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Reports > Jacksonville Florida 05.15.03
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Taking Advantage of an Opportunity
This past week, Raymond McCauley and myself
headed out for a day of fishing in the backwaters of Jacksonville.
This was an important day for two reasons, we were fishing and we were
filming one of my weekly shows.
On this morning I got up a little earlier
than usual so I could research some of my logs for days that were
similar to this one. Keeping logs about past trips is a great way
to have a great data base to look back on. I keep such information
as wind, wind direction, wind speed, moon phase, date, water
temperature, bait used, fish caught, where the fish were caught, air
temperature, barometer, and a few other elements. I have a program
on my PC that allows me to enter each of the above as a separate
field and then sort or select this information using these fields. For
example; say I have 200 days entered in this data base and each having
moon phase, temperature and so on as a separate part of
each day. By doing this I can go into this program and ask the computer
to select all days that have the field that is titled "fish
caught" that equals red fish. What I have done is to pull up all
days (records) that I caught red fish. Or I can ask the computer to pull
up all days that I caught red fish on days that the wind was out of the
south and days that we had a full moon and days that the tide got really
low and so on.
On this day I asked the computer to pull up
all days that I fished in the creeks and caught red fish when the moon
was full and the tide was really low. When the computer did it's
search it brought up several days (records) where all of the information
that I asked it to look for was common. The moon was full, the tides
were really low, I caught redfish and where I caught the fish. Now
you could do the same thing by keeping all of this information in your
calendar but how long would it take you to look through several years of calendars
to find all of this info? Longer than I would like to spend.
In all of the days that were selected, two
things kept popping up as a common factor. Three places, that when the
tide got really low the fish were super concentrated into these small
areas and that I was using finger mullet for bait. Now, I had some sort
of an idea of what I needed to do to catch fish on this day. Ah, a
game plan.
On the way to the dock, I called the three
bait shops that were on the way to the boat ramp and NONE had mullet so
I knew that I was going to have to depend on my Fitec cast net to
provide me with the bait that I wanted to use on this trip.
Arriving at the dock, I was greeted by my
producer, Scott Aston and my guest for the day Raymond McCauley. They
were both as anxious as I was and we quickly launched the boat and away
from the dock we went. I let Raymond drive as I got ready the cast net.
Raymond eased me along the shoreline in search of today's bait, finger
mullet. It wasn't long before we saw a little school pushing water and
with one cast of my 8 foot Fitec net, I had about two dozen finger
mullet. A few more cast and we had all of the bait that we were
going to need for this day. When throwing a cast net for finger
mullet, I like a 1/4 inch mesh. This small mesh allows me to capture
just about every thing that the nets lands over. There are times when
the mullet are small, about three inches long and these small mullet
will swim through a larger mesh size.
Okay, we have bait, and a couple of excited
willing anglers and we are off in pursuit of the nicer inshore redfish.
My first spot was looking good, mullet
jumping every where and an occasional strike from something eating them.
We eased up to this spot, Raymond eased out the anchor and I was quick
to get my finger mullet in the strike zone. I then got ready to rare
back and set the hook. Now, a few minutes have passed with fish
busting all around my mullet and nothing. What is going on here? I
have the killer bait and it is in the right spot but no big fish on my
hook. This was taking a lot longer than I figured it would and I was
about to get frustrated when I heard what sounded like a big explosion.
I looked toward my float just in time to see the results of a big fish
that had inhaled my mullet. Both Scott and Raymond are hollering turn
the handle as I was trying to get a tight line as hard as I could. this
fish was coming straight towards the boat much faster than I could
get the slack back on the spool. The fish rocketed past the boat as he
headed for open deeper water. As the line came tight, I hit him one time
to set the hook and this seemed to make this fish really mad. He bolted
away from the boat with the speed and furry of what could only be one
thing, a big fish. I love it when a fish heads for open water as opposed
to in and around the oysters. Man I was having fun, a big fish screaming
line from my reel and keeping my rod bent almost in half. After
several runs around the boat this fish was ready for the net.
As I led the fish up from the bottom, I could see the yellow hue
and the football shape common to Mr. Jack but it was a nice one, about 5
to 6 pounds. This is not exactly what I was targeting as my computer
program was in search of red fish but how can you turn your nose up at a
good pulling fish like a nice jack.
We stayed at this spot for another ten
minutes or so and saw no other fish working, so we beat feet to the next
spot. This spot showed some promise with a few fish busting but
after about ten minutes and no bites we had to leave this spot. See , we
are working the low end of the tide and therefore we only had about two
hours before the tide would be start back in and then be too high.
The next spot was about 8 miles away so I pushed the throttle down
on my Honda 225 and as it opened up my 2790 Carolina Skiff was
pushing speeds of about 50 mph.
