Author Topic: Keys Trip  (Read 8262 times)

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TimM

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Keys Trip
« on: May 30, 2013, 07:46:25 PM »

As I'm sure many of you can appreciate it's been very busy getting everything cleaned up and put away after our trip so it's taking a while to get a decent report put together. Almost got the stills processed. There are literally hours of video I haven't watched yet.   

On the other hand our son has put together a short video documenting our trip so in the meantime I thought I'd just share his video as a start.  For some of the underwater video the resolution of the monitor is a factor in how easily any fish or whatever can be seen. 

Enjoy.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RuWNmTZMEuk

MikeA

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Re: Keys Trip
« Reply #1 on: May 30, 2013, 10:26:04 PM »
Awesome Tim. Just awesome.
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Steve H

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Re: Keys Trip
« Reply #2 on: May 31, 2013, 05:39:23 AM »
Very, very cool!
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Keys Trip
« Reply #3 on: June 02, 2013, 01:44:42 PM »
Impressive lots of work went into that video. 

TimM

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Keys Trip TR for the first week
« Reply #4 on: June 03, 2013, 09:41:13 AM »

Thanks for the compliments on Chris's video work. I will be sure to pass them along to him.  He's done another one set to a Santana tune that I'll share as well. I think it has a completely different feel to it due to the different music. Some duplication of images but not a lot.

I've finally gotten a big chunk of a report put together and thought I'd start sharing it in pieces.  Frankly when there are this many days involved it's a bit daunting to try to capture it all in written form. However, one thing I realized as I started working on this is that in the months and years to come I will be glad I did so as there is no doubt that I will forget some things that I'd like to remember and this will help me do so.   Anyway...with that here are the first few days report....
_______

A couple of years ago I was fortunate enough to be asked to put together a corporate fishing trip in Key West.  Pretty much from day 1 there I knew that I wanted to go back with my family. Well, we went on that trip a couple of weeks ago.   

We considered many different approaches from all-family included to guys trip options at various locations in the Keys.  In the end we decided to make it a graduation gift / father-son trip with mom along as well We chose Cudjoe as home base. On the trip I organized a couple of years ago I made a point of fishing with each of the guides I booked for the trip. While they were all good like anything else I preferred some over others. In particular there was one guy that was basically a last minute fill-in when some extra people got added to the guest list at the last minute that I enjoyed fishing with. We picked the dates that worked best for us and what would normally be peak mahi & tarpon  bite in that area and worked out a plan to fish with the guide referenced above for three days spread out through the first week we were there. We towed my boat down to use on the days without a guide. It was 2568 miles at a verified 7.1 mpg.  Ouch.  Then again this rig is not designed for fuel efficiency nor did I buy it for that though I wouldn’t complain if it were a little better!  It was however very comfortable and I basically took everything I own with us without being crowded.



We split our drive up into two parts from the Nashville area to Cudjoe Key. On day 1 we went from Nashville to Port St. Lucie FL.  That’s nominally about 800 miles. This is a long day but puts you in good striking distance to the keys on day 2.

 I’m sure many of you have seen this sign too but when I thought about what it said I knew I was in the right place!   Let’s see…. turn left and go to Biscayne bay, turn right and go to the Everglades or just go straight to get to the Keys. There are no bad choices here!


 






TimM

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Re: Keys TR first week
« Reply #5 on: June 03, 2013, 09:44:04 AM »
Within about an hour of arriving at the house we’d rented in Cudjoe the truck was unloaded, the boat was in the water and we were on our way out to explore, fish a little bit and maybe even catch a fish. After driving around a bit and fishing a few random spots we  wound up tying up to the bridge over Kemp channel at dark with an incoming tide and the hydro-glow light over the stern. Some pretty interesting stuff swam into the light but no big fish were caught that night. We did learn a lot though about this new to us place and had a very pleasant end to day 2 of travel.   Here are a few shots from that day and the views from the deck of where we stayed.








