Monday, September 23, 2024

What A Start


 After last week's high tides and slow fishing I have to admit I was a bit worried about today's fishing but I had to "council" myself - we had good weather forecasted and we had a good tide so we surely would catch fish!  I met William and Dara Blalock out at Goffinsville Park early and the forecast was correct - it was a beautiful morning. We made a very short run across river and set up on a wide bend to fish the last of an outgoing tide and as we pulled up we could see bait moving down the bank and getting busted. We had a live well full of Shrimp and a about two dozen finger mullet to "toss at 'em". 

Dara and William made their first casts and BAM! BAM! They began to get hookups. Feisty Redfish were gobbling their shrimp and we stayed catching for about an hour. We did try a couple of the mullet but they didn't seem to want them. We moved up and down the bank and the fish seemed to be in shallower water. Eventually the bite slowed and we moved on. 


Our next stop was down the Nassau where we eased up to a large drainage, switched to jigs, and fished the bottom. William was fishing a shrimp and Dara was fishing a finger mullet and when she felt a "bump" she let the fish have it for a second or two, set the hook and....we thought she had a fish...YES! Fish On!  Dara worked it to the boat patiently and landed a big 18" Flounder. Up on the bow, William switched to mullet and began to fish out deeper and when he got that tell-tell "bump", he set the hook and reeled in a hungry Seatrout. He stayed with that strategy and hauled in another one.  After Dara reeled in another Flounder, this one small, we moved on. 

After making our way up to some docks at Seymore's we fished the pilings. Right off William had a strong bite - he set the hook, had 'em on for just a bit and BAP! Fish off. Ouch. William did hook up and land couple of Mangrove Snapper, one of which was of keeper size. We then made our way down to Broward Island and fished the north end for a bit, then we moved down to the south end and began to work our way north. Just as we reached the "hot spot" Dara put a cast up to the edge of the bank (Note:she had another finger mullet on) and BAM! Right up next to the shore sat a big fish and it took her mullet (and hook) and began to rip some drag. Dara kept that pressure on - it boiled a couple of times and knew it was a big Red. It made it's way to some tree limbs but Dara pulled it out and worked it in and we netted a beautiful golden bronze 25" Slot Redfish, boy what a fish. The duo added another smaller Red to the catch total before we move on. 

We finished up drifting floats at Pumpkin Hill - William got his Slam when he put a feisty Black "puppy" Drum in the boat, then we headed back and called it another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida. 

Friday, September 20, 2024

At Least One Picture Worthy Fish

 Finally, some beautiful weather! I met Brian Roach down at Sawpit Creek this morning early. We had some store-bought live shrimp and we cast netted about a dozen finger mullet then we headed up the intercoastal then up the Nassau to make our first stop at Spanish Drop. We turned into the current and began to toss float rigs on an incoming tide that had only been coming in for a couple of hours but the oysters were already covered. Brian was getting good casts and good drifts and picked up a small Jack Crevalle and a hungry Seatrout. 



We bumped down to Twin Creeks and fished it pretty good with the floats, caught a small catfish, then moved on. Our next stop was up at a dock at Seymore's Pointe where we switched to a jig. Brian worked some pilings good and I made a few tosses, but we had no nibbles. After making the run down to Pumpkin Hill we drifted live shrimp long. This produced a couple of crabs!  But Brian went real long with a drift and when his float disappeared he lifted and let the circle hook set and fish On!  Brian played it patiently and we could tell it was a good fish. I saw it come out of the water once - Brian worked it in and landed a big Seatrout that measured right at 19" - a "picture worthy fish" for sure! 

We fished that area pretty good, then made our way over to some docks at Nassauville where Brian caught a feisty Mangrove - we had more nibbles, caught another Catfish, then moved on. We tried our hand at Seymore's Pointe, fishing the rocks with floats, got some nibbles, then switched to jigsaand got more nibbles. and another......Catfish! Ouch!

We had had a beautiful day and had caught some fish so as we headed back to the ramp we counted it as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida. 

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Jacks Galore and Tasty Mangroves

 

It had to be the prettiest day in a long time that we've had here at Amelia Island - clear skies, sunshine, only a slight breeze, and temperatures below 70 when I met Tim and Laura Wolfe down at Sawpit Creek boat ramp. The tide was high and coming in, so we made quick run over to the intercoastal and up the Back River and around to Pumpkin Hill where we set up to drift float rigs and live shrimp. Both anglers were getting good casts and good drifts and even though we had a bite or two, we had no real takers. I keep waiting for this spot to turn on, but it wasn't today. We fished the point and had not takers, but as I used the trolling motor to take us down to a grassy island, we could see fish feeding on the surface.

