Coastal Angler Magazine | December 2022 | Sarasota/Bradenton/Venice Edition

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TROUT TIPS FOR Wintertime

Trout like cold water, but there’s no denying the slow down that occurs on most wintertime trout fisheries. When water temps fall into the low 40s and below, insect life and other food sources are less prevalent. Trout metabolisms slow and they go into energy-conservation mode. They are content to hover near the bottom out of heavy current and feed only when an easy opportunity arises.

That said, fish still need to eat, and intrepid anglers will find joy in the seclusion of a wintertime trout stream. Here are some tips to raise the odds of a great wintertime trout trip. Dress warmly, wade carefully and savor the taste of the ice you suck from your rod guides.

1) Choose Destinations Wisely: Winter is not the time to explore high-elevation brook trout streams. Instead, float a tailwater, where water temps are consistent year-round, or go to lower elevation streams that are a bit warmer. For a target-rich environment, try out a delayed-harvest fishery. They are stocked heavily through the cooler months.

2) Fish Warm Spells: Two or three days of consistently warmer weather are primetime in terms of winter trout fishing. Everything in the stream, from the trout to the bugs and baitfish they eat, perks up.

By the same logic, the best bite is usually during the warmest part of the day. Sun warms the shallows, bringing out the tiny little midges, black stoneflies and blue-winged olives that are wintertime staples. Even if the action is subsurface, trout will take advantage of easy feeding opportunities.

3) Fish Meticulously: Unless trout are visibly rising, subsurface is the way to go. Turn your attention away from the riffles where rainbows pop dry flies in spring, and look to the deeper, slower runs. Pick them apart with nymph rigs. Keep in mind that most winter food items will be small, but fish a variety of sizes and patterns at the same time and cover every inch of each run vertically and horizontally. The idea is to hit a fish in the nose, and this is best achieved fishing slowly and carefully.

If you want to tempt a giant trout, it’s a good time to dead drift a big streamer with the same meticulous patience. Don’t hesitate to fish a heavy streamer deep under an indicator. Sometimes a big mouthful is enough to convince a lock-jawed bruiser to eat.

4) Fish Safely: Flooding your waders can kill you when it’s frigid. During cold snaps, consider fishing near the truck, where a quick jog can put you in a heated cab if you get wet. If you do go into the backcountry, take a dry-bag with fire-starting equipment, a towel and a change of clothes.

Wherever you fish, wade carefully, avoid stepping on frozen-over rocks, kick any snow off your boots before entering the water and avoid taking chances like wading deep water or heavy flows.

Nick Carter is the author of “Flyfisher’s Guide to North Carolina & Georgia.” Contact him at nsc8957@gmail.com.

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Berkeley County is a wonderland for outdoor enthusiasts, sports buffs, adventure seekers, and water lovers. From exemplary fishing for striped bass, or a trophy largemouth bass, to our hiking trails and water activities, along with scenic outdoors where you can catch a glimpse of white tail deer and gators, Berkeley County has activities to fit all visitors and families. Learn more about Berkeley County at: exploreberkeleycounty.com

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Peacock Bass Luxury

Next stop Manaus, Brazil! It all started when my good friend Capt. Johnny Stabile called.

J: I know what you’re going to say before I even ask.

G: What is it?

J: Do you want to go Peacock fishing in Brazil?

G: When?

J: We would leave 13 days after our Alaska trip.

Of course, my response was, “Ok, sounds great!”

That would give me just enough time to get back from Alaska, fulfill orders for my business, and get things ready to head south. We flew out of Miami, and with a layover in Panama City, Panama met up with several other fishermen on the expedition. After a very long night of traveling, we finally landed in Brazil and hopped on a quick seaplane ride to the Rio Matupiri for six and a half days of non-stop fishing!

We stayed aboard the Amazon Legend with a very accommodating crew of 14. We ate like kings and fished hard. Our typical day of fishing consisted of getting up before the sun for a quick breakfast and loading into skiffs to spend the day zipping around to the guide’s best fishing spots. We threw a variety of lures, mostly topwaters like big choppers and walking baits. Johnny’s favorites of the trip were a Rebel Jumping Minnow and a Borboleta Woodstock 10.5 cm. He wore out the peacock bass on that Jumping Minnow. I threw bucktail jigs, and they produced the largest number of fish, but for Johnny it was all about the BIG’UNS!

Johnny loves to fly fish, so one special thing about fishing in Brazil for him was catching several nice fish on the fly rod with easy-to-tie flies that he made myself. These fish are so much more aggressive than the peacock bass you find in south Florida. For a little perspective, we caught more than 350 peacocks and more than 50 piranha along with several other exotic species. The average peacock was 2 to 3 pounds, and Johnny’s biggest weighed more than 8 pounds. One person in our party caught a big peacock that pulled the scales to nearly 14 pounds.

After a long morning of non-stop action, sometimes we would take a quick lunch break and hide in the shade of a tree for a wonderful shore lunch. The guides packed everything for remote meals on land, where they cooked native fare on an open fire. While they cooked, we relaxed in hammocks with

plenty of cold drinks and the opportunity for a quick nap before lunch was served. Many of the fish we caught contributed to these lunches, and there were also steaks and chicken available with all the fixins. Homemade salsa and native seasonings complimented the meals perfectly. After a relaxing lunch, it was back on the skiff and back in the action!

After afternoons of fishing, we indulged in fivestar dining and the most important part of the trip, air conditioning! The crew made up our rooms, did our laundry and prepared dinner every evening. Specialty cocktails were also provided, if that’s your fancy, but Johnny’s favorite was the freshly squeezed juices. He’s already looking forward to the passion fruit juice when we return next year!

Johnny shot some great video of our trip. Check it out in the December edition of The Angler Video Magazine

If you are interested in a Brazilian fishing adventure, e-mail Johnny at captain@ SFLFishingCharters.com or Gary at gary@purgeright.com.

By Capt. Johnny Stabile and Gary Turner

For as long as I can remember, offshore bottom fishing is what we look forward to during the last half of November and the entire month of December. The week of Christmas has always been considered the apex of the bottom-fishing year.

You can see the move of the big snappers marching offshore on the edge of the colder water. This will pile big snapper and other bottomdwelling species up on certain staging areas, along with a clean water temperature line that also stacks up the kings and wahoo. Keep a light line bait out while you’re bottom fishing. There is no telling what you’ll catch and on what baits.

Of course, I love a pinfish, grass grunts or sailors choice for grouper and snapper baits for more than one reason. 1) They get bites from the target species; and 2) they eliminate most of the trash bites from grunts, pinkies and sea bass.

Yes, I love a live bait on a jig, but don’t ever forget that a big grouper also loves a big chunk of cut bait. We have seen a huge uptick in amberjack and almaco jacks in the past few

years for some reason. This is an excellent bait source! I like to keep one of the first, smaller, amberjacks that come up just for this cut-bait option. The big chunks of cut bait do

of my bottom-fishing strategy. This is also the reason I take a couple boxes of squid on every trip. I start every new post-up on a ledge or live bottom area with everyone firing down whole squid every drop. I don’t care what they are catching. It’s usually grunts, pinkies or seabass, but what is really happening on the bottom is the squid are being ripped to shreds and small pieces are swirling around and creating a chum slick. After several volleys of whole squid, I change it up to live pinfish, grass grunts or other live baits on a jig.

Grouper and big snapper see the live bait as a smaller fish that was grabbed by a crab while feeding on small pieces of squid. It’s a winning technique that has been very successful for me and other Decoy Jig users for years now. It is also new to the fish, tackle-wise.

two things. They get bites and they also create a “chum slick” on the bottom right where you are fishing. When the cut bait gets pecked at, all the small pieces of flesh swirl around as it’s being eaten.

This is one of the most important aspects

The beauty of this cold water line moving farther offshore with every cold front creates opportunity for a variety of species. You never know; keep firing down cut bait and setting the hook on “strange feeling bites,” and you might even catch a big deep-water lobster like the one in the video below.

Check out some awesome bottom fishing videos at https://youtu.be/w1YmT6M0ObQ.

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LIMITED GOLIATH GROUPER HARVEST OPENS MARCH 1

grouper for the table.

e harvest will be very limited and tightly regulated, and permits will be issued by random drawing of applicants who applied during the Oct. 15-30 deadline. e cost to apply was $10 plus fees and permit at GoOutdoorsFlorida.com.

Details for this limited, highly regulated harvest include:

• Total recreational harvest of up to 200 goliath per year, with a maximum of 50 from Everglades National Park.

• A goliath harvest permit and tag, issued via a random-draw lottery ($150 for residents, $500 for non-residents, plus fees) are required to participate. Permits and tags are non-transferable and no exemptions apply.

• A limit of one sh per person per open season with permit and tag.

• An open season from March 1 through May 31.

• Hook-and-line as the only allowable gear.

• A slot limit of 24-36 inches total length.

• Post-harvest requirements including proper application of the tag, reporting harvest data and submitting a n clip for genetic analysis.

• Harvest will be permitted in all state waters except those of Martin County south through the Atlantic coast of the Keys, all of the St. Lucie River and its tributaries, and Dry Tortugas National Park.

• Harvest will continue to be prohibited in federal waters.

“ e highly regulated, limited take of goliath grouper is an exciting and unique opportunity to provide access to this resource a er decades of closure, and we believe limited access is sustainable,” said FWC Commissioner Robert Spottswood. “We also look forward to collecting the post-harvest data to help guide future management decisions for this species.”

In October, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission opened the application process for recreational harvest of goliath grouper in Florida state waters. Harvest of the species was banned when the shery collapsed, and the 2023 spring season will be the rst time since 1990 that recreational anglers will have an opportunity to keep a goliath

is opportunity is intended to provide additional access to this shery while balancing the values of various stakeholder groups. Adult goliath grouper will continue to be prohibited from harvest statewide as well as goliath in heavy dive ecotourism areas. is limited harvest is not intended to address shing depredation concerns.