TimM

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Re: Keys TR for the first week
« Reply #6 on: June 03, 2013, 09:46:13 AM »
The next day, our first full day in Cudjoe we went to the gulf side. Picked up our pin fish trap we’d put out the night before and got a number of baits – I forget how many exactly but several. Rather than ride around with the trap in the boat we just put it back in the same spot but with no bait.  I mention that because when we picked it up a few hours later on the way back in it had 6-8 baits in it.  Anyway,  we then went up Kemp Channel to the Riding and Sawyer Keys area.  We started off with a live pin/pigfish on a slip bobber type rig behind the boat while we blind cast the area with a variety of  lures. The place was crawling with juvenile barracuda with a few other species around. They were fairly cautious, for ‘cudas anyway, but as expected a fast, erratic action with the right lures would trigger a bite. The pigfish idea brought some short groupers to the boat and there were a few jacks caught before we headed back to the house in the early afternoon. We were basically just following the contour where the depth dropped off from 3 feet or so to about 8 feet.    There’s a segment in the “Sail”  video that shows one of these cuda strikes and a grouper typical of what we found there. 





Not  long after we arrived on the flat we were working our way along the edge with the boat in the deeper water and casting into the shallows when I heard a boat coming from around the point behind us.  Turns out he was trolling…..I thought it was pretty obvious what we were doing….I don’t remember having the cloaking shield on but apparently I did because this guy proceeded to troll right down the edge we were fishing which put him between us and the area we were fishing and of course he also then was driving right over where we were working our way to.  Nice.  It didn’t help that they caught a grouper literally right in front of us as they passed by. Then the knuckle head goes offshore a bit to loop back around and troll back by us but on the other side. Again very close by. That time I did hurl a cast at the boat… I didn’t really intend to hit it but was making a point. I could have hit it if I wanted given how close it was.   

Anyway that afternoon we ate a late lunch at The Keys Fishery Market in Marathon. It was a bit of a drive but the food was really excellent.  We had a combination of yellow tail, hogfish, scallops, shrimp and lobster with a conch fritter app. It was really delicious food.  Order up at a window on the outside, go to the bar area and get your drinks then go sit down until they call your order up.  Tables are open air (under cover) around the marina. Needless to say there are pet fish to watch while you wait for your food.  You can also drive up to the place in your boat for a meal. We had a lot of good seafood in a lot places while in the Keys and we all agreed that this place was at least in the top three if not the best we had on the trip just purely in terms of the food. Very relaxed atmosphere with good food fairly priced in my opinion. It did not have the touristy feel that so many other places in the Keys do.

http://www.keysfisheries.com/restaurant/

When we returned to the house we pretty much went right to the boat to go fish a couple of hours to dark. We went out towards the mouth of Kemp channel and wound up tying up to the last marker on the way offshore. We chummed a little and soon the fish arrived. Over the next couple of hours we caught a number of different species including a few fairly nice yellow tails,  various other snappers, some short grouper, jacks, a couple of cero mackerel and a shark about 4’ long or so.  We also got some of my favorite still photos from the trip as the day wound down to a close.   

I had my first (and as it turned out only) boating oops moment of the trip on the way back in that night. We were on plane on the way back in and I (thought) I was following my trail on the GPS from when we came out that night but what I did not take into account was the scale on the monitor relative to how narrow that channel is – especially at a couple of points where it makes an abrupt change in direction and the fact that it was near dead low tide which I had not yet seen in this area. Anyway we were zipping along when in my peripheral vision I see the bottom flashing by much more clearly than I should have been able to. I glance and it’s clearly too shallow although nothing was actually dragging *right then*. In hindsight I probably should have just kept the throttle down, trimmed to the max and veered towards where I thought the channel to be. However I did not, I yanked back the throttle and guess what, now we didn’t have enough water.  Emptied my pockets and such jumped in and that was enough to make it float. Pushed it a little bit and all was well. I’m pleased to be able to say that without my having said a word when my sons saw me go over the side they were right behind me although it wasn’t really necessary.  





