It was a such a pretty morning I snapped a picture of the sunrise with my cell phone as walked down the ramp to meet Bill Redfield and his uncle Cliff out at the Goffinsville Park boat ramp. I saw on my GPS that the tide was falling and still had a couple of hours to hit bottom so I thought we'd run over to Broward Island and fish the logs. But as we were running I saw an oyster bank that looked really, good - there was movement all over and bait was getting popped so we pulled up and began casting jigs and live shrimp. Cliff "knocked the skunk" off quick with a feisty Redfish catch then both he and Bill
were putting fish in the boat. Cliff was taking up the stern and pulling in Seatrout out deeper but Bill was hitting the bank and had strong hookups - his first a big Slot 24" Red, then he followed that up almost immediately with another; then another! He added a keeper sized Black "puppy" Drum and a keeper sized Seatrout.
We finally made it down to Broward: Cliff found a honey hole and worked a few Redfish out of there and Bill hooked up and landed a keeper sized Flounder. Cliff tangled with a big Red but it was big for a reason and found a way to snap the line.
We came back to fish Spanish Drop where Bill fought to the boat a big Bonnethead Shark, then a big Jack Crevalle. The tide had just started in here and the bite was real slow but Bill found one more Slot Redfish at the mouth of a runout. His final fish was a wayward Tripletail - No. 6 caught on the Anglers mark in 16 years! And with that, we called it a day, another great one to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.
1 comment:
awsome trip, one that I will remember fora long time
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