I eased the bow around into the current and Tim put his bait up above the commotion and within seconds he was on, and boy was it ripping some drag!  He fought it from the bow, followed it to the stern, then battled it from around the engine, eventually to land a nice hard fighting Jack Crevalle. For a good while there the fishing were boiling on the surface and we could see the Jacks backs as they raced thru the water and it was a good time as both Laura and Tim hooked up and caught the Jacks.



We then ran around to Seymore's and fished a pointe on the first of an outgoing tide, then ran thru Horsehead and fished a creek off of Jackstaff with the floats, to no avail, then back thru Horesehead we came.

Our final stop was between two docks at Nassauville and here, like yesterday, the Mangrove Snapper were hanging out. You had to be within a foot or two of the rocks with your float, but they'd bite almost immediately. Laura got hot fishing off the stern (the tide was STILL) coming in here) and she hooked up and landed some nice keeper sized fish. Tim was on the bow and caught a couple of smaller Mangroves until he switched back to the jig then he too was getting keepers. It didn't take long before they had their limit of 5 apiece and then we caught some more, culling smaller ones and keeping the bigger ones.

We had a nice fish in the live well, it had been a beautiful day, so as we headed back to the ramp we counted it as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.

Monday, September 16, 2024

Hot Streak At The End

 Crazy weather but we squeezed in a fishing trip today - the forecast called for very  little rain chance but winds hovering around 12mph, and overcast - it wasn't very pretty but we thought, fishable. So I met Robert Stettner, David Vice and his friend Bhavna out at Goffinsville Park and with a very high tide still coming in, we made our way over to Pumpkin Hill where we set up with float rigs and live shrimp to drift the marsh grass. I was optimistic when Robert hooked up on his first drift but before I could even grab the net, it was off. And after that, we struggled to get a fish. We had a few bites here and there as we moved around the point until David finally hooked up and battled to the net a hard fighting Jack Crevalle. 

We then ran over to Seymore's Point and drifted the shrimp again, this time with absolutely no bites.After running thru Horsehead and over to Poteat Point and fishing that stretch, up and down, we did manage another Jack Crevalle catch which Bhavna expertly reeled in. 


The wind had picked up a bit and the floats just didn't seem to doing it, and I could hear whispers of mutiny, so we ran back thru Horsehead and down to some docks at Nassauville where we switched to jigs and the shrimp, with David sticking with the float rig. Luckily, we began to get fish. David got a good handful of Mangrove Snapper, then when he began to go to some rocks he began to get bigger, keeper sized Snapper. Bhavna switched to the float and after making an excellent cast, hooked up and battled to the boat another keeper sized Mangrove. Robert was fishing the stern, sticking with the jig, and it paid off when he had a good "thump". After setting the hook we could tell that it wasn't a Mangrove - he played it patiently to the net and landed a nice keeper sized Black "puppy" Drum. 

Bhavna and David stayed at the stern and reeled in a good handful of those keeper sized Mangroves, the biggest being about 13" while David stayed at the stern. He had baited up with a huge live shrimp, good an "excellent" cast to the rocks and BAM! The minute it hit, Fish On!  He fought it expertly and soon landed a nice 18" Seatrout. Robert also added a keeper sized Mangrove to his catch total. We finished up down at Spanish Drop, fishing a couple of drainages and wrapped things up when Bhavna hooked up and landed another hard fighting Jack Crevalle. And with that, we called it a day, another great one to be fishing here at Amela Island, Florida. 

Friday, September 13, 2024

PLEASE Turn The Spigot Off!

 

Forget turning the spigot off, someone stick a finger in the dam!  Boy have we had some rain this past week - the streets and fields and driveways and garages are flooding. I was three trips go down the drain before I was able to squeeze in today - cloudy, overcast, but no rain and no real wind to speak of.  I met Jeff and Cindy Patrick up at Old Town Bait and Tackle early and we made the run up and around to the Jolley River to fish a tide that had been going out for a couple of hours. The oysters still were not showing when we dropped the trolling motor and began to ease along the bank and toss float rigs and live shrimp and minnows up current to get good drifts along the marsh grass. It wasn't long before Cindy 'knocked the skunk off" with hungry Seatrout catch. We worked that "bank" good and both she and Jeff put a good handful of small but feisty Redfish in the boat. Finally, though, Cindy had a strong bite and it was taking drag. Cindy kept the pressure on, worked it out from the bank, then played it patiently to land a nice 22" Slot Redfish. All of these fish were a beautiful golden color. 

We finished fishing out that stretch then ran up the river to a large drainage and drifted it with floats.
Again, they caught a good handful of the feisty Reds. At one point something big boiled at the stern of the boat and shortly afterwards Cindy had another one of those drag ripping takes. The big fish took her from bow to stern, from starboard to port, and then it dug deep. Cindy worked it in, let it run, worked it in, let it run, then eventually brought to the net an oversized 27"+ Redfish, boy what a fish!  In addition to the Redfish, Jeff added a fat Seatrout to his catch total. 