TimM

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Re: Keys TR for the first week
« Reply #7 on: June 03, 2013, 10:06:26 AM »
The weather forecast for Monday was not favorable for offshore fishing in my boat. However, when we got up early on Monday there was NO wind. It was completely, positively dead flat calm.  Recognizing that this could change on short notice I  made an audible and changed our fishing plans to going offshore looking for Mahi along with bonito, amberjacks and yellow tail if the opportunities presented themselves.  I ran SSW to 200 feet or so where we deployed a trolling spread of 5 lines plus a teaser. It was a busy cockpit.  Unfortunately since I had heard an unfavorable wind forecast the day before I did not buy fresh ballyhoo trolling baits the night before and the store at the marina where we were at was closed so we had to rely entirely on artificial baits. We worked our way out to about 750 feet trolling over various interesting topographic features along the way with only one half-hearted strike from something that none of us saw. Knowing we had other things we wanted to do on the way back home given where we were (about 23 miles or so offshore) late morning we decided to loop back north towards some wrecks and things we wanted to check out for various things.  We had not gone very far when one of my sons saw some small white birds diving and feeding on something on the surface near some scattered weeds. As I turned the boat in that general direction there was surface feeding activity from some as yet unknown species of fish. As we got closer my sons saw mahi flashing in and out of the area feeding on small little baitfish in the weeds.  Previously I had rigged up two light spinning rods one with a jig head-sluggo type body and a bucktail jig – I told my sons to cast those baits toward the fish when we got close enough.  Those baits got eaten almost immediately.   It’s hard to recall the exact series of events at this point but over the next hour or so we fished several different schools of mahi in the area– at times there were 30 or more of them swimming around the boat. They were all generally about 10 lbs.or so. We hooked perhaps a dozen with 8 of them coming home with us.

 I saw these fish do something that I’ve not encountered with Mahi before – they were both color and size specific in what they wanted to eat.  Due to the fact that I was dealing with the boat and trying to get the trolling gear under control as well as trying to chum a little to keep the fish close to the boat after we found them it was still a while before I actually got to fish. At first I just tossed a live pinfish in the middle of several mahi. For a couple of minutes the mahi just swam around looking at the pinfish showing no real interest in eating it.  Weird, very weird in my limited experience.  One finally did eat it though  so I then baited up and tossed them one with a hook. The situation more or less replayed itself with it taking a while before one finally ate it.  I left that fish swimming beside the boat for a long time in an attempt to keep the school close by. In the meantime the sluggo body on the bait one of my sons had been using got torn up beyond being usable. It was a black with silver body color. He replaced it with a white body.  They wouldn’t eat it! They’d follow it but not eat it.  After a while he changed back to a dark color and bingo he hooked up. Meanwhile after watching  them only reluctantly eat the pinfish I thought perhaps I should show them a squid…something I’ve never seen them turn down in the past. Hooked up an entire squid on a smaller circle hook(4/0 ?) with a fluorocarbon leader and tossed it to some swimming near the boat. One of them immediately swam over to it, looked it over and swam away a short distance before returning only to repeat the behavior.  I was flabbergasted that it didn’t eat that squid. Meanwhile the fish I’d had on leash had self-released  jumping around behind the boat so I grabbed another pin and tossed it out. It did get eaten and this fish I also left in the water swimming near the boat after fighting it for a bit.  Since there were obviously a number of fish in the area, they weren’t particularly large and they seemed to want small baits anyway I decided to see if I could hook one on the fly.  I rigged up the 8 weight that Jarrod gave me and tied on a small (tied on a #1 hook) streamer like fly I tied up with dark blue shoulders and silver flash over white.  Presented it to a few fish and got the same reaction the white sluggo type bait got – they’d turn on it and follow it but not commit.  Again somewhat amazed that they were being so picky I decided to try a different streamer type thing I’d tied up that had some dark green and gray colors to it. That they ate --- so long as I was stripping it for all I was worth. Reaction bite? Maybe – I dunno about that but I know it was fun!  I caught a couple that way before we finally lost the schools for the last time. 

