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Saturday, October 26, 2013

Fall River Trolling

With the cold crisp air starting to set in, it was time to break out the trolling gear once again. Weeks prior we had done some light tackle trolling but now it was time again for tandem rigs with six inch shads. We had three knockdowns and amongst them landed a 25 and 22. Our hottest lure was a BFG tandem in white. Captain Chuck makes these rigs and is a good guy who is willing to talk with you at his many area appearances to help fine tune your spread. I have asked him and his wife many a question and they have always given a friendly answer. While I still tend to enjoy fishing with a rod in hand it's nice to boat some fish late in the season with some different tactics. http://www.bfgtackle.com/images/tandem_white.jpg

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Right Bait, Right Time, Wrong Tools

It was the last day before putting the boat away for season. We switched up our coastal bay fishing, aiming for Tog and Redfish instead of flounder. This meant a different game plan, different locations, different bait, different terminal and fishing tackle.  Our plan was to hold close to jettys and bulkheads dropping sand fleas straight down. We used the sensitivity of braid to feel the bottom dropping the baits into deeper holes where the Tog seemed to hide. We caught three Tog, two large fish, one heavy fish that was an inch shy of the 16 inch minimum.  One large fish snapped off as I grabbed the leader because we didnt have the net at the ready. The other two fish were netted together because the hooks got tangled up in the net. That was a first, netting a fish with a fish already occupying it. We ended up with some smaller Seabass but also broke off several rigs with the Tog pulling us into the rocks. We had most things set expect our tools weren't up to speed. We needed a net at the ready, many more rigs, weights and heavier rod and reel combos to seal the deal. Unfortunately our next chance at them will have to wait until spring. 

Friday, October 18, 2013

Flounder Pounder 2013

In September we decided to try our hand again at the annual Bahia Marina Flounder Pounder. The first time we fished the tournament we ended up with a nice 3+ lb. keeper. As we left the dock to the sound of the fog horn we realized we wouldn't be able to keep up with the speed of the other boats so we decided to navigate some skinny water that our pontoons could handle to get us into prime fishing early. This decision paid off as we caught a weighable flounder within 45 minutes of the start. The rest of the day ended up with a couple of close shorts but nothing noteworthy. As we headed for the scales our excitement started to build as people seemed to talk up our fish. We heard, "oh that's a big fish", "you better get that to the scales" and nervously, "my fish is on the leader board and that looks just like my fish." It weighed in at 3.15 lbs just short of 4 pounds but my biggest flattie thus far. I'm guessing it was about fourth at the time we weighed it in but ended up probably seventh or so after all the big fish were weighed. The winner took home around four thousand dollars, not too bad for a day on the bay.

More pictures from the Bahia Marina Flounder Pounder by the Coastal Fisherman
http://www.coastal-fisherman.com/gallery.cfm?c=313D1349-5056-9F21-09D95218AA27BDFD#