After two cancelled days of fishing due to high winds, and after looking at the forecast last night for today, we decided to get out and give it a try this morning. Unfortunately the forecast had changed just a tad and the wind was already at 16mph when I got up this morning. But I thought we could find a spot or two to find shelter so I drove down to Sawpit Creek to meet Dan Giffiths who brought along two of his kids, Daniella and Samuel.
We wanted to try our hand at some flood tide tailing Redfish later in the day but we started off with a run up to Seymore's Pointe...and out of the wind. Dan unlimbered the fly rod and tossed a slow sinking shrimp to the rocks while the young anglers threw spinning gear and mud minnows. On the first cast we had a bite and hookup! Samuel was on the rod and he expertly reeled in a...Grouper! It's not the first time we've caught Grouper in the back water - they're not real big but always a neat surprise.
Then Daniella got in on the action. She was making pin point casts and it paid off with some good Mangrove Snapper bites. She really had the hang of it and caught a good handful. Even though Dan was putting the fly right where the Mangroves were biting, he had no takers.
We headed down to Pumpkin Hill to see if we could get something bigger but we were now out in the wind and it made for some real uncomfortable fishing conditions. We worked our way back to Christopher Creek and saw that the grass was flooding. As we eased up to the grass, we were greeted with Redfish tails everywhere!
Dan had been making excellent casts up at Seymore's in some good shelter but here it was at true challenge. Just when you thought Dan had the perfect cast the wind would catch the line and blow it way off course. The times that the wind cooperated and the cast landed in the right spot, the fish didn't see it.We moved around the flat a bit and approached it from a different angle. There were some small tails out there and some huge tails out there but are efforts were to no avail. We tried another spot, again the selection was limited to the shelter from the wind but by this time the water was seriously high and we saw no more tails. We were treated to a huge flock of birds - Egrets, Herons, Spoonbills, and Storks which made for a great way to wrap up a day of fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.