When we finally lost the mahi schools the guys wanted to go on in towards our next target which was a wreck where I wanted to vertical jig for amberjack and bonito or whatever else might show up.   We found the wreck and there were fish there but we were unsuccessful in getting one of them to eat in the 3 or 4 passes we made over the wreck before my sons gave up on me and we headed off to the next target which was yellowtail. I guess the vertical jigging thing is somewhat demanding so if you haven’t seen it work it’s easy to not be a believer. 

I chose a patch reef location based on some info I’d gathered in advance for the trip and went there since it was on the way “home”. It was really kind of amazing in a way. When we drove up, chose a spot and got anchored there was not a boat in sight. However, within 10 minutes or so there were two other boats that drove up and anchored within 50-75 yards of us.  All that ocean to choose from but they chose there at just that moment. Go figure. Oh well, it had to basically be a public number for me to have it in my list!  Anyway, it didn’t take long for the yellowtail and other usual suspects to respond to the chum. I caught a few but the reality was that my sons were clearly not really into it so after an hour or so we picked up and headed in for the day. All in all a very good day in my book. No real big fish but a fun, fine adventure with my sons out on the big water with a number of different species caught. Learned something about mahi too. Speaking of which in the days since I’ve learned that apparently the mahi were behaving that way all over the area on that day and it was not specific to those particular schools.. Apparently they just do this sometimes and get really picky about what they want. I have never seen that behavior before in mahi. When I’ve run into them in the past they were always just eating machines. That evening we had dinner at  a blue collar/locals type place that one of the guides I fished with a couple of years ago turned me on to. The name of the place is The Rusty Anchor. Good food at fair prices in a very comfortable environment. Definitely not a touristy place and I’ve never been served anything there that wasn’t good.

http://www.rustyanchor.com/

A few photos from that day:

Trolling in the deep blue sea….notice how calm it was….we were several (10+) miles offshore when this was taken



One of the many flying fish we saw this day…oddly they were all singles though…something else I’d never seen before this day…I’ve seen lots of flyers but always in schools. I have no idea what, if anything, this meant though!
 



One of the mahi we caught this day….it was typical of all of them size wise.
 



Something we saw while still well offshore that I just thought was kind of neat.  Sort of like a giant eye looking down on us. I assigned my own meaning to it, feel free to do the same.



As we were cleaning up the boat that afternoon I saw this on the motor cowling and at first wasn’t sure what it was. However I soon realized that it was a ballyhoo beak which was interesting since we’d had no natural ballyhoo in the boat that day. Obviously one of my “pets” that I’d kept on a leash at the back of the boat had thrown this up while jumping around and it just happened to land there. Also found an entire ballyhoo in one of the mahi I cleaned that afternoon. I wondered if maybe this had something to do with why they were being so picky and keying on small baits – namely they’d recently fed on larger more preferred prey items. Perhaps – who knows though.



I had to smile to myself when not long after we got back to the house I looked out and saw one of our sons on the boat with the hydro-glow over the side giving it a go again even though we had to be up early the next morning for our first day with the guide.
 



