Reef and wrecks
If you’re looking for great action with lots of good-eating fish, head to the reef. Yellowtail, mangrove and mutton snappers are biting furiously.
The most consistent action for larger, 18- to 20-inch yellowtails is on the deeper edge of the reef in 70 to 90 feet of water. Whereas the mangroves are biting best in the 35- to 50-foot areas, with live baits definitely an advantage for the bigger fish, which are approaching five pounds and greater. I like to fish live ballyhoo or smallish pinfish on a half-ounce jig head on or near the bottom.
You’ll need slightly heavier tackle than you would use for the yellowtails to get these hefty mangroves off the bottom. Go for 15- to 20-pound tackle and 20- to 30-pound leaders.
There are also a few keeper size grouper mixed in with the mangroves, and the heavier tackle will no doubt increase your ratio of caught to lost fish.
Plenty of muttons are hanging on the reef as well as the wrecks, and you can’t beat live ballyhoo to entice them.
And, on the patches, the mangrove bite remains very good along with lots of keeper size yellowtail in the 12- to 14-inch range. The same baits as you’d use off the reef edge will work here.
Offshore
Offshore, tuna is still the most consistent fishery, with only scattered reports of dolphin. Trolling small tuna darts way back behind your boat and in front of schools of blackfins will produce good size tuna in the 8- to 12-pound class.
Early morning or late afternoon are the best times for the tuna bite as the fish go down deep during the midday heat.
Bay and gulf
Mangroves are making their way back into the bay and gulf waters, with plenty of fish up to three and four pounds. The shallow wrecks and grass banks are best right now.
Finally, now is the best time of the year to go lobstering as there’s very little competition at your favorite hole or ledge from other bug hunters. So, stock up for the holidays!
The week’s best catches
Hannan Allen and Justin Baldwin had a stellar half day on the reef with the SeaSquared crew. They caught their limit of snappers, including monster mangroves up to eight pounds, with a nice gag grouper to top off the day.
And, Rick Berkes, from South Florida, returned for his third shark fishing adventure on the SeaSquared. They caught and released 14 large lemon sharks in the course of their four-hour trip.
add yours now...