I went out today to prefish a flat that I havent been on for about 6 months...I will have 2 clients on saturday and a hard bottom is manditory as one of them is physically challenged...to my surprise there were tarpon everywhere at sunrise...always just out of my reach after a guy jumped one from the daisy chain...if the wind hadnt come up at that moment...I did encounter several pods and singles of bones...the birds seemed to be out to get me and they spooked most of them but NOT ALL...a huge school suddenly appeared and had to be 100 fish and they were pretty big....easy target for the clouser...3 strips and WHAM...with the current and the wind and also the weedball on my line I almost got spooled but took it like a man until half the arbour was bare and it stopped...the fish just held ground for 15 minutes and didnt move but I was at 200yds plus so I was compromised myself...finally I get it coming back and after 35 minutes I landed the bonefish...when I went to tag it I found it already had been tagged before so that was way cool...it might have even been me...I'll have to check...seen everything but permit and ended up with 2 bones
TAGGED BONEFISH
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no...maybe I should have but I'm not sure I'm suppose to...the original tag is still solid and after cleaning it was readable...there is a phone number on the tag to call...the main thing is to get the tag number or its useless...I carry a sharpie and write it inside the canoe in big numbers for all tagged fish...the number can also be found by googling bonefish research and the tagging program will pop up...if anybody gets one please call them as they are securing the future fishing here with tarpon and bonefish research..."rocket science on the flats" is the motto on the shirts they send me each yr
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thats a good question and to me has lots of gray area to work with...there is little doubt the straight in front appoach is best simply because the flyline is the farthest away from the fish and they are basically looking forward...to go against the grain a little I mainly take side shots preferrably at about 45 degrees against the school...if they get by I dont hesitate to cast from the back...this is unheard of and believed to be impossible...Mother has seen me do it before...if your leader is long enough to take the flyline out from overhead and your leader is good quality flourocarbon they really dont know which way it came from until you actually strip the fly...this is where it gets tricky...a crab fly is a good option because it just needs to fall and sit...I have a certain cast that I use on all or nothing senerios as that...it requires throwing a exagerated tailing loop to the point that the fly is actually facing away from you when it hits so the first several strips the fly actually swims away from the fish until the loop of line collapses...did I confuse everything?
lol you gotta love the sport Thanks for the reply. i believe i picked it up. I guess its just trail and error until you find out what works for you and the fish. Hopefully next time ill leave the spinner at home and stick to the long rod do or die style and see what happens. ill try quick short 6 inch strips as if the shrimp is escaping from some predator and see if that catches there attention. Check your email address
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limited time
heard that...thought I saw your truck at the launch today as the tides are good.
Could you give me a quick tip about posting pics, got a nice peacock bass out of the back yard yesterday,
might make some nice inspiration.
Later
Could you give me a quick tip about posting pics, got a nice peacock bass out of the back yard yesterday,
might make some nice inspiration.
Later