I've been fishing out of a SeaBorn FX24 Bay boat the last few trips and thought I'd produce a review for those of you who are looking at purchasing a new boat and getting out on Amelia Island waters
this spring.
You can visit the website, scroll to the bottom and see all the specifications and you'll see that this boat's is 23'9" and 102" wide (that's over 8 feet!) which gives you a huge front deck for you and your buddies to fish from. Although the maximum horse power rated is 300HP, the boat I used had a 250 Yamaha 4-stroke and it easily cruised down the intercoastal-very smooth- and it jumped up on a plan quickly. I never pushed it over 40mph but it felt like it could go a lot faster! The FX24 has a 68 gallon fuel tank which means you could probably fish a whole week without needing to refill.
This boat was equipped with a 80lb Minnkota I-Pilot trolling motor (I'd go with a 112lb-the 80 did fine in low current but struggled with the faster stuff) and it also had one Power Pole on the stern. I've never used a Power Pole but found that it was a good tool to anchor in shallower water, and very quite! The trolling motor batteries were mounted in the console which is accessed by an easy-to-remove panel under the steering wheel. There was a convenient plug mounted on the side of the console for charging.
In addition to the six rod holders incorporated into the console - three on each side), there were two
holders at the stern, one on the starboard ad one on the port for spare rods that you would have at hand. I take 8 rods with me when I have 4 guests so it was great to have storage for them. Then there were two rod holders under each gunwale, and the icing on the cake were lockable rod holders on each side of the bow. I can't tell you how many times I've pulled up to a restaurant on the river or trailering and wish I could lock up my rods. If I'm trailering I take them off the boat and cram them in the front seat of my truck(and risk snagging the headliner or leather seat). If I'm on the water, I'm just hoping there are no thieves around. My rod/reel combo's average $280 each and the loss of 6 of them would really hurt! So having a place to lock your rods would be great!
As mentioned, the front deck has plenty of space for 2 or even three anglers to fish from. The rear
seats fold down to make a nice platform on the stern to fish. This boat can easily fish 4 anglers plus the Captain. There's plenty of storage hatches with stainless steel hardware that shut flush. There's an anchor locker that stows the rope, chain, and anchor then next is a large locker that holds all of the life vests, throw cushion, first aid kit, foldable fish net, and trolling motor power cord. The second locker is actually a built in, insulated two-compartment cooler. One side holds the drinks and food while the other side holds the fish! No slimy fish stuff on your drinks!
Having two live wells is great! The first is located in front of the console; you can keep bait in there or you can shut the cock off and use it for storage or as another cooler. The console is sleek and waterproof. I noticed that there are no open holes on top of the console for water to drip down onto your batteries. This boat was outfitted with a state-of-the-art Simrad fish finder/chart plotter (I didn't delve too much into that but switched from depth to chart easily using a touch screen menu). The console also has a nice little glove box to store your keys, wallet, trolling motor remote. For the helm seat, the owner had a big cooler, matching cushion, with swing back rest. I used it as a "dry box" storage to keep my Captain's bag, Captain's book, ditch box, etc. so it was easily accessible.
The battery switch was located under the starboard side rear seat and in the center of the stern deck was a live well with a clear lid and a light inside the well. We ran the well constantly while fishing which kept our live shrimp alive but was quite enough that it didn't scare the fish. There were more storage behind the seats where dock lines, bait net, bumpers, and a small bucket were kept.
Have you noticed I keep mentioning the storage? When you go to look at a boat you need to be thinking, "where in the heck am I going to put everything?" You don't want anything on the deck while fishing. When you hookup with that fish of a life time, you don't want to be tripping over tackle box's, bait nets, loose coolers as you battle that fish from the bow to the stern, port to starboard, and back to the bow again! This SeaBorn FX24 has enough storage for your rods, your tackle, your life saving gear, your bait, your drinks and food - it's all stored away - it's a fishing machine! Find a Dealer HERE and get out on the water this spring for some great Amelia Island fishing.