We fished Snook Creek for a bit and added one Redfish, moved up and around and fished some exposed oysters with jigs where Jeff put another Red in the boat, then we made our way around to Bell River where we fished some docks. The bite had slowed considerably as the tide reached bottom but Jeff did manage to round out an Amelia Island Back Country Slam when he outsmarted a keeper sized Sheepshead and brought it to the net. And with that, we called it a day, another great one to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida. 



Friday, September 6, 2024

In Between The Storms

 

You've probably heard, "be careful what you wish for" - just a month ago we were begging for rain and now it seems someone forgot to turn the spigot off! And last night the forecast called for 47% chance of rain today so we thought we'd be getting wet if we fished, but we were going anyway! Luckily when I got up to get the boat ready the forecast had changed to just 15% chance and that held, we didn't get a drop while fishing. 

I had met David Prezzano and his fishing buddies Jay and Mike down at the Sawpit Creek boat ramp with a live well full of shrimp, and before they got there, I had casted for a few dozen finger mullet. We ran over to the intercoastal, up it, and then turned into the Nassau and made our way up for a short bit before turning into the current on the first of an incoming tide. I noted that even though it had been only coming in for an hour, it was already covering the shell. All three anglers began tossing jigs and shrimp and in just a few minutes Mike "knocked the skunk off" when he hooked up and expertly landed a feisty Redfish. He followed that up with a golden colored Whiting catch. 

The trio of anglers caught a couple of small Seatrout, a Catfish, a couple of Jack Crevalle, one of which put up a good battle for David, then Jay had a strange "thump" and, Fish On!  Jay played it patiently, worked it to the boat and when it came to the surface, we saw that it was a big Flounder. He eased it slowly to the net and we brought to the boat a nice 18" Flounder, boy what a fish!

We then made our way down to Pumpkin Hill, fished a stretch with float rigs, then moved around to a point and drifted that. David had gotten a good cast that took his bait along the grass and BAM! Another Big Fish On!  He kept that tension on and worked in, let it run, worked it in and I was thinking "Redfish" but when David got it to the boat and netted, we saw that it was a 20.5" Gator Trout, boy what a fish!

Jay added one more keeper sized Seatrout to the box and although we had a few bites after that, we had no takers. That tide had gotten up to flood stage and the fish must have been up in the marsh. But we had caught some "picture worthy fish", had a few in the box, so as we headed back to the ramp, we counted it as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.

Friday, August 30, 2024

Oversized Red Slot Red Big Flounder

 I wrapped my week up fishing with Bill Redfield and his friends Elaine and Joel, meeting them out at Goffinville Park boat ramp. We had live shrimp, finger mullet, and a few mud minnows to fish with and they all caught fish. After leaving the ramp we ran over to Horsehead, thru it, and over to Poteat Point and set up to drift float rigs with the shrimp on a high outgoing tide. I think first cast produced a bite then we "knocked the skunk off" with a Seatrout catch. I was expecting some Redfish but we had none, but did get a small Jack and a high-flying Ladyfish. 


We moved back to fish Jackstaff "bank" and as I eased along with the trolling motor these anglers worked the bank good. Joel, fishing off the stern, had let his float "go long" and it paid off - he let the fish take his finger mullet, lifted to set the circle hook and, Big Fish On! This fish was ripping drag and went out deep - my first guess was a shark-but it wasn't a long run. Joel fought it patiently, up to the bow and back, and after a good battle landed an Oversized 29" Redfish, boy what a fish! We worked along there and got a couple of smaller Redfish and Joel battled a 3- shark to boatside, then we moved on.

Our next stop, after running back thru Horsehead, was over at Pumpkin Hill, drifting some now exposed oyster shell. We had a few bites but no takers. We made a short run across the mouth of  Back River and fished a bend in the marsh and this did the trick. Both Elaine and Joel picked up Slot Redfish "back in the ripple".  After motoring down the Nassau to Spanish Drop and working that bank, we moved up to a drainage and worked it with jigs and shrimp and minnows. Here, Joel had one of those odd "thumps", set the hook, and worked it slowly to the boat where we netted a big 18.5" Flounder.  We fished some docks up at Seymore's where Elaine put a keeper sized Black "puppy" Drum n the boat. 

We tried float rigs at some rocks for Mangroves to no avail, then made a final run down to Broward Island. We could see Redfish busting bait along the shore but they wouldn't eat. Moving up to the "secret spot", we were able to get a small Sheepshead, then we had as strong bite - Bill was on the rod and he played it perfectly as the drag ripped. He worked it, let it run, worked it in, and soon landed the biggest Slot Red of the day, a nice 23" fish. And with that, we called it a day, another great one to be fishng here at Amelia Island, Florida. 