TimM

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Re: Keys TR for the first week
« Reply #8 on: June 03, 2013, 10:11:12 AM »
On Tuesday morning our target species were sails and mahi.  The wind was blowing pretty good (15 mph +/-) out of the NE when we left and it only grew as the day went on.  We struggled a  little bit to make bait (threadfin herring) that morning. Based on the radio chatter it was that way all over. The bait was very skittish…you’d get on them catch a couple and boom they’d be gone.  After hitting several spots we finally had 30 or a few more baits and headed out to the first reef where there was a nice color change with a fair amount of weeds on it. We’d only had the baits out perhaps 15 minutes or so when the first one got eaten.  It turned out to be a large sailfish. Our younger son fought and landed the fish – not sure how long it took but it was a while. It was kind of crazy in a way as at times the fish was jumping at a location 90 degrees from the direction the line was going from the end of the rod and the direction the rod was bent.  That was due to weeds on the line of course but it was still kind of odd visually.  Our guide (Jeff Searcy if anyone is interested) estimated the fish to be 75-80 lbs. This is the sail that shows up in the video our son made.  It wasn’t long after that we had a second sail come to play. It came up tail walking towards the boat as soon as it was hooked – in fact that was really our first clue that it was there as it was swimming towards us and the line didn’t come tight until the slack was taken out.  Unfortunately for whatever reason(s) it didn’t stay hooked and we wound up honing our LDR (long distance release) skills with that fish.   We caught a bonito, a cuda and had 5 or 6 other cut offs over the next few hours before we pulled the plug and went farther offshore looking for mahi.  We’d just barely gotten to about 200 feet when some birds were spotted. We threw out three trolling baits and were quickly rewarded with a fish in the 15 lb. range.  We worked those birds/that area for a bit longer before heading off to find some more birds. A little while later we spotted a frigate with some other birds that were obviously working something. Out go the baits again….soon Jeff hollers “here he comes” and boom fish on! In the end we wound up with 3 more mahi that were all between 15-20 lbs. each before time ran out for us. It was a sloppy, sloppy ride in with the wind and current working against each other – we were all drenched by the time we got in.  A few shots from that day….







One of the mahi we caught on Tuesday -- fairly typical of them all in terms of size...



This particular mahi had swallowed the bait...perhaps for that reason it really didn't ever jump but man did it ever do a lot of thrashing around on the surface!








TimM

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Re: Keys TR for the first week
« Reply #9 on: June 03, 2013, 10:20:38 AM »

Unfortunately our older son had a family issue develop earlier in the week and he had to leave early flying home on Wednesday so we decided to take the opportunity to do some of the touristy stuff in KW with my wife since we were going to be there anyway.  Saw some of the best known places and had lunch at the Hog’s Breath saloon. Very touristy but the food was good just the same. Actually the conch fritters (one of our staples when in that sort of locale) were among the best we had on the trip and they served a sweet chili pepper/ plum type sauce with their coconut shrimp that was amazing. 

Also dropped by Captain Tony’s and Sloppy Joes for a beer just to say we’ve been there/done that. 







That evening my son & I took the carcasses, bonito and cuda that had been stewing in a cooler for a day or two out towards the mouth of Kemp channel to see if we could entice a shark or three to eat on the outgoing tide.  It didn’t take long after dumping the blood water mix and spreading some hunks of meat around an area just off the channel to get some takers. Over the last couple of hours of daylight we boated five sharks and lost a couple of others. They were a mix of lemons, a small bull and a black tip. The biggest was probably in the low triple digit range but not by a lot.  A couple of shots from that evening.





Say what you want about it being a low tech form of fishing but regardless it’s still a low stress and fun way to fight fish this size on reasonably sized tackle and despite what some may think they aren’t just everywhere and there is more to it than just tossing out a hunk of meat any old place. Like any type of fishing to repeat the catches on demand requires some understanding of at least some of the nuances involved.
 