Sunday, January 5, 2020
Saturday, January 4, 2020
Recipe of the Month: Collard Greens
Collard Greens
Purchase 2
big bunches of collards from Yulee Fruit Market (if the collards have gone thru
a freeze, they’ll be less bitter)
Rinse collards
2-3 times thoroughly or they will have “grit”. Lay a leaf on a large cutting
board and slice down each side of the stem, then pull the stem free. Fold the
leaf, roll it up and use a pair of scissors to cut into 1” pieces.10-12 pieces of Bacon Ends from Houston’s Meat Market in Oceanway; cook these until the bacon begins to get hard and the fat is rendered. Remove and save the bacon.
1 ½ sweet onion, chopped
1 T
ground garlic1 t heaping, Red Pepper flakes
- Cook these until onions began to get soft
1 Qt
unsalted Chicken Stock
¼ Cup Apple Cider VinegarSalt and black pepper
-Add these bring to a boil, then simmer for 15-20 minutes. This is the “pot liquor”.
Add salt as needed.
You can cook this the day before, add
liquid and collards to a crock pot, and the next day heat up, beginning about 1
½ hours ahead of time. Add Chicken stock as needed.
Thursday, January 2, 2020
Biggest Fish of 2020!
I hope everyone had a great holiday and 2020 is a great fish catching year for everyone. I kicked it off with a fishing trip with Ike Pohle, meeting him over at the Amelia Island Marina early this morning for a quick run up the intercoastal. We had clear skies, the sun was out, there was only a slight breeze and the temperature was just a tad bit cool. We made our first stop at the logs of Tiger Island and the tide had just started in. Ike was making excellent casts to the bank with a jig and live shrimp and it paid off -he started catching Redfish steadily. The first few were just undersized but then he had one hit and rip the drag and he knew right off that it was a
bigger fish. Ike fought it expertly to the boat and landed a nice 21" Slot sized Redfish. All fish caught today were released. We continued to fish and caught a good handful of Reds with a couple of them being of keeper size.
When that slowed we moved down the island, pitching between the logs and picked up a small Black "puppy" Drum then when Ike had another hookup he thought it was another small Redfish but when it came to the surface we saw that it was a nice 18" Seatrout!
Our next stop was up at the Jolley River fishing the oyster beds that were flooding. Although we gave it a good effort, the fish just weren't cooperating. We came back to the outside of Tiger, switched to float rigs with live shrimp, and did pick up a couple of Seatrout. The final stop was over in Bell River and Ike added another Trout and a barely legal Redfish to his catch. And with that, we called it a day, another great one to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
bigger fish. Ike fought it expertly to the boat and landed a nice 21" Slot sized Redfish. All fish caught today were released. We continued to fish and caught a good handful of Reds with a couple of them being of keeper size.
When that slowed we moved down the island, pitching between the logs and picked up a small Black "puppy" Drum then when Ike had another hookup he thought it was another small Redfish but when it came to the surface we saw that it was a nice 18" Seatrout!
Our next stop was up at the Jolley River fishing the oyster beds that were flooding. Although we gave it a good effort, the fish just weren't cooperating. We came back to the outside of Tiger, switched to float rigs with live shrimp, and did pick up a couple of Seatrout. The final stop was over in Bell River and Ike added another Trout and a barely legal Redfish to his catch. And with that, we called it a day, another great one to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
Wednesday, January 1, 2020
Cool Day for Last Trip of 2019
After that front came thru we had a cool down in temperatures for yesterday morning's trip with Jim Barron, his son David and his grandsons Wyatt and Walker. We met at the Amelia Island Marina and made a good run down the intercoastal with all of us wrapped up tight with extra jackets! But as soon as we pulled in to some docks at Seymore's Pointe, the sun heated us right up and it made for some nice fishing weather.
Wyatt kicked things off when he found some keeper size Black "puppy" Drum on his jig and live shrimp and he pulled in a couple of those. We then ran even further south to Broward Island and fished the logs where we picked up a few Redfish with two of them being just a smidge short of legal size. Walker got on the board with a Black Drum catch and that's all it took to get him going.