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Water Like Glass

 After a day off I was back fishing today, meeting the Johnson crew- Nathan and Hanna, Michael and Cole. We were leaving the Sawpit Creek boat ramp early, the water was like glass, and heading up the Nassau River, all the way around to Pumpkin Hill where we set up to fish float rigs with live shrimp, finger mullet, and a few mud minnows. It wasn't long before they were catching fish - small but feisty Redfish. Nathan and Hanna seemed to have the hot hand early and they could do no wrong. reeling one fish in after another.  Nathan finally had a strong pull, hooked it up, and patiently played a Slot Redfish to the net. 

We made a run back down the Nassau to a large drainage and switched to jigs. The "demo" cast produced a keeper whiting then they were all catching fish. It seemed that Michael and Cole gravitated to the jig setup - they both put Redfish in the boat, their perseverance paying off. The group added a handful of hungry Seatrout to their catch total, Hannah picked up a Black "puppy" Drum, Michael reeled in a keeper sized Flounder, and they all caught some Catfish and Jack Crevalle. 


We fished Spanish Drop and again caught some fish, but the bite was slowing down. After running thru Horsehead and over to Jackstaff "bank" we fished it again with the jigs, added a few more fish to the catch total, then headed back to the ramp, counting as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida. 

Monday, August 26, 2024

Baitfish Signals Good Bite

 There were tons of bait fish passing thru Sawpit when I launched this morning -finger mullet and some
small pogeys. I already had a baitwell full of live shrimp but I couldn't pass up tossing the net to supplement what we had and I'm glad we did!  I met Gregg Fitgerald and his mom Ginnie early and we ran up the intercoastal, up the Nassau, and pulled up at an exposed shell bed on a tide that still had a couple of more hours of going out. It wasn't long before both anglers were catching fish - feisty Redfish, one after the other. Gregg went out deep with couple of casts and picked up some hungry Seatrout. He also added a hard fighting Jack Crevalle to the catch total. 

We moved up a hundred yards and caught a couple more of the Reds, then Gregg hooked up and landed anice keeper sized Flounder. Then Ginnie followed that with one of her own, bigger, and caught on one of the finger mullet. Gregg had a good bump, set the hook and expertly landed a keeper sized Seatrout. We moved up another couple of hundred yards, caught another couple of Reds, one of which had zero spots!



The tide had slowed to a stop and so did the bite. We ran down to Nassauville and fished between two docks, to no avail, then we ran back down te Nassau, and then on thru Horsehead and over to Jackstaff "bank". Ginnie had the hot hand early and caught another few of those Redfish then she had one final hookup. She played it patiently and worked to the boat another nice keeper Flounder. We had had good action for most of the morning, had a few keepers in the box so as we headed back to the ramp we counted it as another great day to be fishing here at Amelia Isalnd, Florida.

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Changed Conditions

 I last fished Friday and we had an outstanding trip, catching Slot Redfish, Oversized Reds, keeper Trout
and a huge Flounder. But 4 days made a difference - we caught fish today and had to work for those, but we didn't get the massive fish last week. I noticed this morning the moon looked almost full and the wind was blowing out of the NE which made for higher tides than normal, and it seemed to come quicker. 

I had met Gordon Fowler and his fishing buddy Bill up at the Old Town Bait and Tackle boat ramp early. We had a bait well of purchased live shrimp and I had cast netted a few dozen finger mullet. We eased out of Eagans Creek and then made a run up to the Jolly River and turned in to the incoming current at the "bank" and proceeded to toss float rigs with the live shrimp. Both anglers were getting good casts but we only got a few nibbles.

After running up the river to Snook Creek we again fished the floats. They both had some good bites, but no takers, and even one Redfish that "boiled" on a bait but didn't take it. Finally, Bill "knocked the skunk off" when  he hooked up and landed a fat Seatrout. After catching one more we moved on. Our next stop was back at the cut going thru Tyger and here we drifted the floats long along the bank, to no avail. We came out of the Jolley and worked along the outside of Tyger now tossing jigs and here we had a small flurry of catching. Bill caught a couple of the Trout and one small Flounder using the finger muillet and Gordon tanlged with some high flying Ladyfish.

We came back and ran thru Tyger and over to Bell River, fished that stretch for a bit, then ran uip Lanceford where Bill picked up one more Seatrout. After fishing around the corner at the final stop, we headed back to the ramp. We had fished 7 spots and had to show for it about (Maybe) seven fish but it was a beautiful day and another great one to be fishing here at Amelia Island, Florida.