TimM

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Re: Keys TR for the first week
« Reply #10 on: June 03, 2013, 10:22:57 AM »
Specifically at our sons request our next day with the guide was a mixed bag approach. Chris specifically wanted to target catching a hogfish while we also wanted to make a pass at catching a tarpon, a permit and spend a little time vertical jigging for amberjack. I didn’t really think it was feasible to combine them all when I pitched it to Jeff but he came up with a plan that had a chance.   We started off the next morning not far from the marina trying to catch a tarpon. We were unsuccessful in that attempt although one was caught by a boat anchored close by.  We then headed off to a near-shore wreck in the area of the Western Sambos (yes that’s actually the name) where we proceeded to catch several different types of snappers (yellowtail, vermillion, lane, gray and it seems like another that I can’t remember at the moment) along with three or four different types of grouper (all short) and the intended hogfish. It was a crazy looking little fish!  Some of the fish caught at this spot show up in Chris’ video.  We were headed offshore from there to the vertical jigging spot when Jeff said hey we’re going to be going right by one of my “mutton holes” and the tide looks right so let’s stop and give it a try. We weren’t there long and had, I think, three hook-ups but the only keeper that came into the boat was this nice mutton snapper that Chris caught.  I think it weighed 14 lbs.



We made a few passes at the jigging spot only picking up a couple of stud bonito before heading back inshore to a wreck to see if we could scare up a permit before calling it a day.  We weren’t there too long when a small jig with a crab on it got nailed. Chris started fighting the fish and sure enough we soon saw the flash of a permit below the boat.  Unfortunately though our LDR (long distance release) skills manifested themselves again and the fish came unbuttoned before being boated. We caught a number of other species there before the closing bell rang and we headed back to the marina. The plan for Friday was to head to the gulf and look for the shrimp boat fleet to do some tuna fishing if the wind laid down as predicted.

TimM

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Re: Keys Trip
« Reply #11 on: June 03, 2013, 10:33:54 AM »
As we were leaving the marina on Thursday morning another guide that I fished with a couple of years ago had his boat at the fuel dock and was preparing to head out. We exchanged pleasantries and went on our way. As we were idling out with Jeff we were just talking about running into Tony and he mentioned that Tony was actually headed out to film a shark episode with Bill Dance that day. Didn’t really give it any more thought after that until that night. Just a few minutes after we got back to the house where we were staying I got a text from Jeff saying that Tony was planning to take Bill Dance to look for the shrimp boats on Friday and asked if I would be interested/willing to take a portion of our day to do some camera boat duty for Bill and in turn work together with them to figure out where the shrimp guys were and which boats had fish and which kinds of fish around them. After a little back and forth to define exactly what was expected/involved I told Jeff we were in.

We were greeted by calm winds on Friday and headed off into the gulf to look for the shrimp boats with Tony and Bill leaving a bit before we arrived. It was a beautiful morning and a pleasant couple hours boat ride out to the general area where they planned to start searching. Our first stop was at the “S” tower where we were greeted with an acre or so of blue runners on the surface (seen in the Santana version of Chris’s video) along with lots of larger cudas and (we think) some AJ’s. Unfortunately we were significantly under-gunned for the AJ’s and each one hooked soon got us  into the tower legs and broke off.  Meanwhile Jeff was communicating with Tony on the radio and they’d found a group of shrimp boats a bit to the southwest of that location.  They hadn’t found the tunas yet but there were a number of boats in the area. Off we went to find the shrimp boats and tuna. At this point we were roughly 60 miles WNW of Key West and more or less due north of the Tortugas.  As we neared the area Tony and Bill pulled away from a boat where they’d found some fish and we slipped in behind them.  There were a couple of guys on the stern of the shrimp boat so Jeff asked if they’d be interested in swapping some fish trash for beer. The older guy said no…don’t need any beer. Got some whiskey? Nope,  no whiskey. Well how about some weed he said with a laugh….to which we backed away a few feet and Jeff started tossing some chum in the water (small dead fish). Soon fish were busting all around us and both Chris and I had fish on.  I don’t really remember all the details about how many were caught with which methods but I do know that pretty quickly Jeff asked if I wanted to catch some on the fly.  Using his 10 weight with a small white streamer type fly it took very little time to hook up.  It also didn’t take long for that to turn into work! It really made me marvel at the idea of catching a 100+ lb. tarpon on gear anything like this. However,   if you just like pulling on a strong, hard running fish that doesn’t quit I’m not sure there’s many fish swimming that are stronger than the tuna family and it doesn’t take a PhD to get them to eat if you make the commitment to go where they are. Yes, the amberjacks are tough customers and pull like crazy but they don’t make the runs tuna do.  This I do know…if you tied a 20 lb. blackfin tail to tail to a 20 lb. striper the blackfin is going to tow that striper around. We just don’t have anything that swims in our waters that runs like a tuna.  Anyway, over the next few hours we caught blackfin and big bonita on natural bait, the fly, topwater lures and a streamer like bait meant for non-fly gear I started tying for striper fishing a few years ago. It was a hoot. I think we wound up keeping 4 blackfin and I’m not sure how many bonita before we decided to release everything else.  Somewhere in the midst of that mania we took a little break and did camera boat duty for Bill Dance. We met at a boat neither of us had been fishing and the camera crew transferred to our boat. While Jeff maneuvered around to keep the camera guys where they needed to be and I snapped pictures Jeff also tossed a bait in now and then to keep us catching fish all the while.  Tell you what guys, he’s not inexpensive but Jeff works hard and does a good job.  Anyway, after watching Bill catch a blackfin on a very light spinning rod with a Zara Spook while Bob Bagby from Zebco caught a bonita the camera crew was transferred back to Tony’s boat and when I asked for a photo of Chris with Bill they invited him over to Tony’s boat. Soon Tony & Bill went off in search of a permit while we went back to what we’d been doing.