We fished Spanish Drop, switching to float rigs, but the wind had picked up and it made for some tough casting, so we buzzed back to the docks at Seymore's and found three boats had the same idea! We tried a spot or two to no avail, then we ran back thru Horsehead and begin drifting our floats across some flooding oysters and this did the trick. These anglers had good action catching Seatrout after Seatrout - one or two were almost at keeper size, but most were small and we tossed them back.
The sun had warmed us up and that last spot the fishing heated up, so we counted it as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
Wyatt kicked things off when he found some keeper size Black "puppy" Drum on his jig and live shrimp and he pulled in a couple of those. We then ran even further south to Broward Island and fished the logs where we picked up a few Redfish with two of them being just a smidge short of legal size. Walker got on the board with a Black Drum catch and that's all it took to get him going.
We fished Spanish Drop, switching to float rigs, but the wind had picked up and it made for some tough casting, so we buzzed back to the docks at Seymore's and found three boats had the same idea! We tried a spot or two to no avail, then we ran back thru Horsehead and begin drifting our floats across some flooding oysters and this did the trick. These anglers had good action catching Seatrout after Seatrout - one or two were almost at keeper size, but most were small and we tossed them back.
The sun had warmed us up and that last spot the fishing heated up, so we counted it as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
Sunday, December 29, 2019
Socked In
The weather forecast last evening called for a slight chance of rain this morning so when I talked to David Dailey yesterday we both agreed that it was a go to meet and go fishing - but maybe we should bring our rain gear just in case! When I got up this morning the forecast called for minimal rain the first couple of hours but then definite rain the last part of our trip, and for once, the weather guru's were right!
We met out at the Amelia Island Marina and made a quick run down the intercoastal to dip into Jackstaff and then up a small creek where
we set up to fish float rigs and live shrimp on an incoming tide. It didn't take long and these anglers - David's wife Marley, and their adult sons Will and Alex - were catching a few Seatrout. After we moved over to a larger creek and fished to no avail, Will switched to a jig and shrimp and picked up a nice sized Whiting on the bottom (all fish caught today were released).
After running thru Horsehead we made a brief stop at some docks at Seymour's Pointe then continued on down to Spanish Drop. Just as we were getting set up we could see the rain coming across the marsh from the south east so we all donned our rain gear and kept on fishing! Both David and Alex picked up some hungry Seatrout drifting a float back to a point of grass while Will stayed with the jig, fishing a creek mouth, and he reeled in an aggressive Blue Crab!
The wind was beginning to pick up and the rain had continued so we pulled anchor and ran back to Seymore's where we were somewhat protected. This turned out to be our most productive spot. They all caught Seatrout and a good handful of them were of keeper size. Facing the 15 minute run back to the marina in the rain, we pointed it north and headed in and still counted it as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida
We met out at the Amelia Island Marina and made a quick run down the intercoastal to dip into Jackstaff and then up a small creek where
we set up to fish float rigs and live shrimp on an incoming tide. It didn't take long and these anglers - David's wife Marley, and their adult sons Will and Alex - were catching a few Seatrout. After we moved over to a larger creek and fished to no avail, Will switched to a jig and shrimp and picked up a nice sized Whiting on the bottom (all fish caught today were released).
After running thru Horsehead we made a brief stop at some docks at Seymour's Pointe then continued on down to Spanish Drop. Just as we were getting set up we could see the rain coming across the marsh from the south east so we all donned our rain gear and kept on fishing! Both David and Alex picked up some hungry Seatrout drifting a float back to a point of grass while Will stayed with the jig, fishing a creek mouth, and he reeled in an aggressive Blue Crab!
The wind was beginning to pick up and the rain had continued so we pulled anchor and ran back to Seymore's where we were somewhat protected. This turned out to be our most productive spot. They all caught Seatrout and a good handful of them were of keeper size. Facing the 15 minute run back to the marina in the rain, we pointed it north and headed in and still counted it as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida
Friday, December 13, 2019
From Cane To Cane Syrup
Last weekend I was lucky enough to be invited to an old time cane grind'n - sugar cane that is. My friend Daniel "Bubba" Rhodes had planted a patch of cane back in March as an experiment "just to see if he could do it" and it was time to be harvested and he put out the notice that he could use some help in getting it squeezed. Luckily, Daniel did the hard part Friday and cut, leafed and topped the cane and loaded it into his pickup truck and attached trailer and then hauled it to the cane grinder guy(Mr. W.)on the north side of Jacksonville. All we had to do was show up!
