Our final day in Tampa provided the best weather of our three-day trip. Sunny skies and lower winds gave us an excellent day on the water.
Here are Terry and John heading out with our guide:
A.JPG
Once again dolphins were nearby:
B.JPG
Also several manatees kept us company. You can barely see the snout of one in this photo:
C.JPG
They stay close, often spouting air from their snouts which is quite a disconcerting sound when they do that behind your kayaks and you can't see them.
Many pelicans did their crash dive antics repeatedly near us. I couldn't capture them in that act but I got this one flying by:
G.JPG
Terry and John saw sharks but I never saw one, which is probably a good thing from my standpoint.
The fishing was similar to previous days with speckled trout making up the majority of our catches. Here's one I caught today:
F.jpg
They're beautiful fish. This one was about the average size of our catches with some over the 15 inch legal size.
John was battling a 17 inch trout in this photo:
E.jpg
We each also hooked ladyfish today as we did during the previous days of our trip. Here's our guide Neil Taylor with one:
D.jpg
Indeed ladyfish were the hardest pulling fish I caught in Tampa.
A new species for me today was a Jack Cravelle. Sorry no photo. It was just a little guy not much larger than my hand. But I believe Terry and John each caught one or more "Jacks" on previous days.
Some of you know that Terry (Raptor) is an outstanding troller for stripers. Here he is today wearing his Snaggedline shirt:
H.JPG
This was a casting trip and I knew Terry was anxious to trail a line behind his boat. So on our way back to the launch today he did just that. True to form he caught a ladyfish and Spanish Mackerel by trolling.
Those were the last catches of our trip.
We arrived back in Baltimore at 9:00 p.m. tonight, tired but very pleased. Our next outing, most likely for Severn pickerel, will certainly be a cold one by comparison. I'm sure we'll be thinking of those warm Tampa temperatures when we launch from Jonas or Tucker Street.
Here are Terry and John heading out with our guide:
A.JPG
Once again dolphins were nearby:
B.JPG
Also several manatees kept us company. You can barely see the snout of one in this photo:
C.JPG
They stay close, often spouting air from their snouts which is quite a disconcerting sound when they do that behind your kayaks and you can't see them.
Many pelicans did their crash dive antics repeatedly near us. I couldn't capture them in that act but I got this one flying by:
G.JPG
Terry and John saw sharks but I never saw one, which is probably a good thing from my standpoint.
The fishing was similar to previous days with speckled trout making up the majority of our catches. Here's one I caught today:
F.jpg
They're beautiful fish. This one was about the average size of our catches with some over the 15 inch legal size.
John was battling a 17 inch trout in this photo:
E.jpg
We each also hooked ladyfish today as we did during the previous days of our trip. Here's our guide Neil Taylor with one:
D.jpg
Indeed ladyfish were the hardest pulling fish I caught in Tampa.
A new species for me today was a Jack Cravelle. Sorry no photo. It was just a little guy not much larger than my hand. But I believe Terry and John each caught one or more "Jacks" on previous days.
Some of you know that Terry (Raptor) is an outstanding troller for stripers. Here he is today wearing his Snaggedline shirt:
H.JPG
This was a casting trip and I knew Terry was anxious to trail a line behind his boat. So on our way back to the launch today he did just that. True to form he caught a ladyfish and Spanish Mackerel by trolling.
Those were the last catches of our trip.
We arrived back in Baltimore at 9:00 p.m. tonight, tired but very pleased. Our next outing, most likely for Severn pickerel, will certainly be a cold one by comparison. I'm sure we'll be thinking of those warm Tampa temperatures when we launch from Jonas or Tucker Street.
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