For more information about the goliath grouper harvest permit and details on the permit lottery and eligibility requirements, visit FWC’s Goliath Grouper Harvest Permit webpage.

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’Tis e Season for Gulf Coast Hogfish

With their oddly shaped mouths and a diet made up of crustaceans and mollusks, hog sh were once thought to be a species too di cult to target with rod and reel. All that changed over the last decade or so, as captains gured out how to speci cally target these delicious and beautiful bottom-feeders.

Wintertime is the best time to target hog sh on the Gulf Coast. From late November into March, they congregate on nearshore reefs and ledges to spawn, which makes them a great option in a season when rough weather can prohibit long runs to deep water.

Hog sh are protogynous hermaphrodites, which means they are all born female and change into males as they age. A single male will tend a harem of numerous females, which means nding good hog sh bottom can result in quick limits of ve sh per angler, but few of them will be large mature males. ere is a 14-inch minimum size limit in Florida, and hog sh of 18 or 20 inches are considered very good sh.

is time of year, dozens of hog sh can be found congregating together on reefs, rockpiles, and hardbottom in 50 to 75 feet of water. In most places, this can be found inside of 20 miles o shore. A prominent ledge with lots of growth is prime hog sh habitat. ey like to hover around reefs and use their long snouts to

probe cracks or root in the sand for critters like sand eas, crabs and snails.

Once you nd them, the secret to catching hog sh is pretty simple. Like just about anything else that swims, they are suckers for shrimp. Big live shrimp, fresh dead shrimp and even stinky thawed shrimp are irresistible. Just leave it right on the bottom, where a hog sh is likely to nd it while rummaging around in the sand. e rigs used to catch hog sh are also pretty simple. A knocker rig with a 1- or 2-ounce slip-sinker right up against a 1/0 circle hook will keep that shrimp right on the bottom. A half or 1-ounce circle-hook jig head will do the same thing. Some successful captains swear by hogballs, which are painted weights tethered to a hook by a small chain.

Regardless of the rig, you don’t need to go too light because hog sh aren’t particularly leader shy. A 5000 series reel with a comparable rod and 25-pound braid to a 30-pound leader is enough to haul even the largest hog sh up from depth. e trickiest part of catching hog sh is getting a good hook-set. You’ll want a little bit of slack in the line, which allows them

to pull that shrimp into their snout. Typically, you might feel or see a subtle rst bump, which will be followed by a second bump as they actually take the bait. Allow the sh to pull the line tight before reeling down and swinging the rod to drive the hook home.

For more information, go to coastalanglermag.com.

PhotoS courtesy of Capt. Quinlyn Haddon
By CAM Sta
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A mackerel’s ability to slice through line as if they were wielding a set of Ginsu knives leaves many anglers frustrated a er losing tackle. But if you target these speedsters with the right equipment, they can make for a fun day of action packed shing.

I like light spinning like a GLoomis GLX PR844 with a 2500 Stradic or an 8-weight NRX y rod with a Nautilus NVG 8/9 with Scienti c Angler sinking line. Chances are anything less than 30-lb. mono will be shredded immediately, so it is imperative to use wire leader when mackerel are around. Even then, they are known for hitting the line at the swivel connection from wire to mono, so it’s best to have several rigs ready. Also, make sure your swivels are black and not silver, these guys like shiny things. All that said, a spoon or a small jig rigged on wire will usually last a while.

Best of all, once mackerel move in, they are typically found right in the passes to within a few miles of the beach. I nd the sh o shore tend to be larger, so I like to target them. A 3-pound mack will make a blistering rst run that is reminiscent of a bone sh, and they are much less spooky than bones. e easiest way to nd them is to look for birds working. at’s a tell-tale sign. Reefs and good hard bottoms that hold bait are great places to search, as well. ese types of spots can be trolled or chummed to keep the action close to the boat. A standard chum bag will bring the school well within casting range for both conventional and y shermen. Just throw out something shiny, move it fast and you’ll hook up quickly.

Mackerel get a bad rap as table fare, as they are oily and can be strong tasting. at oiliness makes them perfect for smoking, and that, too, could not be easier. Simply llet the sh, leaving the skin on. Salt them liberally and let them rest in the refrigerator for about an hour. Rinse the salt o and add some Cajun seasoning to the sh and smoke over indirect heat at 250 degrees for about two hours. It is done when it akes easily o the skin. Smoked mackerel tastes great on its own in a salad or rice bowl, and it’s fantastic when made into sh spread.

As the water temperatures drop this time of year, bait sh shows up in force. Pods of bait sh are followed closely by schools Spanish mackerel. is o en-overlooked speedster is viewed as nuisance by some anglers, but mackerel are a blast on light tackle and y rods if you gear up correctly.

If you are looking for some hot action with minimal work, grab some wire and enjoy the return of the mack.

Will Schmidt is a seasoned tournament angler who has been writing about shing for more than two decades.

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TIPS FROM A PRO

JERKBAITS AND BAITFISH

Ajerkbait is a good idea whenever bait sh are plentiful. A jerkbait’s natural movement, size and resemblance to what the sh are already eating make this bait deadly.

ere are many scenarios I would consider good times to throw a jerkbait. One of the best situations you can encounter is when sh are actively feeding on bait sh and schooling. When bass are doing this, throwing a natural-bait sh-colored, shallowdiving jerkbait is an awesome way to replicate a dying bait sh. It at out gets bit, even when you can’t nd anything else they will touch.

Another awesome way to use a jerkbait is to blind cast in areas where bass are staged up and feeding. If you can identify bait sh already in an area, this makes the scenario even better. A lot of times this pattern sets up along grass lines, rip-rap banks and in pockets close to areas bass use to spawn. Depending on water clarity, I like a naturalcolored jerkbait or one with a little bit of chartreuse. Use a shallow or deep-diving jarkbait to match the depth you’re targeting.

Jerkbaits are also a great option for bass that are suspended with bait. Typically these sh are less pressured because they are harder to nd. You’ll need to spend some time searching with your electronics, but nding

this scenario and knowing how to target the bass can line up as some of the most fun shing you can imagine.

is can happen anywhere, but typically it occurs on points and pockets where sh can ambush the bait easier.

I use forward sonar a er I locate an active area and use the jerkbait to imitate the bait these sh are chasing in the water column. Typically, a shallow-diving jerkbait like a 13 Fishing Loco Special will work absolute wonders if you can get a sh to see it amongst the other bait sh.

Picking colors can get a bit confusing, as there are so many di erent options. I keep this decision as simple as possible and use only two di erent colors… ever. 13 Fishing makes a lot of natural colors as well as colors that stand out in dirty water. My go-to color is Casper Shad; it’s one of the most natural shad patterns you can get. Another color they make that is awesome in stained water is Neon Disco Shad.

With jerkbaits, I like a shorter rod, something between a 6’10” and a 7’. Actionwise, I like a medium-fast, which allows the sh to get the bait when you feel them hit it. e 13 Fishing Omen Black 6’10” MF is absolutely perfect. Reel selection doesn’t need to be too complicated. A 7:0:1 ratio allows you to work the bait and pick up line at the perfect pace. For line, I like 10- to 12-poundtest, and Seaguar Invizx uorocarbon is a very good line for the job.

Tyler Woolcott is a professional tournament angler and guide. Check out his website at www.tylerwoolcott shing.com.

12 FLORIDA DECEMBER 2022 COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM

Cooler Temps

Well, the weather has cooled down a bit, but that doesn't mean the fishing will be cooling down! In fact, it can turn the heat of fishing up if you plan your fishing trips at the right time. So, let's get ready to enjoy some cooler air and catch some fish!

Snook- Look for big numbers of these fish hiding out in the backwa ters trying to stay warm. Unfortu nately, Snook are probably the most heavily affected by cold weather. If they spend too much time in water temps in the low to mid 50's they will start to go belly up. That is why they like to spend this time of year either on the darker bottom sea floor or even push back into freshwater springs where temps stay around 72 all year, but when you get on them you are ON THEM! Just please do your best to release them quickly and as healthy as possible because of their vulnerability at this time of the year.

Trout- They absolutely flourish in the cooler temps and even prefer

it. Look for lots of these fish in the shallows or little deeper potholes. They will be there waiting patient ly for their prey to come to them. This making them a great species to sight fish at this time of year. And don't be surprised to catch your personal best at this time! The big females "aka Gator Trout" will be fattening up before their spawn.

Redfish- You can still find these fish grouped up, but I really key in on singles and doubles cruising the flats. With their colors sometimes being bright reddish/ bronze; it makes them easier to spot or sight fish.

Unfortunately, we are still deal ing with the effects of hurricane Ian and due to massive amounts of freshwater poured into our oceans, that is causing a red tide. So, please practice safe catch and release han dling skills when not harvesting the fish. Be safe out there and have a wonderful time!

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Casting Kayaks | CastingKayaks.com | 941-504-1349

Need A Beach Fix

It has been several weeks since Ian wreaked havoc in SWFL. I really haven’t had many opportunities to fish with all that has been go ing on down here during the recovery. One Saturday, I had a window during the morning that I could go fishing for a few hours. I headed to Manasota Key to fish along the beach. The island is in rough shape but some of the beaches are open to the public. I love fish ing the trough along the surf as I walk the beaches. I didn’t have any expectations on this day, I just needed a beach fix. Spending a morning fishing the beaches doesn’t require a bunch of equipment. Usually, I have a spinning outfit and a small backpack with tackle, lures, water and sunblock. My window was fairly limited, no need to haul a ton of equipment for this type of fish ing. I typically start with a jig and paddletail and will adjust depending on the conditions. I like to have a selection of jigs ⅛ oz to ½ oz which usually will help me to adjust depending on the tides and surf condi tions. Fishing along the beach is really not much different than other types of fishing. I’m looking for points, blowouts, bait pods, structures that can hold fish along the surf. Whether I catch fish or not, spending a beautiful morning along our beaches is a blessing, one of the many reasons I moved down here after I retired. Luckily this fishing day was successful, I caught snook, flounder, pompano, ladyfish and a few jacks. There were big schools of bait and the fish were hanging around the bait pods. It didn't take long to figure out how to get a bite. Definite ly the beach fix I needed. Hopefully many of you will find a morning or day to get your fix, good luck and keep casting.