A couple of hundred years ago evidently farmers would hitch up a mule to a long pole then someone would either ride or lead the mule around and around the grinder while folks fed the cane thru the grinding wheels and collected the juice on the other side. Then they'd tote the juice to a huge cast iron pot and cook it down to syrup. Mr. W. told Daniel that he'd need about 500 stalks of cane to fill his pot. We met out at the "farm" and began grinding at about 7:30 in the morning. Mr. W. had biscuits and sausage and coffee for everyone.
Mr. W. had two electric grinders - one was a 1/2 HP built in the 1930's in Jacksonville and the other was a newer model 2HP and boy did it squeeze some juice. Mr high school buddy Raymond Keen and I were shoving cane thru the smaller grinder while Daniel and his friend and neighbor Monroe worked at the other one. It took no time at all to begin to pile up a huge pile of waste that collected on a chain link "sled" that Mr. W. said he'd drag off into the woods after we were all done.
Both mills were set up in such a way that the juice was routed thru some removable PVC pipes into the cooking shed and drained thru a rack with burlap bags acting as a strainer. The grinder that Raymond and I were on eventually got in a bind (I was advised not to put two big stalks thru it, just a big 'un and a little 'un, but I miscalculated) and the grinder came to a halt. Yep, I broke it. By the time we got if fixed we were able to move the whole operation over to the newer grinder.
Eventually Mr. W. called for a halt - the big cast iron vat was full! He had some huge propane tanks outside the shed that were piped in to multi-burner unit under the vat; Mr. W. said years ago they would use wood, but that made it more difficult to moderate the temperature. He fired it up and we soon found that the cooking needed to be watched constantly and the temperature adjusted on occasion.
All told, the cane juice cooked for about 4 1/2 hours. At first, there was a big "scum" of impurities that accumulated on top of the cooking juice. Mr. W. and his grandson monitored the cooking process continually and every once in a while they'd take some home made skimmers and take the scum off of the top of the juice. I assume they were adjusting the heat as needed.
Eventually they didn't have to skim anymore and then they really let it cook. If you look at the above picture you can see a large SS ring hanging over Mr. W's right shoulder; it fit perfectly over the iron vat and once the temperature was just right, the foam with it's impurities would spill over and be filtered thru some croaker sacks that lined the ring(click on the video to the left). Every once in while we'd remove those sacks, take them out in the yard and rinse them, and put them back for some more filtering.
This went on for a couple of hours. The cooking shed was hot and steamy but when you stepped in for a peek you could begin to smell the syrup! Those in charge (and boy did they know what they were doing!) knew when to lift the SS ring from the vat and remove the croaker sack filters and then three of them surrounded the vat and began taking rags and wiping the edge of the vat as the last of the impurities bubbled to the edge. I don't know how they did it - it seemed like this process took an hour of wiping, wiping, cleaning their cloth, wiping, wiping, cleaning their cloth. Even though we had some cooler temperatures that morning, it was hot and steamy in the cooking shed!
We were getting close to the end of the process! Mr. W. must have known it was getting close - he said he could tell when the syrup began to "fall" in the vat and no amount of heat could bring it back up. (click on video to the left) The foam on top was light and airy and had turned a beautiful golden color. But Mr. W. instructed his grandson(he knew what to do - he'd been doing this with his grandfather since he was a little kid) to use a hydrometer to test the liquid; they had a homemade PVC contraption that the hydrometer fit down in and with one hand holding the hydrometer at arms length, he dipped out some of the syrup and poured it in. It only took a time or two over the course of a few minutes and they pronounced it ready.
The heat was shut off and two guys took some home made dippers and begin to take turns dipping the hot syrup into a modified beer keg that had a spigot down at the bottom. Once all the syrup had been dipped out, the vat was quickly cleaned with water while it was still hot.
