I spent the past week in Florida fishing with two different kayak guides - one on each coast. Mark, John Rentch, and I fished on the east coast (in Indian River and Mosquito Lagoon) on Tues and Wed with Dee Kaminski of Reel Kayak Fishing. The bite was slow there both days. Due to the failure of a National Park Service employee to open a key access gate, we could not fish at our planned location on Tues. The alternate location was not highly productive. Strong winds on Wed clouded the shallow flats where we were and turned off the fish. We were scheduled to fish again on Thurs, but the winds were even stronger that day. The guide cancelled that trip. I managed to catch one nice 20" speckled trout and a tiny redfish on Tues.
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Mark and John can add their own commentary and photos. The next day they headed home, but I drove across the state to Tampa to fish with my usual kayak guide -- Neil Taylor of Strike Three Kayak Fishing. Although the winds were howling on Fri, Neil knew a spot where we could anchor and drop live shrimp onto a rock pile. Despite rough conditions, I managed to catch 7 strong sheepshead. At 16" and several pounds weight, these were the largest sheepshead I had ever caught.
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Neil does not normally use live bait for his clients, but he felt that shrimp would offer better opportunities given the high winds and cold water. We fished shrimp again on Sat on a rock pile in a different location. This spot also produced sheepshead, but added five other species too (porgy, lizardfish, gag grouper, pufferfish, and squirrel fish ).
For our final day, we fished a series of docks using shrimp. The shrimp were rigged on small circle hooks with a split shot a few inches up the line. I anchored up and dropped the shrimp to the bottom in 7-12 ft depth and held it still on a tight line. As soon as I felt any change in pressure, I set the hook. These fish are quite good at bait stealing. I missed quite a few, but by the third day I caught plenty too. We finished up before a large storm moved into the area. I caught nearly 30 sheepshead, 5 gag groupers, and 3 pufferfish on Sun morning. I had a great time catching some fish I do not normally get in that area.
IMAG0413.jpg IMAG0414.jpg 20180128_155221_resized.jpg 2003-08-01 00-00-03.jpg 2003-08-01 02-03-53.jpg
P1030377.jpg 2003-08-01 01-48-06.jpg
Mark and John can add their own commentary and photos. The next day they headed home, but I drove across the state to Tampa to fish with my usual kayak guide -- Neil Taylor of Strike Three Kayak Fishing. Although the winds were howling on Fri, Neil knew a spot where we could anchor and drop live shrimp onto a rock pile. Despite rough conditions, I managed to catch 7 strong sheepshead. At 16" and several pounds weight, these were the largest sheepshead I had ever caught.
IMAG0409.jpg
Neil does not normally use live bait for his clients, but he felt that shrimp would offer better opportunities given the high winds and cold water. We fished shrimp again on Sat on a rock pile in a different location. This spot also produced sheepshead, but added five other species too (porgy, lizardfish, gag grouper, pufferfish, and squirrel fish ).
For our final day, we fished a series of docks using shrimp. The shrimp were rigged on small circle hooks with a split shot a few inches up the line. I anchored up and dropped the shrimp to the bottom in 7-12 ft depth and held it still on a tight line. As soon as I felt any change in pressure, I set the hook. These fish are quite good at bait stealing. I missed quite a few, but by the third day I caught plenty too. We finished up before a large storm moved into the area. I caught nearly 30 sheepshead, 5 gag groupers, and 3 pufferfish on Sun morning. I had a great time catching some fish I do not normally get in that area.
IMAG0413.jpg IMAG0414.jpg 20180128_155221_resized.jpg 2003-08-01 00-00-03.jpg 2003-08-01 02-03-53.jpg
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