2 SARASOTA / BRADENTON | DECEMBER 2022 | COASTALANGLERMAG.COM/SARASOTA/
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Ready For a Charter?

Hello fellow Anglers! Having added another boat to the fleet at Alpha Omega charters, as we retired one vessel and replaced it with another, we now have a 25ft. Parker Walkaround Cuddy Cabin, it is a very roomy boat and has a pot ty for the ladies. We have a State of Florida fishing license that allows us to travel out to 9 miles in the Gulf of Mexico. And we still have our 22ft. Aquasport Center Console it too is a good fishing boat, it is good for in the harbor and flats. We also have gift certificates that can be purchased for the holidays or if you have guests coming from out of town, or birthday gift. Yea, this is the time of year we get lots of visitors from up north they may enjoy a half day on the water. And this time of year, we find in the harbor red drum, sheepshead, flounder, and trout. These are all fun to catch and good table fare. This would be using the 22ft. boat around the harbors and, inlets, and intra coastal waterways, depending on the area you live in or are visiting in Southwest Flor ida. We furnish all the tackle and licenses that are required for a fun day on the water. Looking at what could be available offshore this time of year, the king

mackerel will be migrating to the south as the Gulf waters cool down. There should be plenty of spanish mackerel too moving south and the hogfish bite should be going on as the waters cool down, they feed bet ter out to 50 to 60 feet on natural bottom structure. Also, the nearshore artificial reef should be covered up with sheepshead. If you like to do some site fishing, we go into the Gulf and follow the lines of stone crab traps and search for some tripletail hang ing around the floats to ambush shrimp or small fish. Okay live shrimp or artificials do work and remember not to set the hook when you see the fish take it, WAIT till you feel it then it is game on. So, if you would like to come along with Capt. Bart Marx give us a call or e-mail at captbart@alphao megacharters.com And for those of you that have moved to the area, I will go with you on your boat and do what I call a train ing session to shorter your learning curve here in Southwest Florida. And always re member singing drags and tight lines make me smile. <*(((((>{

4 SARASOTA / BRADENTON | DECEMBER 2022 | COASTALANGLERMAG.COM/SARASOTA/
Alpha Omega Charters | alphaomegacharters.com captbart@alphaomegacharters.com | 941-979-6517
FACEBOOK.COM/COASTALANGLERMAGAZINESARASOTA/ | DECEMBER 2022 | SARASOTA / BRADENTON 5

Weather Changes

As we move thru December, we should start seeing some changes in our weather. For one we normally start having more cold fronts push their way through Southwest Florida. The cooler water temps will move fish into different areas. The biggest effect will be on our snook fishery, these warm water tropical fish do not like water temps much below 70 degrees. When the waters begin to cool down these guys seek out deeper water for winter. Places like deep water res idential canals, and our local creeks and rivers. If our local waters get

During the winter they begin to school up to spawn. These guys can be found in many different locations from nearshore reefs to back yard docks. The one thing that is important is hard rocky bottom or oysters with crustaceans. Shrimp is also a great bait for these guys, however if fiddler crabs are available, and they work excellent. You can fish them on a jig head or a small circle and split shot. It's very important to keep your bait directly on the bottom. Also be prepared to lose bait, these guys are great bait thieves. The winter fishing can be very productive if

to cool snook will often not feed for several days. This does not mean that our other fisheries shut down in fact his time of year can be very good for them. The two that benefit the most are probably sea trout and sheep head. Let's start off with sea trout, the cooler water generally causes these guys to school up in deeper water. Also, deep potholes on the flats will hold good numbers of trout. Generally, shrimp fished on a jig head gets the best results, either on the bottom or under a popping cork. Sheep head are another fish that's known for great winter action.

you adjust your approach. Also keep an eye out for debris, there's still a lot of junk floating around in the water.

If you would like to experience some of Southwest Florida's finest fish ing give us a call or send an email. All of our charters are customized to fit your party's needs.

Back Bay Xtremes |Backbayextremes.com 941-916-5769

6 SARASOTA / BRADENTON | DECEMBER 2022 | COASTALANGLERMAG.COM/SARASOTA/
FACEBOOK.COM/COASTALANGLERMAGAZINESARASOTA/ | DECEMBER 2022 | SARASOTA / BRADENTON 7 You Can Trust Your Local Mastry Suzuki RePower Center – It Simply Makes Sense REPOWER When you purchase a new Suzuki outboard from an authorized Mastry RePower Center you qualify to become a member of the Mastry Suzuki Owner’s Edge. Owners receive an identification card that provides them with important information about their Suzuki outboard motor as well as a passport to additional benefits during ownership. Members enjoy a detailed engine maintenance schedule, Mastry Suzuki RePower Trade Program and special pricing from Mastry Suzuki Partners. THE ALTERNATIVE TO BUYING A NEW BOAT When Considering A Repower, Consider These Factors: • Bayfront Yacht Works a has decades of repower experience providing proper rigging, controls, propeller matching and in water testing • With Mastry Suzuki RePower owners gain improved performance, less noise and greater reliability • Options that will fit most any budget, financing available • Mastry Suzuki RePower’s exclusive Owner’s Edge Program* • All Suzuki RePowers come with Suzuki’s 5-years of protection suzukirepower.com | 1-800-545-4574 *Get with the Program! With 13 Locations Across Florida There is a Mastry Suzuki RePower Center Near You In the Sarasota | Bradenton | Venice area Bayfront Yacht Works is a local Mastry Suzuki RePower Center Bayfront Yacht Works 8865 Midnight Pass Rd. | Siesta Key, FL 34242 941-914-9136 • Bayfront Yacht Works and Marina is a Suntex business that has Southwest Florida’s premier full-service marine repair, haul-out and storage facility. Located directly off the ICW at marker 48 on south Siesta Key, technicians are factory certified with over 50-years of combined experience, offering prompt, friendly services and installations, from routine maintenance to major engine rebuilds.

Fishing the Outer Banks

I’ve just concluded a fishing trip to the Outer Banks in North Caroli na that had been on my bucket list for quite some time. I was hoping to fish on the outer beach but the fore cast for high winds and rough seas relegated me to the intercostal water way and I was forced to find sheltered bays for most of my time. Now I’m not saying I can find fish anywhere but after a visit to the local bait shop, I was pretty sure I could catch something.

Th is time of the year on the Outer Banks is a time for Drum, AKA Redfish. As I’ve been fishing for them in S.W. Florida for about twelve years and most recently the Texas and Louisiana coast. I have a fair and broad understanding of how they feed. Of course, any new environment requires a little time to learn and this was certainly true for me here. My first day out was a bust. I did see other kayakers out in the middle of this huge bay that I assumed was deep but a return visit the following day proved to be only about two feet deep and covered in grass. I tossed the usual paddle tails, shrimp imitators and everything else I could think of only to catch one fish all morning, it was a nice Redfish but only one of the dozens I saw. A return visit to the bait shop did the trick. A young woman angler in the shop said her friends all use gold spoons but she never uses them. So, gold spoons in hand and I’m back out the following day. I hook a Drum less

than five minutes from launch while trolling and then I recall my friend Pam Wirth using them all the time in Florida and other Gulf states. I don’t catch another Redfish for an hour but I’m convinced that the gold spoon is the trick. I consciously begin to play with the cadence, presentation and lo cation of my casts. I began to replicate what a trolling lure would look like and all of a sudden it was game on, fish after fish. Like all fish they will only take a lure that is presented just right and there it was all along, that perfect rhythm, not to fast, near and through the sea grass with a steady retrieve.

The following five or six days were filled with hot Redfish ac tion, most in the slot size, eighteen inch minimum up to twen ty-seven inch maximum. When the tide would slow down or change and the Redfish bite would cool off I started dragging paddle tails and shrimp imitators across the sandy bottoms for Flounder! Talk about an aggressive fish and fun to catch. Due to the amount of time that I spend fishing, I tend to follow a catch and release philosophy, but the chance to blacken a Redfish back at camp was enough to entice one stunning Redfish onto my plate!It’s A Wild World-Get Out There! Fishman Dan @paddlinandfishin

