigger yellowtail my clients had to fish one rod at a time, but catching one every ten minutes vs not catching any because of one too many lines in the water is a winner in my book. While fishing for yellowtail I would let the rest of my clients fish the bottom for muttons and groupers, where they did fantastic. I had many days where we were limited out by 11:00AM on grouper.

Don’t forget to book me in advance this summer as most of my days are taken a month in advance, I will have a few days available.

 

Have you ever seen a Mako shark eat a swordfish?

MARATHON, Florida Keys — Wow, what a beautiful week we had out on the water.  The weather was almost perfect the entire week.  We still didn’t find many dolphin but while were searching we came across an unusual floater.

We found half of a large swordfish floating, with a mako shark circling.  The swordfish was cut in half, with it’s cobolt blue color still intact.  I cut a chunk off of the swordfish and tried to bait up the mako but he wasn’t interested.  I guess after eating 100 pounds of swordfish he was full.  I t would be just a matter of time before he got hungry again, and I was hoping it would be soon.  I tried to remove the swordfish from the water but the mako just left when we did that.  So I tied the swordfish to the boat and dumped it back in the water.

It took only a few minutes for the mako to come back.  I kept the chunk of bait right behind the carcass, and we just watched this magnificent shark swim around the boat for over a half an hour.  The shark kept swimming circles around the boat and with every minute passing I got more and more frustrated.  I finally took off the bait and pulled in the swordfish.  I took the hook and stuck in the meat of the carcass where the mako had bitten him in half.  I proceeded to let the swordfish out on a dock line.

After ten minutes the mako came up to investigate his prize.  Shortly after that he took a bite out of the swordfish and it was so amazing to see how effortlessly he cut through it.  I noticed that my line was moving away from the swordfish and I set the hook.  I stuck him good, thumbing the drag and repetitively set the hook until the fish thrashed a bit.  He didn’t go anywhere; he just swam around the boat like there was nothing wrong.  Knowing what a mako is capable off I powered the boat away from the fish and then he realized that there was something wrong and he sounded peeling 400 feet of line in seconds.  We fought the fish for about an hour when he finally came up for some jumps and shortly after that we lost him.  He must have gotten wrapped up in the leader and it parted in the middle of a forty-foot leader.  Even though we didn’t land him it was an epic adventure.

The dolphins haven’t shown up yet, but there are a few fish out there.  I have found some schoolies in close and a few scattered big fish anywhere from 12-30 miles offshore.  The tunas have slowed down at the hump, but if you get there early or stay out late you can manage a decent catch.  Trolling around really has been a waste of time; if you run and gun you will find more fish under the birds.

The deep dropping was awesome this week.  We found lots of snowys, a few queen snappers, tilefish, rosefish, and barrelfish.  One of the spots we limited out on snowys on the first drop.  We dropped two rods and got a double and a single.  You are only allowed to have one snowy per person, so don’t do another drop in the same place because you are liable to catch another one.  Usually we only catch one or two snowys in one spot but they seem to be on every spot I drop on.  We had to stop deep dropping so we didn’t go over our limit.  I do have spots where snowys won’t be.  We went out to 1,100 feet of water and got some rosefish, and a barrelfish.  This is the time of the year where I do very well catching snowys.

If a reef fishing charter is more your style, it has been great.  We caught lots of yellowtail and groupers.  I found that the bite is starting to turn on in the deep water.  You will find larger yellowtails in 75-100 feet of water.  Using oats and lots of chum you can get the big boys up in the water column, where your odds of landing the big ones increase.  We did get a few large mangroves on one spot; most of them were from 2-4 pounds, which is decent.  I was fishing in 88 feet of water with a jig tipped with a small pinfish.  This is also how we caught all those grouper. 

Once this wind lets down here in Marathon, get offshore to fish and drop while you still can.  And don’t forget to check all of your safety equipment…you never know when you might need it.

Offshore Fishing Report: Cold Water Moves Into Marathon

MARATHON, Florida Keys — Cold and blusterous, seems to be a theme this year.  There has been cold water plaguing us here in Marathon.  This was caused by the Gulf Stream shooting into the Gulf of Mexico and forcing out cold water, which inevitably was forced along the Keys and it was the reason why the Gulf Stream or warmer water was so far out this week.  If you think of a bucket that has been filled to the top with cold water, then add a hose with warm water; the water leaving the bucket first will be cold and then a mix of warm and cold water.  This is what we are going to experience this coming week.  There will be very large spikes of warm water all along the Keys.  By heading either East or West you will find the warm water when heading out offshore.  Listening to the weather report by NOAA you will be able to find out if your homeport is in the vicinity of the Gulf Stream.  If it isn’t, you will either travel far offshore or up and down the road where the current and warmer water comes closer to shore.  Fishing in these cold water is a waste of time and money.  Find the warm water and you find the fish.

Offshore has been awfully bleak.  There has been a few dolphin around the edge of the warm and cold water.  Off of Marathon this week it was 30 miles out and further.  There is warm water heading our way for the rest of the week.  The Gulf Steam ought to be no more than ten miles from shore if not closer.  This warm water will only be here for two to five days before another body of cold water from the Gulf of Mexico is pushed around Key West and then up the Straits of Florida.  Most people think we are fishing the Atlantic Ocean, but in fact we are not in the Atlantic but the Florida Straits.

The reef fishing in Marathon has been fair with some yellowtail biting even though there hasn’t been any current in three weeks.   The water has been dirty green and cold, not a great combo for a normally warm water-loving, cold blooded animal.  The yellowtails are there and schooling in the chum, but they are not motivated to eat.  I fished for yellowtails once this week and we got our limit but it took a while.  The grouper action is hot just about everywhere.  From 20 feet of water to 160 feet the blacks have been on a rampage, eating most baits.  It is too bad we can’t even keep one a day.  A few muttons have been taken on the reef from what my friend have told me, we didn’t see any though.  The kingfish are pretty much all over the place; they seem to be digging the cold water.  Cobias have been spotted in great number on the ocean side following rays and turtles.  I wish I were out there to see it, I was told it was pretty impressive, with many fish in the 50-pound class and bigger.

Sail fishing was a bit bleak in Marathon, but if you traveled twenty miles East or West the bite was decent.  There has been cleaner and warmer water in these areas, which have been teeming with sails and dolphin.  Set up on the edge of the reef from 80-130 feet for the sails.    Many multiple hook ups are possible and don’t forget about the wahoo, they are still around.  My buddy John Foster got a fifty pounder this week.  By using a little wire on your sailfish rig you can capture some of the toothy critters, which are in the same areas as the sails.  Six inches of number Four or Five wire will work just fine and the sailfish won’t even know it was there, especially if you’re using ballyhoo.

Check the weather reports and fish in areas that look fishy don’t just choose an area out of a hat, and be precise with your rigging.  By using all the tools and information available today the fisherman can be very productive these days, but when you fish blind sometime you get lucky and sometimes fall down.  So use everything at your disposal from the Internet to the electronics on your boat, and be safe and good luck.

 

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