Daniel provided the bottles and caps and Mr. W. began to pour off the syrup into bottles. I had the honor of putting the caps on the bottles but was warned to "grab them at the top" because boy were they hot! But I didn't drop a single one!
I had seen parts of this process a couple of times in my life. Once was over in the Branford, Florida area when I was young boy. I vaguely remember a tractor attached to along pole that went around the grinder. We must not of hung around because I don't remember any of the cooking. Also as a young boy, I remember my dad taking me out past the interstate in Yulee to a "grinding" and here they were cooking the syrup. So approximately 50 years ago! This time I got to experience the entire operation and boy was it a treat!
A couple of hundred years ago evidently farmers would hitch up a mule to a long pole then someone would either ride or lead the mule around and around the grinder while folks fed the cane thru the grinding wheels and collected the juice on the other side. Then they'd tote the juice to a huge cast iron pot and cook it down to syrup. Mr. W. told Daniel that he'd need about 500 stalks of cane to fill his pot. We met out at the "farm" and began grinding at about 7:30 in the morning. Mr. W. had biscuits and sausage and coffee for everyone.
Mr. W. had two electric grinders - one was a 1/2 HP built in the 1930's in Jacksonville and the other was a newer model 2HP and boy did it squeeze some juice. Mr high school buddy Raymond Keen and I were shoving cane thru the smaller grinder while Daniel and his friend and neighbor Monroe worked at the other one. It took no time at all to begin to pile up a huge pile of waste that collected on a chain link "sled" that Mr. W. said he'd drag off into the woods after we were all done.
Both mills were set up in such a way that the juice was routed thru some removable PVC pipes into the cooking shed and drained thru a rack with burlap bags acting as a strainer. The grinder that Raymond and I were on eventually got in a bind (I was advised not to put two big stalks thru it, just a big 'un and a little 'un, but I miscalculated) and the grinder came to a halt. Yep, I broke it. By the time we got if fixed we were able to move the whole operation over to the newer grinder.
Eventually Mr. W. called for a halt - the big cast iron vat was full! He had some huge propane tanks outside the shed that were piped in to multi-burner unit under the vat; Mr. W. said years ago they would use wood, but that made it more difficult to moderate the temperature. He fired it up and we soon found that the cooking needed to be watched constantly and the temperature adjusted on occasion.
All told, the cane juice cooked for about 4 1/2 hours. At first, there was a big "scum" of impurities that accumulated on top of the cooking juice. Mr. W. and his grandson monitored the cooking process continually and every once in a while they'd take some home made skimmers and take the scum off of the top of the juice. I assume they were adjusting the heat as needed.
Eventually they didn't have to skim anymore and then they really let it cook. If you look at the above picture you can see a large SS ring hanging over Mr. W's right shoulder; it fit perfectly over the iron vat and once the temperature was just right, the foam with it's impurities would spill over and be filtered thru some croaker sacks that lined the ring(click on the video to the left). Every once in while we'd remove those sacks, take them out in the yard and rinse them, and put them back for some more filtering.
This went on for a couple of hours. The cooking shed was hot and steamy but when you stepped in for a peek you could begin to smell the syrup! Those in charge (and boy did they know what they were doing!) knew when to lift the SS ring from the vat and remove the croaker sack filters and then three of them surrounded the vat and began taking rags and wiping the edge of the vat as the last of the impurities bubbled to the edge. I don't know how they did it - it seemed like this process took an hour of wiping, wiping, cleaning their cloth, wiping, wiping, cleaning their cloth. Even though we had some cooler temperatures that morning, it was hot and steamy in the cooking shed!
The heat was shut off and two guys took some home made dippers and begin to take turns dipping the hot syrup into a modified beer keg that had a spigot down at the bottom. Once all the syrup had been dipped out, the vat was quickly cleaned with water while it was still hot.
Daniel provided the bottles and caps and Mr. W. began to pour off the syrup into bottles. I had the honor of putting the caps on the bottles but was warned to "grab them at the top" because boy were they hot! But I didn't drop a single one!
