I
don't really believe in Murphy's Law but we didn't have a
whole lot go right for us this past week at the Wal-Mart FLW
Redfish Tour Championship in Orange Beach AL. We did have
one very important thing go right for us however; we got
there and back safely. In fact, that's the most important
thing. But it is also just about the only thing that went
right for us.
When my tournament partner and I first started practicing
for this tournament about a week ago, it was very windy. The
wind is not a tournament anglers friend. It creates choppy
water that muddy the water up as well as make long runs
dangerous or even impossible. So we decided to pre-fish
close to the start of the tournament the first few days and
just deal with the milky water. We caught a few fish a day
but nothing that would provide us with a tournament win. The
last two days before the tournament we decided to trailer
the boat to places that would be 60-90 miles from the start
of the tournament. We found a few more fish there but the
wind was predicted to get worse, not better. So the game
plan the night before the tournament was that we would stick
close by and hope that our fish got bigger for the
tournament.
We woke up on tournament morning to find out that we had
absolute quagmire conditions. Heavy downpours, lighting, and
high winds. As if not catching a lot of fish in practice
wasn't enough, now we had to deal with mother nature as
well. At the start of the tournament we took off running to
our first spot in the southern end of Moblile Bay. It was a
torturous run in a ridiculous amount of rain. I wore
shooting glasses that were hi-vis yellow just so the
raindrops wouldn't hurt my eyes while running.
When
we got to our first spot we found that we were fortunate
that the wind was in a direction that left our stretch of
shoreline calm. We quickly boated two smallish fish and
decided on moving onto a spot that we had heard held larger
fish. While idling off the flat, we notice that another team
(by chance they were real good friends of ours) was waiving
at us to come over and talk to them. When we got within ear
shot they told us that they were broke down. I checked the
radar on my GPS and it was obvious that another huge rain
squall was coming and that we all needed to get out of
there. So we tied them off to the back of the boat and towed
them back to the tournament headquarters. The storm squall
chased us there the whole way and we arrived just in time to
take cover. Wind, rain, lightning all came down around us
for about an hour. By this time we had only been able to
fish for a grand total of an hour and it was almost noon.
When the weather lifted to a point where we felt somewhat
safe fishing we left the dock in search of bigger fish in
places we had never fished before. We scooted under a little
bridge on the East side of Mobile bay and began pitching
Gulp Shrimp under shrimp boat docks. We caught a few
flounder and a trout and were sure that this was a good sign
that there is at least life in this little bay. About an
hour later I hooked a nice redfish that quickly entangled me
in a crab trap buoy. We rushed over to the trap and scooped
up the fish, buoy and all. After swapping a smaller fish out
of the live well for this 4lb fish we were almost out of
time. So we headed back with our 7lbs 6oz stringer. It was
good enough to put us in 37th place for day one. Not what we
had hoped for but good enough for us considering what we'd
been through that day.
The next morning we were awakened by the loud, house
shaking, roar of thunder. We didn't believe that the
tournament would start on time. So we called the director
and asked about the status of the start. He just said, "come
on, we working with a green light. We're starting on time."
In disbelief, we threw on our fowl weather gear, dropped the
boat in water at the flooded boat ramp, and headed to the
start of the tournament while ducking lighting bolts during
the whole 6 mile trip.
The
2nd day started much the same way as the first day of the
tournament. We had to run the boat in blinding rain to our
first spot. But the wind had switched directions and our
once calm flat was now a washing machine of muddy water. We
knew this wouldn't work so after about 20 minutes of fishing
we decided to just "wing it". We headed to the closest
protected water we could find and just began fishing. Sadly,
the only bite of the day came from one of the biggest jack
crevelles I had ever caught. Oh well, it brought a smile to
our rain soaked faces and we had to take a picture.
Time ran out and we had to make that depressing run back to
the weigh-in with no fish in tow. It's not the only time
I've had to come to the weigh-in of a tournament empty
handed but it doesn't happen often, and when it does, is
stinks.
Sometimes things just don't work out like you plan.
Sometimes it hurts you and sometimes it helps you. Some of
the teams in the top 5 for the tournament had their plans
change because of the weather as well and they just happened
to be fortunate that their change of plans helped them. It's
frustrating but hey, I can't let it get me down. I have
charters to do and I'm excited to get back home and fish
with my clients. "Murphy" may have gotten me last week but
the fish at home had better watch out. I've got a score to
settle. I need to see some fishing rods doubled over this
week and the redfish and snook at home better be ready.