@paddlinandfishin | gulfcoastkayak.com | 239-283-1125

8 SARASOTA / BRADENTON | DECEMBER 2022 | COASTALANGLERMAG.COM/SARASOTA/
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12 SARASOTA / BRADENTON | DECEMBER 2022 | COASTALANGLERMAG.COM/SARASOTA/ CORTEZ PORT MANATEE 3113 1st Street, Bradenton, FL 34208 941.746.6020 5409 Manatee Ave E Bradenton, FL 34209 941.795.8442 December/2022 • 27°28’N 82°41’W December/2022 • 27°38’N 82°34’W www.USHarbors.com Cortez, FL - Dec 2022 Date High Low AM ft PM ft AM ft PM ft Rise Set Moon 1 Thu 5:58 1.7 7:58 1.6 12:53 1.1 1:40 0.2 7:02 5:37 2 Fri 7:45 1.5 8:18 1.8 2:27 0.7 2:22 0.5 7:03 5:37 3 Sat 9:13 1.5 8:39 2.0 3:33 0.3 2:57 0.7 7:04 5:37 4 Sun 10:27 1.4 9:01 2.1 4:25 0.0 3:27 0.9 7:04 5:37 5 Mon 11:32 1.4 9:24 2.2 5:09 -0.3 3:52 1.1 7:05 5:37 6 Tue 12:31P 1.3 9:49 2.3 5:49 -0.4 4:13 1.2 7:06 5:37 7 Wed 1:25P 1.3 10:15 2.4 6:26 -0.5 4:31 1.2 7:06 5:37 8 Thu 2:15P 1.3 10:45 2.4 7:02 -0.6 4:48 1.2 7:07 5:37 9 Fri 3:02P 1.2 11:19 2.3 7:38 -0.5 5:06 1.2 7:08 5:38 10 Sat 11:57 2.3 8:15 -0.5 7:08 5:38 11 Sun 8:55 -0.4 7:09 5:38 12 Mon 12:40 2.2 4:53 1.2 9:37 -0.3 7:28 1.2 7:10 5:38 13 Tue 1:28 2.0 5:21 1.3 10:21 -0.2 8:58 1.2 7:10 5:39 14 Wed 2:24 1.8 5:48 1.3 11:05 -0.1 10:40 1.1 7:11 5:39 15 Thu 3:33 1.6 6:15 1.4 11:49 0.0 7:12 5:39 16 Fri 5:00 1.4 6:41 1.6 12:18 0.9 12:32 0.2 7:12 5:40 17 Sat 6:40 1.3 7:08 1.7 1:39 0.6 1:14 0.4 7:13 5:40 18 Sun 8:16 1.2 7:35 1.9 2:43 0.3 1:53 0.6 7:13 5:40 19 Mon 9:43 1.2 8:06 2.1 3:37 -0.1 2:30 0.8 7:14 5:41 20 Tue 11:00 1.2 8:39 2.2 4:28 -0.4 3:03 1.0 7:14 5:41 21 Wed 12:13P 1.2 9:18 2.4 5:17 -0.7 3:32 1.1 7:15 5:42 22 Thu 1:23P 1.2 10:01 2.5 6:07 -0.9 3:56 1.2 7:15 5:42 23 Fri 10:48 2.6 6:58 -1.0 7:16 5:43 24 Sat 11:39 2.6 7:49 -1.0 7:16 5:43 25 Sun 8:41 -0.9 7:17 5:44 26 Mon 12:34 2.4 4:47 1.1 9:32 -0.8 7:13 1.0 7:17 5:45 27 Tue 1:34 2.2 5:08 1.1 10:21 -0.5 8:59 1.0 7:18 5:45 28 Wed 2:43 1.9 5:33 1.2 11:07 -0.2 10:52 0.8 7:18 5:46 29 Thu 4:08 1.5 6:00 1.4 11:49 0.1 7:18 5:46 30 Fri 5:54 1.2 6:30 1.6 12:39 0.5 12:29 0.4 7:19 5:47 31 Sat 7:51 1.1 6:53 1.8 2:08 0.2 1:06 0.6 7:19 5:48 www.USHarbors.com Port Manatee, FL - Dec 2022 Date High Low AM ft PM ft AM ft PM ft Rise Set Moon 1 Thu 7:01 1.7 9:00 1.6 1:08 1.2 2:03 0.2 7:02 5:36 2 Fri 8:42 1.5 9:23 1.8 2:45 0.8 2:46 0.5 7:03 5:36 3 Sat 10:13 1.4 9:49 1.9 3:57 0.4 3:22 0.7 7:03 5:36 4 Sun 11:35 1.3 10:16 2.1 4:52 0.0 3:53 0.9 7:04 5:36 5 Mon 12:48P 1.3 10:43 2.2 5:38 -0.2 4:19 1.1 7:05 5:36 6 Tue 1:55P 1.3 11:09 2.3 6:18 -0.4 4:40 1.2 7:06 5:36 7 Wed 11:34 2.4 6:57 -0.5 7:06 5:36 8 Thu 7:34 -0.5
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SARASOTA BAY VENICE INLET 490 Substation Road Venice, FL 34285 941.258.2528 December/2022 • 27°7’N 82°28’W December/2022 • 27°20’N 82°33’W 1485 S Tamiami Trl Venice, FL 34285 888.538.4052 DISCOVER DAIWA REELS EXCEEDING EXPECTATIONS THROUGH QUALITY AND INNOVATION Whether you’re enjoying a day on the water with your favorite fishing buddy or you’re after that tournament trophy catch, you need the right equipment. Sunshine Ace Hardware offers quality rods, reels, lures and baits from top-notch brands like Daiwa. Follow us on Facebook and sign up for email offers at www.CrowderBros.com Bradenton | (941)-795-8442 | 5409 Manatee Ave. W., Bradenton, FL 34209 www.USHarbors.com Venice Inlet, FL - Dec 2022 Date High Low AM ft PM ft AM ft PM ft Rise Set Moon 1 Thu 5:56 1.6 7:56 1.5 12:40 1.1 1:27 0.2 7:02 5:36 2 Fri 7:43 1.5 8:16 1.7 2:14 0.7 2:09 0.4 7:03 5:36 3 Sat 9:11 1.4 8:37 1.9 3:20 0.3 2:44 0.7 7:04 5:36 4 Sun 10:25 1.3 8:59 2.0 4:12 0.0 3:14 0.9 7:05 5:36 5 Mon 11:30 1.3 9:22 2.1 4:56 -0.2 3:39 1.0 7:05 5:36 6 Tue 12:29P 1.3 9:47 2.2 5:36 -0.4 4:00 1.1 7:06 5:36 7 Wed 1:23P 1.2 10:13 2.2 6:13 -0.5 4:18 1.2 7:07 5:36 8 Thu 10:43 2.2 6:49 -0.5 7:07 5:36 9 Fri 11:17 2.2 7:25 -0.5 7:08 5:37 10 Sat 11:55 2.2 8:02 -0.5 7:09 5:37 11 Sun 8:42 -0.4 7:10 5:37 12 Mon 12:38 2.1 4:51 1.1 9:24 -0.3 7:15 1.1 7:10 5:37 13 Tue 1:26 1.9 5:19 1.2 10:08 -0.2 8:45 1.1 7:11 5:38 14 Wed 2:22 1.7 5:46 1.3 10:52 -0.1 10:27 1.0 7:11 5:38 15 Thu 3:31 1.5 6:13 1.4 11:36 0.0 7:12 5:38 16 Fri 4:58 1.3 6:39 1.5 12:05 0.8 12:19 0.2 7:13 5:39 17 Sat 6:38 1.2 7:06 1.6 1:26 0.6 1:01 0.4 7:13 5:39 18 Sun 8:14 1.1 7:33 1.8 2:30 0.3 1:40 0.6 7:14 5:40 19 Mon 9:41 1.1 8:04 1.9 3:24 -0.1 2:17 0.8 7:14 5:40 20 Tue 10:58 1.2 8:37 2.1 4:15 -0.4 2:50 0.9 7:15 5:41 21 Wed 12:11P 1.2 9:16 2.3 5:04 -0.6 3:19 1.1 7:15 5:41 22 Thu 9:59 2.4 5:54 -0.8 7:16 5:42 23 Fri 10:46 2.5 6:45 -0.9 7:16 5:42 24 Sat 11:37 2.4 7:36 -0.9 7:17 5:43 25 Sun 8:28 -0.9 7:17 5:43 26 Mon 12:32 2.3 9:19 -0.7 7:18 5:44 27 Tue 1:32 2.1 5:06 1.0 10:08 -0.5 8:46 0.9 7:18 5:44 28 Wed 2:41 1.8 5:31 1.2 10:54 -0.2 10:39 0.8 7:18 5:45 29 Thu 4:06 1.4 5:58 1.3 11:36 0.1 7:19 5:46 30 Fri 5:52 1.2 6:28 1.5 12:26 0.5 12:16 0.3 7:19 5:46 31 Sat 7:49 1.0 6:51 1.7 1:55 0.2 12:53 0.6 7:19 5:47 www.USHarbors.com Sarasota, FL - Dec 2022 Date High Low AM ft PM ft AM ft PM ft Rise Set Moon 1 Thu 6:20 1.6 8:20 1.5 1:20 1.1 2:07 0.2 7:01 5:36 2 Fri 8:07 1.5 8:40 1.7 2:54 0.7 2:49 0.4 7:02 5:36 3 Sat 9:35 1.4 9:01 1.9 4:00 0.3 3:24 0.7 7:03 5:36 4 Sun 10:49 1.3 9:23 2.0 4:52 0.0 3:54 0.9 7:03 5:36 5 Mon 11:54 1.3 9:46 2.1 5:36 -0.2 4:19 1.0 7:04 5:37 6 Tue 12:53P 1.3 10:11 2.2 6:16 -0.4 4:40 1.1 7:05 5:37 7 Wed 1:47P 1.2 10:37 2.2 6:53 -0.5 4:58 1.2 7:06 5:37 8 Thu 2:37P 1.2 11:07 2.2 7:29 -0.5 5:15 1.2 7:06 5:37 9 Fri 3:24P 1.2 11:41 2.2 8:05 -0.5 5:33 1.2 7:07 5:37 10 Sat 8:42 -0.5 7:08 5:38 11 Sun 12:19 2.2 4:45 1.1 9:22 -0.4 6:46 1.1 7:08 5:38 12 Mon 1:02 2.1 5:15 1.1 10:04 -0.3 7:55 1.1 7:09 5:38 13 Tue 1:50 1.9 5:43 1.2 10:48 -0.2 9:25 1.1 7:10 5:38 14 Wed 2:46 1.7 6:10 1.3 11:32 -0.1 11:07 1.0 7:10 5:39 15 Thu 3:55 1.5 6:37 1.4 12:16 0.0 7:11 5:39 16 Fri 5:22 1.3 7:03 1.5 12:45 0.8 12:59 0.2 7:11 5:39 17 Sat 7:02 1.2 7:30 1.6 2:06 0.6 1:41 0.4 7:12 5:40 18 Sun 8:38 1.1 7:57 1.8 3:10 0.3 2:20 0.6 7:13 5:40 19 Mon 10:05 1.1 8:28 1.9 4:04 -0.1 2:57 0.8 7:13 5:41 20 Tue 11:22 1.2 9:01 2.1 4:55 -0.4 3:30 0.9 7:14 5:41 21 Wed 12:35P 1.2 9:40 2.3 5:44 -0.6 3:59 1.1 7:14 5:42 22 Thu 1:45P 1.2 10:23 2.4 6:34 -0.8 4:23 1.1 7:15 5:42 23 Fri 11:10 2.5 7:25 -0.9 7:15 5:43 24 Sat 8:16 -0.9 7:16 5:43 25 Sun 12:01 2.4 9:08 -0.9 7:16 5:44 26 Mon 12:56 2.3 5:09 1.0 9:59 -0.7 7:40 1.0 7:16 5:44 27 Tue 1:56 2.1 5:30 1.0 10:48 -0.5 9:26 0.9 7:17 5:45 28 Wed 3:05 1.8 5:55 1.2 11:34 -0.2 11:19 0.8 7:17 5:46 29 Thu 4:30 1.5 6:22 1.3 12:16 0.1 7:17 5:46 30 Fri 6:16 1.2 6:52 1.5 1:06 0.5 12:56 0.3 7:18 5:47 31 Sat 8:13 1.0 7:15 1.7 2:35 0.2 1:33 0.6 7:18 5:47