I had seen parts of this process a couple of times in my life. Once was over in the Branford, Florida area when I was young boy. I vaguely remember a tractor attached to along pole that went around the grinder. We must not of hung around because I don't remember any of the cooking. Also as a young boy, I remember my dad taking me out past the interstate in Yulee to a "grinding" and here they were cooking the syrup. So approximately 50 years ago! This time I got to experience the entire operation and boy was it a treat!
Thursday, December 12, 2019
Nasty Front Moving In
Yesterday we had record high temperatures here at Amelia Island but today we woke up to gloomy skies with a nasty front moving our way. I've already cancelled Thursday and Friday bookings! But this morning was "fishable" so I met John Cipriani and his fishing buddies Dean and Bill, and Bill's daughter Sydney also came along for the fun! We met at the Amelia Island Marina and this time we headed south, down the intercoastal to dip into Jackstaff, then into a small creek, to set up fishing a large run out with float rigs and live shrimp. The weather was outstanding - just a bit cool and only a slight breeze.
BAM! The fish started biting almost immediately. We caught one Trout after another - all 11-14" in length and we were beginning to think they were all the same fish until Sydney(the rookie) hooked up and landed a nice keeper sized one. Once the bite slowed, we made the run thru Horsehead and set up at a grassy pointe to cast and let our floats drift by. Again, we had good action on Trout, but then
John's float slowly went under and he had a strong hookup and Fish ON! John fought the fish patiently and after a good battle landed a big 21" Sheepshead - a fish big enough to take a last minute first place in the Angler's Mark 2019 Bragging Rights Tournament-Sheepshead Category(scroll down the right side of this report for standings).
We didn't quite fathom that we were sheltered from the wind until when moved on down to Pumpkin Hill and set up to fish a grass patch and found that the wind had picked up, the skies had gotten greyer, and the chill was more noticeable. We fished for just a bit but had no real bites so we moved back to the mouth of Christopher Creek. We were sheltered here but the fish just didn't bite.
Our final stop was back at some docks at Seymore's Pointe, partly because it was somewhat sheltered, it was on the way back, and we could fish some jigs up by the dock pilings. The front was really moving in and the mist was so thick it looked like a huge fog bank. But when these anglers began to catch fish the weather was forgotten! In just a short period of time they landed six keeper sized Black Drum, some smaller ones, and a few more keeper sized Seatrout, all on jigs and live shrimp.
Heading back to the marina we were running right into the wind and the mist which made for a cold ride, but the Sea Born 24" bay boat were in was cruising smoothly and we made it back to the Marina in no time. Although the weather went bad in a hurry, we still counted it as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
BAM! The fish started biting almost immediately. We caught one Trout after another - all 11-14" in length and we were beginning to think they were all the same fish until Sydney(the rookie) hooked up and landed a nice keeper sized one. Once the bite slowed, we made the run thru Horsehead and set up at a grassy pointe to cast and let our floats drift by. Again, we had good action on Trout, but then
John's float slowly went under and he had a strong hookup and Fish ON! John fought the fish patiently and after a good battle landed a big 21" Sheepshead - a fish big enough to take a last minute first place in the Angler's Mark 2019 Bragging Rights Tournament-Sheepshead Category(scroll down the right side of this report for standings).
We didn't quite fathom that we were sheltered from the wind until when moved on down to Pumpkin Hill and set up to fish a grass patch and found that the wind had picked up, the skies had gotten greyer, and the chill was more noticeable. We fished for just a bit but had no real bites so we moved back to the mouth of Christopher Creek. We were sheltered here but the fish just didn't bite.
Our final stop was back at some docks at Seymore's Pointe, partly because it was somewhat sheltered, it was on the way back, and we could fish some jigs up by the dock pilings. The front was really moving in and the mist was so thick it looked like a huge fog bank. But when these anglers began to catch fish the weather was forgotten! In just a short period of time they landed six keeper sized Black Drum, some smaller ones, and a few more keeper sized Seatrout, all on jigs and live shrimp.