Not long after that  I saw something I’ve heard about before but don’t think I’ve personally experienced before then…I’d been using a top water lure  and had a blackfin hooked up which after fighting for a while got off. When I checked the lure I found that the split ring which held the hook the fish was hooked on had been straightened out. The remaining split ring wasn’t far from doing the same. Considering that you can’t really put that much force on these split rings when you’re fishing I’m not sure I understand the dynamics of how that works but I saw it happen. We’re not talking small typical freshwater split rings here either.  Anyway, while it’s certainly not stalking a fish in a foot of gin clear water it is an experience that I think any light tackle fisherman would enjoy. The highlight of the day for me, fishing wise, was when I saw a blackfin in the 20 lb. range come out of the water and land on top of the lure I was using. THAT was an exciting strike.    Here are a few photos from that day:
























To say this was a unique and very cool day is an understatement in my book.  It was definitely one of the highlights of the trip.

As it was close by and easy that night we ate dinner at the BoonDocks:

http://www.boondocksus.com/

It was exactly what we thought it was and I do not recommend it for anything other than convenience. It was a hyper touristy spot with very poor service and only mediocre food for the area that was not bargain priced.  I would not repeat this call. YMMV though.



TimM

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Re: Keys TR for the first week
« Reply #12 on: June 03, 2013, 10:40:50 AM »
After having been up early and had long days the last two in a row we slept in a bit on Saturday. One of the things we specifically wanted to try while in the area was chumming in some sharks over a sand flat where you could see them coming. I looked around on my tide prediction tools and found what I’d read/been told is a really pretty area with this sort of bottom areas that had an outgoing tide mid day on Saturday so of course that’s where we headed. It’s called the Content Keys and it lives up to it’s reputation in my opinion. It is very picturesque area. We chose a natural funnel area that had a sandy spot in about 5 feet of water with 20 feet closer by than anywhere else for a few miles according to my chart.  We anchored up and started chumming heavily. We put out several mahi and tuna caracasses on a stainless steel ring at the boat. We threw  numerous carcasses of various types in the water all around the boat. All of them had been marinating in the cooler outside with very little ice for at least a few days.   We then poured out the blood/water mix that was in the cooler. I really don’t know how much it was but it was definitely more than a gallon. We then put out several different baits that were variations of hunks of bonita and cuda.  Perhaps 30 minutes or so after we started I was  doing something or other on the back deck when a dark shadow in the water caught my attention in my peripheral vision.  I glanced around and could hardly believe my eyes.  It was a  very large hammerhead perhaps 20 feet from the boat. I called out to Chris who then set about getting his GoPro off the rigid mount so he could try to get some underwater footage of this beast since it was so close. Before I knew what he was doing he had the camera under the water pointing it at the Hammerhead as it investigated the boat.  It circled around a couple of times with each circle getting a little larger. As it was looping around I moved a line into it’s path that was baited with an entire bonita head.  The fish saw it, swam over to it and after a second’s hesitation sucked it in. It mouthed the bait and started to swim off – meanwhile I’m wondering what on earth am I going to do --- I am in no way prepared to deal with a fish this size. However that proved to be irrelevant as the fish wasn't hooked...it was just swimming with the bait in it's mouth and it soon spit it out.  We discussed it at length later and came to the agreement that the fish was definitely in the range of half the length of my 22’ boat.  It was a BEAST of a fish whatever though. My best guestimate is that this fish was in the 450 lb. or more range just given how long it was relative to my boat and the fact that two of us saw it close by several times. I believe it was a 10’ long fish.