SAWFISH NEWS

Men Arrested for Illegally Catching and Killing an Endangered Sawfish

Officers with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Division of Law Enforcement arrested two men in October for using an illegal gillnet near Everglades City and killing an endangered smalltooth sawfish. The men now face several misdemeanor and felony charges.

Sonja Fordham with Shark Advocates International, and a member of the U.S. Smalltooth Sawfish Recovery Implementation Team stated “It’s tough to read about the illegal killing of an endangered sawfish, but good to see FWC Officers taking the offense seriously and publicizing various aspects of the enforcement process. I’m hopeful law enforcement will also prioritize penalties for these individuals”.

The confiscated sawfish is being held as evidence during the investigation, then will be transferred to sawfish researchers with the FWC Port Charlotte Field Lab.

Adam Brame, the NOAA Fisheries Smalltooth Sawfish Recovery Coordinator said, “I’m hopeful the legal process will hold the perpetrators accountable for their actions and that this unfortunate situation can be used to raise further awareness about the consequences of illegal fishing practices and their effects on endangered species.”

More information about the case is available in The Miami Herald at https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/floridakeys/article267820352.html

Th is event is a good reminder about the impacts of illegal gillnet fishing. Gillnets are not selective therefore tend to catch both target and not-target species, which contributed to the decline of sawfish prior to the implementation of the Florida gillnet ban in 1995, when sawfish were

incidentally caught by anglers targeting mullet. Smalltooth sawfish use the same shallow estuarine waters as mullet and unfortunately the sawfish rostrum (saw) is easily entangled in gillnets, making them a common bycatch species. Given the difficulty in removing sawfish from gillnets, they were often killed when incidentally captured. Despite the population declines observed during the last century, we’ve seen positive signs in the smalltooth sawfish population since the protections of the 1995 net ban and the ESA-listing in 2003.

If you see or catch a sawfish, follow the viewing and handling guidelines at www.SawfishRecovery.org then note its estimated total length, and the date, time, and your location with GPS coordinates if available. Please share the information by visiting www. SawfishRecovery.org, calling 1-844-4SAWFISH, emailing sawfish@ myfwc.com, or entering the details in the FWC Reporter App to help scientists steer research and conservation efforts and track recovery of the population.

14 SARASOTA / BRADENTON | DECEMBER 2022 | COASTALANGLERMAG.COM/SARASOTA/
Photo credit FWC More about the case use the QR code here
FACEBOOK.COM/COASTALANGLERMAGAZINESARASOTA/ | DECEMBER 2022 | SARASOTA / BRADENTON 15

The Magnificent 7 Towers

There is nothing like these Air Force Radio/Relay Towers in most of Florida, except the Panhandle has some too. Standing regally, about 150-feet above the waterline, the narrow towers attract flocks of frigates, pelicans, terns, gulls, and lots of divers & fishermen! Below, the magic begins, as 4 coral

and sponge encrusted diagonal beams spread out and down to about 20-feet, where vertical legs and horizontal beams drop to the bottom, which is usually limestone live-rock with scattered metal debris.

My first descent on a Tower was in spring of 1992, freediving on the deepest (127’) and farthest offshore (100-nautical miles) from Fort Myers Beach. The W-Tower is almost to the Dry Tortugas, so it was crystal clear from the surface on down and loaded with bait, cudas, AJs, and monster mangrove snappers. I had one fin tip still in the air when I shot a 10-lb mango and the scuba divers onboard changed their minds quickly and joined me! It was an epic trip, boating multiple AJs, snappers and scuba divers saw a big cubera and black grouper on the bottom, but they bolted.

Towers start 24 to 27-n.miles SW of Marco Island, then spread 21n.miles apart on a perpendicular grid. Most divers hit the R-Tower first in 69’, or if they made a Tortugas trip from Ft Myers, then dove the L-Tower in 102-ft and the Baja California wreck, about half way home. Two of the remaining 5 Towers, P & T in 66’ to 69’ are mostly dove on trips from SW FL to Key West. They're in greener Gulf water, but have good spearfishing visibility, around 20’plus and the usual pelagics, like AJ, AP, and sometimes cobia. The D-Tower is only 30’ deep and the closest to land at 20-n.miles from Goodland & Everglades City, so it's fantastic hook & line fishing, but the visibility of only 5’ made it too tough to spearfish freediving, when bringing my boat around from Ft. Lauderdale this summer. I saw big Goliath groupers and small fish, but the smart gags, blacks and snappers stayed out of site.

The S-Tower is tough for many to reach because it's 65-n. miles from Marco and 42-n.miles from Key West, and not in line with either, or around other sites. It's the last of the Magnificent 7 Towers to elude me, but it's not too out of line from the Dry Tortugas to Marco Island. It's my goal and it'll be great just because it's off the beaten path, and 82’ deep so it'll be clear and fishy!

chad.carney@yahoo.com https://www.facebook.com/floridaskindiver/ https://www.deeperblue.com/beginners-guide-spearfishing/ 727-423-7775

16 SARASOTA / BRADENTON | DECEMBER 2022 | COASTALANGLERMAG.COM/SARASOTA/

Friends of the Pelicans

Even if you take precautionary steps to avoid it, sometimes you might hook a bird by accident. That’s when it’s important to remember—don’t cut the line and let the bird fly away with it attached. This will lead to entanglement, resulting in death of that bird and possibly others as well. Instead, follow these simple steps to unhook the bird: Reel. Remove. Release.

1. Wear safety glasses and enlist a partner for help.

2. Reel the bird in slowly and lift it from the water using a hoop net. Even a large pelican weighs only 4-8 pounds

3. Grasp the bird by the head just behind the eyes and fold the wings against the body. For pelicans, hold the beak, keeping the mouth slightly open so it can breathe. Cover the bird’s head with a cloth to keep it calm.

4. Never pull the hook out but carefully push the end through the skin, cut off the barb and back the hook out using pliers or clippers. If the bird is entangled, remove all line.

5. Release the bird (if healthy) by placing it on the ground near the water and allowing it to take off.

6. If the bird has swallowed the hook or is severely injured, contact a local wildlife rehabilitator from the list at MyFWC.com/unhook.

How else can you help a seabird or wading bird?

1. Don’t feed the birds, which teaches them to approach where they are more likely to be hooked.

2. Dispose of filleted bones where birds can’t get them—in a trash can with lid or at home. Bones of a filleted fish will become lodged in or tear throats, stomachs and intestines leading to the death of that bird .

3. Cover bait buckets and take unused bait home. 4. Dispose of fishing line in a monofilament recycling bin or cut into small pieces and place in the trash.

5. Don’t leave your line unattended. 6. Cast carefully to avoid hooking a bird in flight or being snared on trees, bridge pilings etc.

7. Help others learn what to do when they accidentally hook a bird. It’s pretty easy, once you know how.

8. Sponsored by Friends of the Pelicans, Inc. More detailed information can be found at facebook.com/ friendsofthepelicans.

— Photos by Carol Cassels

FACEBOOK.COM/COASTALANGLERMAGAZINESARASOTA/ | DECEMBER 2022 | SARASOTA / BRADENTON 17

Jack Attack

If you are a saltwater angler, then you know these fish give their hardest fight when reeling them in! Jack Crevalle, to me, are some of the toughest saltwater fish species, always putting up a strong fight no matter the size. I remember my first time catching them, under the Jolly Bridge in Marco Island, where we would wake up in the early hours of the morning, get on the water when the sun starts to wake up, cast net our live pilchards, and then head straight to the bridge, ripping them up one after an other. I would probably have to say this spe cies of fish is what truly got me hooked to fishing. The fights were intense while reeling them up, feeling like I could almost fall in as they fought hard to swim away, while also having the current act as another obstacle. At this point in my fishing career, I have caught numerous jacks, ranging from big to small, but I can say that reeling them in never gets boring. I also am pretty good at being able to tell when I have a jack on before I see it. The fight is pretty recognizable for me, especially the head shaking.

I have caught and seen jacks in a great va riety of places, ranging in my fishing experiences from Sanibel down

to the Everglades/Ten Thousand Islands.

I have been able to capture them in deep cuts, shallow waters, mangrove areas, flats, boat ramps, marinas, docks, and even out in the open with no surrounding structure. They definitely seem to have an abundant population as most spots I travel to, I al most always catch one. I have noticed some with other species as well, such as along the tarpon and sharks at Robbies in Islamora da, or even near some gators at the Port of the Isles Marina, close to Everglades City.