It wasn't long before we arrived at the next
spot and I liked what I saw, mullet showering and fish busting. We
quickly eased the anchor over and got our baits in the right spot. You
could see the schools of red fish working the bank, busting the mullet
that were in their path. He comes a school of reds right for my mullet
and it seemed as the competition factor set in as two reds tried to
inhale my little bait at the same time. As this was happening, my cork
went under and I immediately tighten up the line and off to the
races it went. Once again my reel was making that funny noise that we
all like so much to hear as the big red pulled out line. These big
backwater reds are just amazing as how they seem to pull so long and so
hard. This fish took all of 4 minutes to get to the net and we were now
cooking with gas. I told Raymond to cast at the fish that were working
down the bank and as soon as his bait hit the water he was also
hooked up. Another nice red fish was screaming line from his reel
as he could be seen with a big smile that went from ear to ear. Raymond
was now pumped up as his fish ran to the end of the pool and then back
down the other bank. After several minutes, Raymond also had a nice fish
in the net.
The next fish was a very nice flounder, that
ate one of our 6 inch long mullets. We then landed another
flounder and I lost one that would have gone 4 or 5 pounds. I wound my
cork back towards the boat to check the bait and felt something heavy on
the business end but felt no head shake or anything pulling back. The
entire time I was winding the cork back to the boat, I kept saying, "I
must be hung on something" but never did feel anything that
resembled a fish. When I got the cork back to the boat and tried to lift
it up, I was able to see just what I was hung on, a big flounder that
was just holding on to my bait but had not sucked it down yet.
Well, I guess he also saw me because he spit out the bait and swam away. We
live and we learn.
I quickly rebaited and back on the edge my
bait went. About then Raymond was hooked up on another nice fish but it
did not pull back like the two previous red fish. After a short battle,
I put the net on a very nice trout that was about five pounds.
Raymond with a very nice trout, caught on a
mullet and cork rig.
Alright another bonus fish. See I thought we
were going to catch reds and I had no idea that we would end up
with the SLAM. We fished a while longer and boated another nice flounder
and several more nice trout.
What a day, we started off with a big
backwater jack and ended up with red fish, trout and flounder. All in
less than 18 inches of water and all on a cork and a live finger mullet.
Who would have thunk it, The SLAM, all on a
mullet and cork rig and all in less than 18 inches of water.
The rig that I was using:
Rod:
Shakespeare Graphite 7 foot Medium Action
Reel:
Shakespeare Tidewater 4835 Spinning Reel
Line:
10 lb test, 2 lb diameter Power Pro Braided Line
Leader:
Cajun Red Lighting 20 lb test
Cork:
Cajun Thunder
Hook:
Daiichi D16Z Bleeding Bait Octopus Wide
Cast Net:
Fitec Super Spreader 8 foot 1/4 inch mesh
Bait:
Live finger mullet
Action Spotter:
Freshwater:
Bass can be caught in the St. Johns around
the grass beds near Paccetties and around the Green Cove area.
Bream are doing good around the docks, using
worms and crickets. Try fishing right next to the pilings.
Inshore Saltwater:
The flounder are starting to show up in some
numbers. reds in the creeks are still on one day and off the next. Trout
are every where. Try a surface lure like a MirrOlure Top Pup or in the
deeper areas give a MirrOlure 5200 a try. Spanish Mackeral, Jacks and
Lady fish are on their way towards downtown. There a few tarpon in the
river and backwaters.
Jetties:
Big reds at the tips. Lots of small sharks
and a tarpon or two. Yellow mouth trout on the falling tide. A few
spanish still there on the flood tide.
Offshore:
Still good numbers of snappers and a few
groupers in close (inside of 20 miles). Kingfish over the wrecks with a
cobia or two mixed in. Lots of sharks on the bottom.
On Saturday June 7, Comcast, Shakespeare,
Honda Marine, Duval Ford Commercial Sales and Fun Fishing are
sponsoring a kids day at Frenchie's Catfish Heaven in Maxville.
All kids under 10 get in free. The first 20 kids get a free
Shakespeare Kids rod, reel and tackle pack. The kid with the largest
fish will win a nice prize. I am going to film this and air it on the
following week. Directions to Frenchie's: Follow Normandy Blvd until
it runs into Hwy 301. Go left on Hwy 301 for about 200 yards (you will
see a gas station, Max gas), turn in front of the station. Go about
100 yards and you will be there. Frenchie's phone number is 673-4338.
The fun last from 9 am to 3 pm. Come join us for some fun.
For charter information you can call me at (904) 757-7550, email me at jim@hammondfishing.com or check out my website at http://www.hammondfishing.com. Good Fishing Capt. Jim Hammond This report brought to you by Fitec Cast nets (www.castnets.com)
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