Heading back to the marina we were running right into the wind and the mist which made for a cold ride, but the Sea Born 24" bay boat were in was cruising smoothly and we made it back to the Marina in no time. Although the weather went bad in a hurry, we still counted it as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
Record Heat for December
I fished with Bob Blalock Tuesday morning, meeting him out at the Amelia Island Marina. The Angler's Mark is down for repairs this month and luckily a friend of mine offered the use of his new Sea Born 24' bay boat for a couple of trips.
We ran up the intercoastal to Lanceford Creek, back in there a ways, and found a grass patch to fish with float rigs and live shrimp on the very first of an outgoing tide. There wasn't much happening but Bob did get a Trout or two before we eased over to a dock that usually holds a nice
Trout but had no luck there.
After cruising over to Soap Creek and set up to fish a large run out and here things picked up. We caught one Trout after another, drifting the float rig in the current and a few of these were of "keeper" size(all fish caught today were released). When the bite slowed we eased up along the marsh bank and fished some submerged oysters and picked up 3-4 small but feisty Redfish, and then another Trout. That slowed, so we dropped back to the original spot - the tide had been going out for a bit - and sure enough, the Trout began to bite again - again, a couple were of keeper size.
Our next stop after a good run was over at the mouth of Jolly, fishing some oysters that were just exposed with the tide drop. I had a couple of outstanding trips the week of Thanksgiving at this spot, but it wasn't happening today. We fished further up Jolley for a bit, then tried the logs at Tiger, then headed back to the marina. I heard on the radio that it was a record high temperature for our area and it was a great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
We ran up the intercoastal to Lanceford Creek, back in there a ways, and found a grass patch to fish with float rigs and live shrimp on the very first of an outgoing tide. There wasn't much happening but Bob did get a Trout or two before we eased over to a dock that usually holds a nice
Trout but had no luck there.
After cruising over to Soap Creek and set up to fish a large run out and here things picked up. We caught one Trout after another, drifting the float rig in the current and a few of these were of "keeper" size(all fish caught today were released). When the bite slowed we eased up along the marsh bank and fished some submerged oysters and picked up 3-4 small but feisty Redfish, and then another Trout. That slowed, so we dropped back to the original spot - the tide had been going out for a bit - and sure enough, the Trout began to bite again - again, a couple were of keeper size.
Our next stop after a good run was over at the mouth of Jolly, fishing some oysters that were just exposed with the tide drop. I had a couple of outstanding trips the week of Thanksgiving at this spot, but it wasn't happening today. We fished further up Jolley for a bit, then tried the logs at Tiger, then headed back to the marina. I heard on the radio that it was a record high temperature for our area and it was a great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
Saturday, November 30, 2019
Wrapping Up Thanksgiving In Style
I wrapped up a 9 fishing trip stretch thru 10 days this morning when if fished with Dale Bullard, his daughter Autumn and son-in-law Jacob and it also finished up November and the Thanksgiving weekend for me - and it turned out to be another great day of fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
We met down at the Sawpit Creek boat ramp and under clear and sunny skies, made a short run up the Nassau River to fish an incoming tide with float rigs and live shrimp. As we eased along a shell lined bank that was quickly flooding, the three anglers were making excellent casts. We
could see some big wakes coming around a corner and the dolphin made a pass and boiled on them. But luckily they moved off and left the fish to us! BOOM! The bite was on! We caught Seatrout and Redfish and Seatrout and Redfish and Redfish and Seatrout and stayed in that one spot for over an hour. Many of the Trout were close to the size limit, but not quiet enough. Finally, Dale put a slot sized 5-spot Redfish in the boat and Jacob followed that up with one just a tad bit bigger.
We were half way thru our bait and decided to move on, take a rest, and fish at another spot so we buzzed down to Pumpkin Hill and fished a couple of spots. Even though the conditions were just right, we didn't get much action. After cruising thru a pod of dolphin we made one final stop at the entrance to Christopher Creek and here the action picked right back up. The trio caught one Trout after another and it was Autumn that put a couple of keeper sized ones in the boat.