As much as I seem to catch these fish over and over, I do enjoy them, and have developed some good and funny memories with my jack fishing experiences. One spe cifically, I was fighting a jack on a boat in the middle of a deep cut in the Ten Thou sand Islands, when I tried to get around the bimini as the fish was turning me quickly, I fell straight in the deep and murky wa ter! Still fighting the fish, and having to be pulled up, where once I got back in, terri fied and soaked from head to toe, I was able to bring it in. Definitely a crazy memory for sure, as I have noticed sharks and gators swim quite often in the exact area I fell in!

18 SARASOTA / BRADENTON | DECEMBER 2022 | COASTALANGLERMAG.COM/SARASOTA/
FACEBOOK.COM/COASTALANGLERMAGAZINESARASOTA/ | DECEMBER 2022 | SARASOTA / BRADENTON 19

Holiday Fishing

Normally, this is the time of year when the area ‘lights’ up with numerous visitors and returning homeowners to enjoy some of the most beautiful weather and waters that the world has to offer. Unfortunately, This December will not be the same as previous holiday venues. Hurricane Ian has made sure of that. Nonetheless, our spitits will not be broken and we will count the blessings and overcome the tragedy that virtually all of us have experienced. Out hearths and prayers go out to those that lost loved ones. Property can and will be replaced over time, so “heads up” and thank God you’re alive to experience more that life has to offer! Ian has and will in some way impact us all, some bad and some good! It is still worth reflecting on years gone by knowing that the beauty, wonderful and fulfilling experiences on and off the water will return. Our restaurants, beaches and waters will again soon be filled with clients and new visitors coming to enjoy another Christmas and New Year. It’s mostly about the experience of family, friends and business as sociates spending time together in a venue unlike any other. As a professional fishing guide and Charter Captain, I take great pleasure and pride to do whatever it takes to insure everyone on my ‘WATCH’, has and great time with ‘MEMORIES OF A LIFE TIME’. We will and can do it again! There are restaurants, bars and beaches available to investigate this year and by the way, the fishing has been fantastic!

December is what I call a ‘Transitional’ month in regard to the strength of currents, water levels and water temperatures, which all go hand in hand to determine the location and types of species to target. These are, in my opinion, the more crucial ele ments for finding and catching fish. The hurricane has changed some things up, but not to the extent that one may expect. Re gardless, the basics for locating and catching fish are the same.

Th is begs the question; which fish species will better provide an opportunity for anglers throughout the month of December and where will they be located? The answer as always, depends on water temperature and depth. As the temperature cools, off

shore species (grouper, snap per, sheepshead) are likely to move to shallower water, while Redfish and Seatrout are likely to move away from the shallows to deeper holes. Common sense that the inshore spe cies move as the water depths get extremely low from the backcountry areas in the win tertime, to deeper locations in the grass flats (just off the channels) and around the pass cuts that offer food and protection.

POST HURRICAN IAN RECOMMENDA TIONS FOR DECEMBER FISHING

Inshore: I suggest that as the cold fronts come in from the North, anglers concentrate on Sheepshead and Mangrove Snappers around the docks, seawalls and other structure using shrimps or Fiddler Crabs on small bait hooks with a small pinch weight to keep the bait close to the seabed. Fish canals and passes with Pil chards and Pinfish for Snook and big Jack Crevalle. Target Black Drum and Redfish around the east side of the outer islands in the current cuts and around docks using shrimp. Seatrout will continue to hold on the grass flats in about 4ft. of water. Spanish Mackerel should begin to make their debut in good numbers. I like to fish for them in the passes with ¾oz. silver spoons on a 40 lb. monofilament leader. Look for the birds diving inshore and just off the beaches for these toothy, fighting fish.

Offshore: look for snapper and grouper around the crab pots offshore. Many time the lines of crab pots will denote ledges that hold Gag and Black Grouper this time of year. However, Red Grouper is closed. Be aware of the changes in harvest require ments for all species in regard to length and numbers. While offshore, keep an eye out for Triple Tail on the crab buoys and around surface debris. The cooler water temperatures will push the larger reef fish closer to the coastal islands. Other than water temperature, the wind velocity will be the dominant factor as to when anglers go offshore. Look for diving birds and baitfish activity on the surface. These are the ‘telltale’ signs of fish below the surface.

During this time, be sure and be extra cautious for changes in depths from the hurricane as well as submerged objects. Be low I reiterate that I am available by the hour on your vessel for safe navigational instruction (by the hour) on your vessel as well as to point out and locate new fishing spots.

Due to Hurricane Ian, the Annual Ft. Myers Boat Show at the Ft. Myers Convention Center will be held on January 5th thru 8th. First Mate Vicki and I are looking forward to seeing everyone at our FISH FACE CHARTERS BOOTH and at our inshore and offshore fishing seminars pavilion sponsored by Coastal Angler Magazine!

20 SARASOTA / BRADENTON | DECEMBER 2022 | COASTALANGLERMAG.COM/SARASOTA/ Fish Face Charters | fishfacecharters.com | 239-357-6829
By: Capt. Terry Fisher
FACEBOOK.COM/COASTALANGLERMAGAZINESARASOTA/ | DECEMBER 2022 | SARASOTA / BRADENTON 21 ON THE CALOOSAHATCHEE RIVER IN FT. MYERS’ HISTORIC DOWNTOWN 1972-2023 CELEBRATING 50 YEARS OF PROVIDING FUN ON THE WATER Check out boats of all styles and sizes displayed throughout Centennial Park and inside the Caloosa Sound Convention Center during newly adjusted dates to accommodate hurricane recovery. Hundreds of accessory exhibits feature engines and electronics to boat lifts, boating services, fishing seminars and gear, clothing, and anything else you might need on the water. Tickets & More Information Available at www.FortMyersBoatShow.com MAIN ENTRANCE Bay St. & Heitman St. Intersection (Next to the Post Office) MARINA ENTRANCE Edwards Dr. & Lee St. ADMISSION: $18 (Under 16 Free with Paid Adult) Marine Industries Association SOUTHWEST FLORIDA AND TAMPA BAY
Photos submitted Courtesy of Coastal
Readers and Contributing Writers Submit pics to: camswfl@gmail.com or text to 239.595.8265
Angler
Eric caught this nice 31” snook in Terra Ceia Bay. Jim Partyka & Kip Traffican with big snook and redfish catches. Steve Keller of Cape Coral landed this beauty while fishing the canals. Caitlyn Gatrell likes fishing the Ten Thousand Islands! This family created some great memories w/ Reel Tight Fishing Charters. @kylemugavero was targeting reds in Everglades City. @Arabian_pirate showing off a nice redfish. @Dultonw caught this beauty out on Pine Island after the hurricane. Sterling Hanel with a solid Red at Keyes Marina.
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What Did We Name Our Boats in 2022?

With recreational boating season coming to a close across much of the country, BoatUS compiled a list of the top-10 boat names ordered this season through its online boat graphics service. Here are the rankings.

1) Andiamo: Meaning “let’s go/we go /come on” in Italian, Andiamo remains in the No. 1 spot from last year’s list. It’s also a happy refrain heard from the person behind the helm as they put the throttle down and head to open waters.

2) Osprey: is year was the rst time Osprey has made the top10. In a unique twist, Osprey bumped last year’s No. 2 boat name, Social Distancing, completely o the list. ’Nu said, right?

3) Serenity: is No. 3 name is so popular it has made the top 10 seven times since 2010, tying the record with Second Wind. Yep, you guessed it – both are popular with sailboat owners.

4) Encore: Also a newcomer to the top-10 this year, Encore may be the boat name of choice for an entertainer. Or, it could indicate the “next” boat – either satisfying the three-foot-itis or scaling down, or maybe even coming back to boat owning a er a hiatus.

5) Zephyr: Last appearing on the top-10 in 2010, sailors will welcome this reference to a gentle breeze back to the list.

6) Second Wind: Is this boat named for a new chapter in life or achievement? A comeback? A new strength? We’ll never know for sure, but gosh is it perennially popular.

7) Adventure: A boat with this name is usually out of the slip every weekend putting miles of water under the keel.

8) Knot on Call: is boat name serves as a notice that on-the-water time can’t be tampered with. Of unique importance, the owner of this boat can silence their cellphone ring in just under two seconds.

9) Shenanigans: Quit fooling around. Shenanigans are a part of every boating culture.

10) Grace: In its fourth appearance on the top-10 boat names list since 2010, Grace likely holds deep meaning for vessels with beautiful lines or for those that navigate with nesse. is is the one boat in the marina that also makes docking look easy.

For a look at all of the BoatUS Top-10 Boat Names lists over the years, visit BoatUS.com/BoatNames.

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This Isn’t the PANFISH of Your Youth

More o en than not, pan sh were the sh that introduced most anglers to the sport. e term “pan sh” is used to describe any of the commonly found species that usually never grow bigger than the size a frying pan. Most of them are legal to keep, regardless of size.

ese are species known as sun sh, bluegills, red eyes, rock bass, pumpkinseeds and countless other names, o en depending on the region. But this article is about a di erent kind of pan sh, and one that was naturally found only in other countries.

e Mayan cichlid is native to southeastern Mexico and the waters of Central America’s Honduras, Belize, Nicaragua and Guatemala. e rst reported non-indigenous population was recorded here in Florida Bay in 1983. Due to their adaptability and south Florida’s favorable climate and water conditions, they now can be found in great numbers from the canals in Miami to the Kissimmee Chain of Lakes, and almost all inland waters between.

Mayan cichlids are a freshwater species, but are known to thrive under a variety of environmental conditions, from a wide range of salinity to low oxygen conditions, and therefore can inhabit most waters in this region.

is oval-shaped sh has spiny anal and dorsal ns, and it ranges in color from olive green to a light brown, with darker vertical bars. During breeding season, their colors become vibrant, and their throats and n edges glow bright red to orange, which earned them the nickname “atomic sun sh” or “orange tiger.” Similar to their cousins the peacock bass and the oscar, they sport a black spot and ring on the tail to confuse predators. e Mayan’s spot is black with a turquoise ring.

