Fish Tales Blog

Fishing blog: Tales of angling adventures from around the world

Welcome to our fish blog! Here you can read more sage advice from anglers around the world. This is the place for news, tips and non-fiction fish tales from mountain lakes to distant beaches. Please feel free to comment and join in on the conversations and share some fish tales of your own!

New Year’s Day Surprise!

Conventional wisdom maintains that in the winter snook head upstream into the rivers and canals in search of warmer water and baitfish. Most magazines and fishing periodicals will tell you to head upstream too if you want to catch a snook.

However, due to the remarkably warm fall and winter [so far] we are enjoying in Southwest Florida, the beach is still HOT and full of snook feeding on the bait that is still around. The resulting warm gulf temperatures [still in the 70’s] make for some great fishing while you enjoy a day on the beach.

Following our tradition of fishing on Jan 1 no matter what, we found ourselves fishing a great bite on the beach north of Boca Grande on a sunny 86F afternoon. We took a bucket of shrimp in anticipation of a whiting, sheepshead, or drum dinner but only caught snook, one right after the other on nearly every cast. Simply free lining the shrimp in the trough just past the curl on the beach was the ticket. Two feet of 20 lb. fluorocarbon, with a 2/0 Octopus hook and a small split shot above it to get it away from the seagulls was just right.

So, don’t always believe the sage advice you read. Be sure and consider the weather, tides, and water temperatures so you can  find quality fish where others aren’t even looking. Have fun and remember snook season is closed around here until March so release them gently.

Negative Tides

Winter is known here in SWFL as a season of big tides. A lot of water moves through our passes as it leaves and returns to our bays. The negative low tides this coming week will result in water levels significantly below normal with the shallow flats becoming nearly dry. This makes access challenging for boaters or the wading anglers who may sink up to their knees in the soft bottom. Kayakers and SUP anglers are in a unique position to capitalize on these low tides using their shallow draft fishing platforms. These same low tides that make access difficult for most anglers tend to concentrate gamefish in the deeper sand holes scattered across most flats. The fish you find there will be skittish and require you to cast from a good distance away. Accuracy counts here and casting to the far edge of the sand hole will allow you to hop a jig across this open area. You can usually see the fish with good light and polarized sunglasses, but even if none are visible, cast anyway. Trout and snook will commonly hide in the surrounding grass and ambush baitfish foolish enough to expose themselves while crossing this open area.

For boaters, the same tides that make these flats inaccessible can benefit them too. Fish that don’t get comfortable in a sand hole will wait out this low tide in the deeper water just off the flat. As baitfish and other menu items are forced to leave the safety of their grassy home they get ambushed.  Get out there before dead low and find the small drainages that carry water off the flat towards the channel. Stay a cast away from the nearly dry flat and work the edge as you ease along. Casting up onto the flat with a weedless rigged plastic and retrieving with the flow from the shallows can be a perfect presentation. A long cast ahead of the boat paralleling the edge of the flat over the deeper water nearby can also be effective.

As the water returns with the rising tide, fish that have left the flat will return with enthusiasm to find baitfish, shrimp and crabs that have been stressed during the previous low tide. The lack of water stresses bait as the temperature changes quickly [either up or down]. This same lack of water creates an environment low in oxygen for flats residents unable to retreat to the deeper water in sand holes or nearby channels. These factors combine to create a feeding opportunity for returning gamefish that will push up onto the flat and out of the sand holes as soon as the water is deep enough to cover their dorsal fins. Our favorite lure in this situation is a weedless rigged plastic shad tail. Rigged with a small bullet weight ahead of a 2/0 wide gap worm hook, they imitate what gamefish are looking for and with a bullet weight, they can be cast far enough to prevent spooking these feeding fish.  Lead these fish, let the lure sink into the grass, hop it as your target arrives and hang on!

So, check your tide charts, pick your time and take advantage of these negative tides.  You might see us out there too
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City Island KAYAK & SUP launch at low tide

Sarasota Bay SWFL

GPS= 27.335738, -82.573313

 

Sunset Bass and Speck on Zoom Horny Toad!

Bass continue to strike frogs along the shoreline of most lakes and streams in this area. Of course, Sunset is the best time but we are catching fish even when the sun is high. Fish these Toads with a 5/0 wide gap hook and rig them weedless. Either cast them onto the floating grass along the shore and “tickle” them off into clear water OR swim them into the grass mat and bounce them on the edge like a frog having trouble climbing onto the grass. Either finesse presentation will create a feeding opportunity for bass. Frogs are easy to swallow and don’t have dorsal fins that scratch their throat.
Here is a photo of an incidental catch: a black crappie or speckled perch as we call them here in Florida. This one also liked frogs. We have even caught bluegill on these lures.
Get more information from our waterproof pocket guides for Southwest Florida:
“Angler’s Guide to Shore Fishing Southwest Florida-Longboat Key to Boca Grande” and
“Angler’s guide to Kayak Fishing Southwest Florida-Sarasota Bay to Pine Island” available at B&T stores along the coast and at https://www.anglerpocketguides.com/ with FREE SHIPPING.
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Tilapia and Bass on a Zoom Horny Toad

A couple of days ago, we were kayak fishing for bass in a small creek near North Port. Kimball had a powerful strike and a good run from a fish that she didn’t see. After a good fight, she landed and released this really large Tilapia that took a frog. Now tilapia are not known as predators but this one ate the lure. I imagine the lure intruded in the nest and the tilapia picked it up to get it out of there. Kimball went on to catch and release over 15 bass in a little over 3 hours. All fish were caught on the Zoom Horny Toad in the Watermelon Red color. Me? I was paddling a guest and didn’t even make a cast. Learn how we fish this lure as a finesse bait in our book “Angler’s Guide to Kayak Fishing Southwest Florida-Sarasota Bay to Pine Island” Check out the whole series of waterproof angler pocket guides at https://www.anglerpocketguides.com/ 011915 (240)