04-30-2007, 05:07 PM
OK, lets try this again. I had a report typed earlier and erased it on accident. [mad] Boy was I mad! LOL Also, keep an eye on this thread, i'm going to post the pictures that go along with this trip later on either this afternoon or tommorrow. [
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Anyhoo, the day started out great. The water was calm and the wind was very moderate. After a quick stop by Inlet Conveniance for some bait, we shoved off.
Comming out of the mouth of the jetties, my father in law noticed some birds diving down in the distance, so i decided to head over and see what all the fuss was about. Small mullet minnows were being cut, so I rigged up 2 rods with a #00 clark spoon and 2 with a #01 clark spoon. I put two down on a #1 planer and kept two on top. Each line was rigged with Spro swivels and 3' of 20 lb fluorocarbon. (no steel leader) During the first pass I noticed one of my planer rods standing up. It was a spanish! I was thinking to myself, "A spanish? This time of year?" LOL, it was a pleasant surprise as we caught quite a few nice spanish, a couple breaking the 20" mark. Those will be good in the oven with a little lemon and butter. [cool] We got many of them with in rock throwing distance of the one mile marker, which is a great place to head to if the fishing gets slow. (the bait fish like that thing for some reason [crazy]) LOL
After we got our fill of the little mackies, we turned the boat NE and headed towards paradise reef. I bought some monster mud minnows from Inlet Conveniance and predetermined a drift pattern for some flounder action. I was using a carolina rig w/ a 20 lb mono leader and a 2/0 kahle hook. But, I would come to be disappointed as the flounder just weren't there. I made about 4 or 5 drifts and after not getting a bite (accept for a small shark), I decided to call it quites. That's one way to waste 21 dollars worth of mud minnows, I ended up letting them go. [mad] But, on the bright side, on my last drift I noticed a little hump about 500 yards due east from the reef marker and I anchored over it. I dropped down a bag of menhaden chum and lit up a smoke as I waited for it to do it's work. Using the scraps from the spanish I cleaned earlier, We started in on some great shark fishing action. The sharks were smaller, in the 20-40 pound range, but none the less a great time. I was waiting for a big boy to come out and play, but nothing big showed up. Lucky for them I guess. LOL [
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We decided to move up on another spot and dropped anchor over the reef balls. We got a little fishing in before the wind shifted on us, I hate it when that happens. [unimpressed] The seabass aren't hanging around anymore, even though you can still snagg a few little ones here and there. I was surprised that even the pinfish weren't very hungry yesterday. Usually, you can't get help but catch pinheads along the structure. My father in law caught a small whiting and I decided to put it out on a balloon rig to see what was hanging around. Of course, no so much as a sniff.
After catching a few spanish, I gave DR a call and we both agreed that if the spanish were there, the kings might be too. So, before I headed back to the hill, I dropped drone spoons down on my rods rigged with planers, but I didn't get bit. This weather really has things wierd. The kings are still offshore and haven't quite made thier way in yet. Usually the kings make it in before the spanish, since the spanish dig the hotter water. It wasn't long and the wind picked up and we decided to call it a day.
On the way back in I swung over to the mile marker and gave it a couple more passes with just the two planer rods. I scored 2 more spanish, even with the foul conditions, and that was the ending note for the day. I put those guys on ice whole and will use them for shark bait during my next trip.
All in all a pretty good trip. Other than being dog tired after the two hour drive back, I'm ready to do it all over again next weekend. (if the weather every cooperates) [cool]
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Anyhoo, the day started out great. The water was calm and the wind was very moderate. After a quick stop by Inlet Conveniance for some bait, we shoved off.
Comming out of the mouth of the jetties, my father in law noticed some birds diving down in the distance, so i decided to head over and see what all the fuss was about. Small mullet minnows were being cut, so I rigged up 2 rods with a #00 clark spoon and 2 with a #01 clark spoon. I put two down on a #1 planer and kept two on top. Each line was rigged with Spro swivels and 3' of 20 lb fluorocarbon. (no steel leader) During the first pass I noticed one of my planer rods standing up. It was a spanish! I was thinking to myself, "A spanish? This time of year?" LOL, it was a pleasant surprise as we caught quite a few nice spanish, a couple breaking the 20" mark. Those will be good in the oven with a little lemon and butter. [cool] We got many of them with in rock throwing distance of the one mile marker, which is a great place to head to if the fishing gets slow. (the bait fish like that thing for some reason [crazy]) LOL
After we got our fill of the little mackies, we turned the boat NE and headed towards paradise reef. I bought some monster mud minnows from Inlet Conveniance and predetermined a drift pattern for some flounder action. I was using a carolina rig w/ a 20 lb mono leader and a 2/0 kahle hook. But, I would come to be disappointed as the flounder just weren't there. I made about 4 or 5 drifts and after not getting a bite (accept for a small shark), I decided to call it quites. That's one way to waste 21 dollars worth of mud minnows, I ended up letting them go. [mad] But, on the bright side, on my last drift I noticed a little hump about 500 yards due east from the reef marker and I anchored over it. I dropped down a bag of menhaden chum and lit up a smoke as I waited for it to do it's work. Using the scraps from the spanish I cleaned earlier, We started in on some great shark fishing action. The sharks were smaller, in the 20-40 pound range, but none the less a great time. I was waiting for a big boy to come out and play, but nothing big showed up. Lucky for them I guess. LOL [
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We decided to move up on another spot and dropped anchor over the reef balls. We got a little fishing in before the wind shifted on us, I hate it when that happens. [unimpressed] The seabass aren't hanging around anymore, even though you can still snagg a few little ones here and there. I was surprised that even the pinfish weren't very hungry yesterday. Usually, you can't get help but catch pinheads along the structure. My father in law caught a small whiting and I decided to put it out on a balloon rig to see what was hanging around. Of course, no so much as a sniff.
After catching a few spanish, I gave DR a call and we both agreed that if the spanish were there, the kings might be too. So, before I headed back to the hill, I dropped drone spoons down on my rods rigged with planers, but I didn't get bit. This weather really has things wierd. The kings are still offshore and haven't quite made thier way in yet. Usually the kings make it in before the spanish, since the spanish dig the hotter water. It wasn't long and the wind picked up and we decided to call it a day.
On the way back in I swung over to the mile marker and gave it a couple more passes with just the two planer rods. I scored 2 more spanish, even with the foul conditions, and that was the ending note for the day. I put those guys on ice whole and will use them for shark bait during my next trip.
All in all a pretty good trip. Other than being dog tired after the two hour drive back, I'm ready to do it all over again next weekend. (if the weather every cooperates) [cool]
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