Mayan cichlids are a very attractive sporting species that o ers strong ghts on light and y shing tackle. Mayans readily take a variety of natural baits as well as small arti cial lures and ies. e countless canals, lakes and neighborhood ponds of south Florida are full of these amazing little ghters and many other species. I am a y sherman, and Clouser’s Minnow or any small bait sh pattern, along with a Gurgler work well for this aggressive feeder.

I would recommend an out t in the 7/8 weight range, because cichlids share these waters with much larger species. It’s common to catch snook, juvenile tarpon, tilapia and largemouth bass in these locations.

Mayan cichlids are not considered invasive, although they are nonnative. ey have no season or bag limit, and harvest is encouraged. ey have white aky meat with a mild avor and are considered very good table fare.

I will not o er an opinion on just how this species found its way to this region, but I believe they’re here to stay. We might as well sh for them.

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COLD FRONTS BRING BLACK DRUM TO THE INLETS

With the mullet run over and the cold setting in, our target species begin to change. Most of the high-energy sh like jacks and tarpon slow down during winter. So we turn our attention to already slow bottom-feeding sh that aren’t as a ected by cooler water. Black drum are a highly praised bottom-feeder. Not only do they taste delicious, they grow to amazing trophy size.

Black drum are in the drum family with red sh, but they are di erent in appearance and their way of living. Black drum have a high arched back compared to most sh that levels out toward the tail. ese sh are a darkish gray or black with some tones of brown that fade to a lighter belly. Normally, juveniles have four to six vertical bars on their side, similar to sheepshead. e bars fade with age.

Black drum have barbels or whiskers on their lower jaw like cat sh. ese barbels are used to smell mollusks and other prey in the sand, which the drum digs out. ey then use rows of molar-like pharyngeal teeth to crush mussels, crabs and other hard-shelled creatures. ese teeth line the top and bottom of their mouths and can extend to the back of their throat.

Black drum live from Texas all the way up past New Jersey. ey congregate around structures like bridges and docks. However, they also can be found in bays, river mouths, oyster beds and along beaches. Juveniles are mostly found in estuaries.

As these sh begin to spawn in the colder months, they move toward owing inlets. Just like red drum, they participate in mass free-spawning, where they release sperm and eggs while grouped together in owing water. e pre-spawn move to the inlets gives anglers plenty of time to target them in groups.

Jalon Tomlinson enjoys targeting black drum during peak season. He said shing is best during cold fronts on an outgoing tide. He uses a chicken rig with a 3- to 4-ounce pyramid sinker or a Carolina rig with a 3-ounce egg sinker and a 2/0 hook. He recommends a 40-pound leader because powerful sh heavier than 30-pounds are a real possibility. Ideal baits are fresh dead shrimp or old stinky shrimp. However, Tomlinson has also caught them on crabs and sand eas.

Tomlinson catches some monster drum with this technique, but he prefers to keep the 14- to 28-inchers because they’re better to eat. In Florida, there is a daily bag limit of ve per harvester, with a slot size of 14 to 24 inches. One sh is allowed over the 24-inch slot.

e IGFA all-tackle world record black drum weighed an amazing 113 pounds, 1 ounce and was caught out of Lewes, Delaware.

Emily Rose Hanzlik holds 56 IGFA world records in various categories.

She hails from West Palm Beach, where she has a part time Bow n Guide Service as well as shing classes for Jr. Anglers.

Find her on Social Media @emilyhanzlikoutdoors.

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SNOOK SEASONS CLOSE

Florida seasons for snook harvest close this month in state and federal waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic.

e Gulf snook season closure date is Dec. 1, and snook harvest will remain closed through the end of February in Gulf state and adjacent federal waters. e Atlantic snook season is closed Dec. 15 through Jan. 31 in state and adjacent federal waters. Special regulations for di erent zones exist for this species, so be sure to check current regulations online at MyFWC.com.

When snook season re-opens, anglers who wish to harvest a snook must have a snook permit in addition to a recreational shing license. ere is a slot limit of not less than 28 inches or more than 33 inches total length. e daily bag limit is 1 per harvester per day with zero captain and crew for-hire limit.

For more information, go to MyFWC.com.

COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM DECEMBER 2022 FLORIDA 19
Photo courtesy of Richard Matteson

LURES

FIGHTING FISH AT LONG DISTANCE

It’s on! You made a very long cast, and within a few cranks a sh grabs your lure and you’re engaged in a ght!

Long distance lures allow you to hook-up with sh other anglers can’t reach, but ghting sh with so much line out presents complications, mostly in the form of environmental elements the angler does not control.

If you’re shing from a at sandy beach on a calm day with no waves, little current and no oating sargassum, then nothing is di erent. Just ght the sh and enjoy it. But when ghting a sh at great distance, elements like current or obstacles such as rocks or weeds become magni ed threats to successfully landing the sh. e more line you have in the water, the less direct in uence you have on the sh. e sh has more freedom to swim sideways or even directly at you. ere’s a greater chance your line will snag an encrusted boulder or load up with oating grass. Ripping currents and wave action are more pronounced during the ght, and sh—especially bigger ones— will use this to pull away.

Here are tactics to better ght sh from long distances.

• Keep the rod tip up and hold it high to keep as much line as possible out of the water or high in the water column. is limits the risk of snags and reduces drag on the line. I sometimes put the rod butt against my shoulder and hold the rod almost vertically to gain as much height as possible.

• When a sh swims or is pushed by waves or current into a snag-prone area, it’s o en counter productive to crank down and pull directly against the sh. Pulling hard works OK on small or mediumsized sh, but with larger sh I like to angle the rod horizontally and

sideways in the direction the sh is going. It’s like judo in that you use the sh’s momentum against it. By pulling the sh sideways, instead of directly against it, it will curve toward you. is is unconventional, but it has saved sh for me a number of times.

• When sh use strong currents during the ght, walk with them. Try to walk the same speed the sh is moving with the current and continue picking up line.

• Use a power-pull to put a lot of pressure on big sh. Keep the rod at a 30 to 45 degree angle from horizontal, and walk backward at constant speed. When I was guiding in Africa for tiger sharks and giant tarpon, this was the best way to bring sh closer to shore.

Legendary angler Patrick Sebile is a world record holder and an award-winning designer of innovative lures and shing gear. Check out his creations at abandofanglers.com.

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PATRICK SEBILE A Band of Anglers pro team member Jim Louro, of Vicki Lynn Sport shing, caught this big striped bass with a long cast from the beach.

Perhaps Florida anglers are getting used to the regulations changes that closed fall harvest of ounder for the rst time last year. With a 45-day closure during the peak of the fall spawning movements, keeping ounder is by design illegal when it’s easiest to catch them. e season closure ran Oct. 15 through Nov. 30, and many Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic states enacted similar closures in the face of several years of falling ounder numbers. So, while you likely didn’t get to enjoy stu ed ounder at the anksgiving feast, you should be able to go catch, or gig, a doormat to serve at Christmas.

Starting Dec. 1, ounder harvest is allowed with a 14-inch minimum size limit and a daily bag limit of ve sh per person. ese regulations apply in state and federal waters o Florida. Legal gear includes spears, gigs, hook and line, seine and cast nets.

For more information, go to MyFWC.com.

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Chipola River Shoalies are on the Comeback

If you’re not familiar with shoal bass, they are a distinct species of black bass that evolved to inhabit the riverine shoals of the Apalachicola River Basin in Florida. ey are considered a Species of Greatest Conservation Need by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission because they are native only to one drainage worldwide, and habitat in that drainage was forever altered by dams.

e Chipola River, which roughly bisects the Panhandle to join the Apalachicola River at Sumatra, Fla., is home to Florida’s only known

reproducing population of shoal bass, and it is potentially the species’ most genetically pure population. Farther north, Georgia’s Chattahoochee and Flint rivers are part of the same drainage. ere, shoal bass are considered an excellent sport sh. ey grow to weights heavier than 9-pounds and o er a unique opportunity for anglers, especially y shers, because they inhabit swi -water shoals and will readily slam arti cial lures, topwaters and ies.

Shoal bass are in trouble in Florida, and FWC is on the case. In 2018, the Chipola River population of shoal bass was nearly destroyed by Hurricane Michael. Impacts from the storm resulted in nearly a 90 percent decline in the population. In May, 2022, biologists with the FWC’s Fish and Wildlife Research Institute and the Division of Freshwater Fisheries Management released 3,300 1- to 2-inch genetically pure, hatchery-spawned shoal bass from the Blackwater Fisheries Research and Development Center into the Chipola River.

Recent sampling discovered the released sh have made a signi cant contribution to the existing population. DNA analysis of n clips taken from shoal bass collected during these sampling events con rmed that 65 percent of the yearlings collected were from sh produced and released by Blackwater Hatchery. ese stocked shoal bass had grown to 4 to 6 in the four months since being stocked. Additionally, data suggests these stocked sh may comprise nearly 20 percent of the entire shoal bass population in the river.

“ e shoal bass population in the Chipola River has become a top priority of sheries biologists within the northwest region of Florida since Hurricane Michael,” said Fisheries Biologist Andy Strickland. “Management actions to suspend harvest and successfully stock shoal bass have yielded positive results for this unique black bass species.”

FWC biologists anticipate stocking additional hatchery reared shoal bass in the Chipola River in the spring of 2023 to increase the number of genetically pure sh in the population and eventually restore population numbers to pre-Hurricane Michael levels.

Currently a catch-and-release-only regulation is in e ect for shoal bass on the Chipola River and its tributaries.

To learn more, visit MyFWC/Freshwater.

22 FLORIDA DECEMBER 2022 COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM

Florida Angler Ties Georgia Pompano Record

In November the Georgia Department of Natural Resources certi ed a sh that tied the state record for Florida pompano. e sh, which weighed 1 pound, 7.68 ounces, was caught by a Florida woman who was at St. Simons Island, Ga. volunteering at a youth shing tournament.

