I
had a great game plan set out for my Clearwater fishing charter
with John Sr., John Jr., and Gabe today. But, just like many of
my plans as of late this one had to be changed midstream. First
off we had a lot of rain yesterday and I was afraid that bait
would be hard to come by. I even talked with another well known
guide at the ramp and he too was lamenting the hunt for bait
prior to his charter today. Luckily, I pulled out of the boat
ramp and hadn't made it 1/2mile down the ICW before I saw a ton
of pelicans diving. I know that could only mean one thing, bait!
I guess the rain hadn't messed up the bait situation after all.
So I pulled over and in less than 10 minutes I had blacked out
the well.
Well,
I went back to the dock to find that my clients were already
there waiting for me, early. Which is MUCH better than them
being late. They let me take a few minutes to clean the boat off
a little and then off we went to pursue the plan that would not
be. On the agenda was to hit up three barrier islands on the
west side of the intercoastal waterway, working our way from
North to South back towards the boat ramp. The first spot has
been my most productive in the area for the past month or so but
when we got there, things just didn't look right to me. The
mullet weren't as thick as they had been when we were doing well
on redfish there. We did catch a few trout and a ton of small
grouper but that was it. This is when we switched gears. Instead
of hitting the other two barrier islands in succession, I
decided to go hit a spot near the mainland. Good decision (pat
myself on back, lol).
After about 5 minutes on the trolling motor we started seeing
the unmistakable wakes of redfish.
I
put the
Power Pole down and began throwing some greenbacks out as
chummers. It wasn't long before the chummers were getting
crushed, and then shortly after, the rods were getting bent. The
bite lasted just a little over an hour and we managed 15-20
redfish in that time. One thing we all noticed was that the
redfish seemed to really key in on the small pinfish over the
greenbacks. Though we got bites on both baits the pinfish were
much more successful.
After the bite died down we decided to catch the tail end of the original plan and hit the last of the three barrier islands. It was slow at this last spot but we did hook two big snook that got away and landed two more redfish to finish of the trip.
