After having a little bit to much to drink in celebration of Cinco de Mayo, the alarm startled me awake a little early Sunday morning for another fishing day trip. By the time we arrived at the river, the sun was already shining high with not a cloud in the sky. However, we saw a Brown Trout chasing a chub right away so we thought streamer fishing might still be hot. However, this was not the case.
Evan trying to figure out what the fish were eating
Eventually, the fishing turned on or we started to figure the stream out, but we began pulling them up on Caddis, Hare’s ears, micro Mayflies, and Juju betas nymphs.
One caught on the micro mayMan and his pupAnother reason to believe the streamer fishing should have been better
After several miles of hiking and countless hours of fishing, pulling up Browns, Rainbows, Cutthroat, Tiger Trout, and quite a few chubs the sun began to tuck below the mountains and it was time to rip some Streamers. With all the chubs in the water, I thought a white Peanut Envy would do the trick.
Notice not only did this trout eat my streamer, but it already had a chub for dinnerTuckered out pooch enjoying the days last raysEvan with the fish of the day, at the end of the day
Sanibel and Captiva Island geologically formed roughly 6,000 acres ago. Early humans inhabited the area as early as 2,500 years ago; these indigenous peoples were known as the Calusa. While many local pirate legends are recounted, the first failed attempt at settlement was in 1832 and again in 1862. The now famous, Sanibel Lighthouse was finally completed in 1884. In May of 1963, a causeway linking the mainland was opened; combined with the post war boom, a real estate gold rush kicked off. Extensive local controls on growth have helped the island to resemble “Old Florida,” with buildings no taller than two stories and few fast food chains on the island.
Spey Cast at Sunset
Getting There
This trip was coordinated for Mark’s thirtieth birthday party; in this man’s opinion, there is no better way to spend the big three zero than fishing, eating Conch Fritters and enjoying a few “Man Sodas.” Departing on an 8 AM JetBlue flight out of Newark, we arrived in Fort Myers by 11:30 AM. This left enough time to fetch a rental car, purchase fishing licenses, secure drinks and wade out into the water. A perfect plan, combined with windless blue sky days is exactly what is required to catch a fish.
Sanibel Island has a Wild Side
Targeting Snook
Snook are a tropical fish; Florida is on the northern part of their natural range. Warmer water makes for very active Snook, cold spells can result in mortality. They winter in the back bays heated by the sun, pass the spring along the beaches moving out to the in the ocean in the summer, come fall, they return along the beaches headed to the backwater.
Early AM Beach Blue Fish
What To Throw
The species, as an apex predator, will eat anything that fits in their mouth and cannot consume them; feeding in a manner similar to the Old Bucket Mouth (General Lee) residing in the farm pond out back. Mark and I stumbled to the beach around 5:30 AM; he netted roughly two dozen Green Back Shiners, we hooked them to our circle hooks. Not too soon later, I had a Snook on the end of my line. I hustled out into the flats chasing after this top water splashing Snook. Unfortunately, as I reeled him to shore he popped off the hook. The key lesson from this experience is to use a fly that matches the widely available baitfish in size and color. Looking back, the two flies I would select are the Chartreuse and White Lefty’s Deceiver along with a similarly colored Clouser Minnow. The aggressive Mackeral surely enjoyed Norm Zeigler’s signature Crystal Schminnow as well.
Gulf Toadfish on the Fly
That Saltwater Taste
The majority of what you have read here on Moose Knuckle is about targeting Trout. This Sanibel Island adventure is a new direction for the blog. Beach fishing has its perks; don’t get me wrong I love where Trout live. Nonetheless there is something good to be said about Fly Fishing, waist deep in 80 degree water while beautiful women stroll on the beach. Not to mention, the fish are huge and it’s a crap shoot what you might pull up. Further, the Lazy Flamingo’s Conch Fritters washed down with a pitcher of Yuengling is heavenly.
Spring arrived quickly this year; there was no melting snow to supplement the water level of the streams here in New Jersey. That being said, Trout season has been charging hard out of the gate. As I write this, glancing at the weather forecast, we should be receiving a substantial downpour this evening into tomorrow. With luck the low water issue will be rectified quickly.
Accidental Carp
A month ago, Larry Chandler posted a blog titled, “Carp on the Fly.” Whilst pondering that piece, I was stoked on the idea of hooking into a Carp. In an average year, Carp are sought during the warm summer months when other fish are not biting. Friday after work the Moose Knuckle Fishing Crew dropped in at the Black River to rip a few lips. Water at the Kay Pond was a mere trickle. Returning to the point I was throwing the Moose Knuckle Fishing Wooly Buggerwhile slow strip retrieving easily along the mucky bottom. There were stocked Trout nibbling on the Bugger, I simply could not land one. Then along came this juvenile Carp, my first Carp on the Fly.
Carp On The Fly
Smallmouth Bass are Biting
Anticipating the downpour to commence on Saturday I met up with my fishing buddy Chris on the Paulinskill. Again the water was warm and sluggish, we have already addressed the lack of rain issue. Chris and I each pulled up two trout; my two were on a size 12 March Brown Nymph and the Wooly Bugger (fly is so hot right now). The feeding activity was sluggish much more so than last weekend; likely the result weather and low water.
Cute Little Smallmouth Bass
While Trout may not thrive in the current conditions, Smallmouth Bass sure do! During warmer months, the Paulinskill is an exciting Smallmouth fishery. When the Trout hide in the refreshing water of natural springs, Smallmouth veraciously feed. Looking forward to many good days this summer.
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