Cathy Sanders, of Palm Coast, Fla., landed her record-tying pomp while surf shing on St. Simons Island on Oct. 9. Her catch tied the previous record holder, Laura Cheek, who landed a 1-pound, 7-ounce pompano on Sea Island in 1982. Sanders’ pompano was 12 inches fork length.

Sanders was volunteering with the Kids Can Fish Foundation’s Running of the Bulls youth tournament when she caught the sh. She was surf shing with a 12-foot Okuma Rockaway rod and Okuma Rockaway 6000 reel. As bait, she used Fishbites EZ Crab (Electric Chicken) with Sinker Guys glass beads and salted shrimp on 20-pound high visibility mono lament. Her terminal rig was a 2/0 circle hook on a double drop rig with 3-ounce Guy Sputnik sinker.

Under the rules of the Georgia Saltwater Game Fish Records Program, Sanders’ catch quali ed as a tie because it weighed more than the current record, but did not exceed the record by more than 4 ounces.

e IGFA all-tackle world record Florida Pompano weighed 8 pounds, 4 ounces. It was caught by Barry Huston in St. Joe Bay, Fla. in 1999.

See Georgia’s saltwater records at CoastalGaDNR.org/SaltwaterRecords.

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The question of lure size is o en pondered in the shing world. Di erent circumstance requires a di erent mentality, but one thing is for certain, the sh did not read any articles, attend any seminars or watch that YouTube video. ey eat what they want, when they want, but I have an approach that I nd useful in deciphering the riddle.

As winter approaches, it brings changes to our estuaries: cooler water temps, a change in the type and abundance of forage, less pressure from boaters, and in some areas, much better water clarity. ere are two trains of thought on lure size when it comes to winter shing in the bays. Should I go bigger or smaller? I know anglers who immediately upsize for the entire season, while others downsize for its duration.

Both can be e ective, but here is how I typically tackle early winter shing.

Cooling water temps and increasing frequency of cold fronts put the sh on both spectrums of the feeding attitude. Unlike more stable weather patterns, when sh are less a ected and feed more consistently, these fronts can make them, for a lack of a better term, moody.

Late fall and early winter can be some of the best inshore shing of the year. Schools of

bait ushed from the bays with the dropping tides are followed by hungry specks and reds. In these situations, I like to use a smaller lure. Generally, they feed on shrimp or smaller bait sh, and having a lure of similar size is a good idea. When they are following these schools, I like non-natural colors so the sh have something to key in on when bait is abundant. I like my lure’s color to stand out in the fall feeding frenzy.

Now, for the other end of the mood swing, the inactive period caused by post-frontal conditions. is is another situation when I favor smaller lures in early winter. When the bite is o , smaller o erings entice bites from non-aggressive sh. Using myself as an example, if I am not hungry, the chance of me driving to a restaurant for a steak dinner are slim, but I might grab a few peanuts for a quick bite just because they are on the counter.

e nal reason is clearer water. Some bays I sh will have 1 to 2 feet of clear-green water in the summer, but 6 to 7 feet of air-clear water in winter. ese sh are not accustomed to this transitional clarity. When I can see my lure bouncing in the sand in depths of 7 feet, a much smaller lure will produce more bites.

I hope these tips help you catch more sh this winter, and next month I will explain my transition to larger lures as we press deeper into winter’s grip.

10 NATIONAL DECEMBER 2022 COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM
Big
Capt. Michael Okruhlik is the inventor of Knockin Tail Lures®, Controlled Descent Lures™, and the owner of www.MyCoastOutdoors.com.
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On a recent trip to Tucson, we spoke with fourth generation turquoise traders who explained that less than five percent of turquoise mined worldwide can be set into jewelry and only about twenty mines in the Southwest supply gem-quality turquoise. Once a thriving industry, many Southwest mines have run dry and are now closed.

We found a limited supply of turquoise from Arizona and purchased it for our Sedona Turquoise Collection . Inspired by the work of those ancient craftsmen and designed to showcase the exceptional blue stone, each stabilized vibrant cabochon features a unique, one-of-a-kind matrix surrounded in Bali metalwork. You could drop over $1,200 on a turquoise pendant, or you could secure 26 carats of genuine Arizona turquoise for just $99

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MONSTER SMALLIE IS GREAT LAKES RECORD

Ohio Angler Gregg Gallagher caught a 10.15-pound smallmouth bass on Nov. 3 that once certi ed should be a new Lake Erie record. e 23 ¾-inch sh is also the largest bronzeback ever caught from the Great Lakes.

Gallagher told In-Fisherman his was the result of his son’s extensive time surveying bait and bottom structure. With sonar, they were able to do what some call video-game shing and target individual sh with drop shot rigs. He was shing 8-pound test.

“With an abundance of bait sh and unique bottom composition located a er long days behind the graphs, we dropped down our forward-facing sonar and we were able to individually target these pelagicesque smallmouth,” he told In-Fisherman. “On what turned out to be the most memorable cast of my life, my bait got hit before it even hit the bottom and my rod quickly doubled over. I honestly thought I had hooked into a sheephead and not a smallmouth. We quickly learned we had just caught the smallmouth of a lifetime.”

e monster smallmouth is the only certi ed 10-plus-pounder ever caught from the Great Lakes. It should beat out the Canadian record of 9.84 pounds, which was set 68 years ago. It is also heavier than the Ohio state record, which weighed 9 pounds, 8 ounces and was caught in 1993.

e world record smallmouth bass weighed 11 pounds, 15 ounces. It was caught from Tennessee’s Dale Hollow Lake in 1955.

12 NATIONAL DECEMBER 2022 COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM
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5 WINTERTIME FISHERIES

Instead of spending the next few months holed up inside, get yourself a good parka, nd a window of decent weather and go shing. Believe it or not, for some sheries winter o ers some of the best action of the year. Here are a few ideas to help you combat cabin fever.

1) Wintertime Wahoo:

is time of year, wahoo pile up around the Bahamas. Some of the largest sh of the year will show up over the next couple of months.

High-speed trolling is the technique that allows captains to cover lots of water along rocky ledges, color changes, temperature breaks and dropo s. ’Hoos hunt in packs, so multiple hook-ups and double-digit days are possible. is shery requires some forethought and perhaps some exibility. ey bite best around the full and new moons, but you’ll de nitely want to avoid fronts and those wicked north winds.

2) South Florida Sailfsh: From

December

through February

the Atlantic Coast of South Florida becomes one of the best sail sh destinations in the world. Release ags will be ying along the edge of the Gulf Stream from roughly Fort Pierce down through the Keys.

For this bite, you’ll want to sh when the weather’s a little rough. With strong winds from the north, tailing conditions push sail sh high in the water column to feed. ey surf the swells and it’s possible to sight sh for them, which is about as exciting as shing gets.

3) The Outer Banks: In winter, North Carolina’s Outer Banks are the destination for several migrations which bring excellent shing to the island chain from Oregon Inlet down past Ocracoke.

Out of Hatteras, it’s a short ride out to the edge of the Gulf Stream, and this time of year tuna congregate there to feast on a bounty of bait sh. Big blue n tuna 200 pounds and larger are on the prowl, and anglers can also do battle with black n, yellow n and bigeye tunas.

At the same time, big schools of striped bass will be marauding bait sh on the beaches and in the inlets. Surf anglers can encounter them blitzing menhaden by looking for bait and birds. Charter boats do good business this time of year trolling while keeping eyes peeled for stripers herding and crashing bait balls.

4) South Padre Island, Texas: Way down on the Mexican border, South Padre Island is as far south as you can go in Texas. e winters are mild and the shing is good year-round.

When water temps drop, snook pile into the canals and school up. ese schools of sh can be giant, and they are suckers for arti cials. At the same time, the grass ats experience the clearest water of the year. Red sh, big trout and black drum cruise the ats, where anglers can sight sh them in shin-deep water.

5) Delayed Harvest Trout: On the East Coast from Maryland down to Georgia, most states have developed robust delayed harvest trout sheries which keep y shers on the stream through the winter. ese specially regulated sheries are catch-and-release only through the cooler months and most of them have single-hook, arti cial-only regulations.

Most delayed harvest streams are heavily stocked, usually with some largerthan-normal hatchery sh. Since you can’t keep them, they stay in the creeks and rivers all winter long. Maryland, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia are some of the states with excellent delayed harvest programs. See the state wildlife agency websites for information.

COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM DECEMBER 2022 NATIONAL 13

TROUBLED ATLANTIC STRIPED BASS STOCKS TREND UPWARD

For the rst time in a while, sheries managers are reporting some good news about striped bass populations on the Atlantic Coast. In early November, e Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) accepted an updated 2022 stock assessment that looks good enough that no additional harvest cuts will be needed.

is stock assessment found that rock sh stocks are still over shed but they are not currently experiencing over shing. e female spawning biomass appears to have been on a modest upward trend for at least the last three years, but at an estimated 143 million pounds is still far below the 235-million-pound target for rebuilding.

Total mortality in 2021 from commercial and recreational shing was estimated at 0.14, which is below the mortality threshold of 0.20 as well as below the mortality target of 0.17.

What does this mean for anglers?

Currently, a reduction in catch is not needed, and the rebuilding program is on schedule to declare the striped bass stock rebuilt by 2029.

“ is 2022 assessment was the rst check-in point for progress toward stock rebuilding by 2029,” said Board Chair Marty Gary with the River Fisheries Commission. “It is extremely important shery removals and conduct regular stock assessments to keep evaluating rebuilding progress and stay on track.”

e next stock assessment update is scheduled for 2024, and the Board will review the 2022 removals as soon as the data are available to evaluate whether catch remains at sustainable levels.

The Return of a

For more information, visit www.asmfc.org.

14 NATIONAL DECEMBER 2022 COASTALANGLERMAG.COM • THEANGLERMAG.COM
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