Anyway we stayed there for a while hooking, I think, 5 or 6 other sharks but only landing a single lemon in the 5 foot length range.

I have two removable telescoping outriggers on my boat. Of course given where we were on this trip I had them installed at this point. As we were running back to the house on Saturday there was a snapping/popping sound loud enough that my son & I both heard it over the outboard. The outrigger on the port side of the boat had worked it’s way out of the base, gone overboard where the water pressure snapped the retaining strap and it was gone.   I idled on towards home for a moment before deciding that I’d turn around and make a pass over the area using the trail on my GPS to retrace our path. The water was about 7 feet deep but clear and we happened to be in an area where the weed patches  had a few sandy spots.  So we idle back past where I’m sure it happened but don’t see anything. I turn around and head back the original direction and just as I was about to give up I see a metallic glint in my peripheral vision just on the edge of a sandy patch in the middle of some weeds. Somehow I had the presence of mind to set a waypoint marker on the GPS pretty quickly after seeing the outrigger pole. We proceed to circle around for a while getting glimpses of it now and then. Initially I was thinking I’d just put a lure on a heavier, longer rod which I’d use to snag the rigging on the outrigger. After a few passes though I gave up on that since pretty much as soon as we saw it, it was gone. So I emptied my pockets, took off my glasses and the next time we drove by it I threw the motor into neutral and jumped straight in landing almost literally on top of it.  I grabbed it and stuck it up above the surface for Chris to grab –which he did. I climbed back into the boat, got squared away and off we went none the worse for wear. 

On Saturday we ate an early dinner at the Hogfish Bar & Grill:

http://www.hogfishbar.com/

In the same neighborhood as The Rusty Anchor the Hogfish Bar and Grill is also more of a blue collar/locals type spot than touristy place. The food and atmosphere were excellent. The service was good and the prices fair.  I would repeat this meal in a heartbeat. We all agreed this one belongs in the top 3 places we ate while there.




Well, that's it for the first week.... 

Here's a link to the second video that Chris made from our trip footage set to a Santana tune...for what it's worth there's some footage in here from days that I haven't talked about in the TR yet...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YS4ZFoRXbvc

countryflyfisher

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Re: Keys Trip
« Reply #13 on: June 03, 2013, 11:19:11 AM »
What an epic report. Between you and TWiles I will never feel adequate in posting a fishing report.
The more I fish the more I realize it isn t about the fishing.  The older I get the more I realize it is about the moments God has hand crafted just for me. 

                                                                             countryflyfisher

gaspergou

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Re: Keys Trip
« Reply #14 on: June 03, 2013, 08:45:10 PM »
Epic report indeed. Thanks for sharing -- that's a heck of an incentive to get down that way soon!