It was a beautiful day and the fish cooperated so we counted it as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
We met down at the Sawpit Creek boat ramp and under clear and sunny skies, made a short run up the Nassau River to fish an incoming tide with float rigs and live shrimp. As we eased along a shell lined bank that was quickly flooding, the three anglers were making excellent casts. We
could see some big wakes coming around a corner and the dolphin made a pass and boiled on them. But luckily they moved off and left the fish to us! BOOM! The bite was on! We caught Seatrout and Redfish and Seatrout and Redfish and Redfish and Seatrout and stayed in that one spot for over an hour. Many of the Trout were close to the size limit, but not quiet enough. Finally, Dale put a slot sized 5-spot Redfish in the boat and Jacob followed that up with one just a tad bit bigger.
We were half way thru our bait and decided to move on, take a rest, and fish at another spot so we buzzed down to Pumpkin Hill and fished a couple of spots. Even though the conditions were just right, we didn't get much action. After cruising thru a pod of dolphin we made one final stop at the entrance to Christopher Creek and here the action picked right back up. The trio caught one Trout after another and it was Autumn that put a couple of keeper sized ones in the boat.
It was a beautiful day and the fish cooperated so we counted it as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
Friday, November 29, 2019
Backwater Bull
I waddled to the truck this morning after a day of turkey and dressing and casserole's and Carrot Cake but it was good to get back to fishing with a day off for giving thanks! I met Tripp Miller, his fishing buddy Sean, and his nephews Bennett and Nick down at the Sawpit Creek boat ramp early and we made a quick run up the Nassau River to the Spanish Drop area, pulled up and into the current of an incoming tide, and began pitching jigs and live shrimp. We caught a small Trout or two then switched to float rigs
and the live shrimp as we trolled a stretch of flooded oysters and then the bite lit up like a wild fire! Fish On! The four anglers were tossing their rigs up current and drifting them back and were catching one Seatrout after another, Finally, Sean had a strong bite - one that was big enough to pull some drag - and after a good battle, landed a nice Slot sized Redfish. We continued to fish it, continued to catch Trout, then it was Tripp's turn to battle a big fish, and boy was it big. It boiled up a few times, not wanting to come in, but Tripp kept the pressure on and worked it slowly to the net. The fish
turned out to be a tad bit over 26", but in the slot! Boy what a fish!
We eventually moved on, making the run over to Middle River and up and around to just past Pumkin Hill. The wind had picked up and was blowing the current really fast so after catching just one or two trout, we moved back to Pumpkin Hill. Again, we caught a handful of Seatrout.
Our next stop was back at the mouth of Christopher Creek. We found that the wind wasn't so bad and that we could get a good drift up by the flooding grass. I think all four anlgers hooked up and landed Trout, and some of them were of keeper size. Both Bennett and Nick were holding their own and nipping at the heals of the older anglers fish count.
We made one final stop around at Seymore's Pointe and again found some Trout biting. We picked up one or two more keeper Trout here, then called it a day, another great one to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
and the live shrimp as we trolled a stretch of flooded oysters and then the bite lit up like a wild fire! Fish On! The four anglers were tossing their rigs up current and drifting them back and were catching one Seatrout after another, Finally, Sean had a strong bite - one that was big enough to pull some drag - and after a good battle, landed a nice Slot sized Redfish. We continued to fish it, continued to catch Trout, then it was Tripp's turn to battle a big fish, and boy was it big. It boiled up a few times, not wanting to come in, but Tripp kept the pressure on and worked it slowly to the net. The fish
turned out to be a tad bit over 26", but in the slot! Boy what a fish!
We eventually moved on, making the run over to Middle River and up and around to just past Pumkin Hill. The wind had picked up and was blowing the current really fast so after catching just one or two trout, we moved back to Pumpkin Hill. Again, we caught a handful of Seatrout.
Our next stop was back at the mouth of Christopher Creek. We found that the wind wasn't so bad and that we could get a good drift up by the flooding grass. I think all four anlgers hooked up and landed Trout, and some of them were of keeper size. Both Bennett and Nick were holding their own and nipping at the heals of the older anglers fish count.
We made one final stop around at Seymore's Pointe and again found some Trout biting. We picked up one or two more keeper Trout here, then called it a day, another great one to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
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