Summer Siesta, Fall Fiesta
Transcription
Summer Siesta, Fall Fiesta
WEEKEND FISHING 4 CAST Log on to www.floridasportsman.com p61 p60 p59 p57 p58 p56 p52 p54 SPORTSMAN’S REGIONAL E XPERTS ON THE SCENE GUIDE YOU TO THE HOTSPOTS IN THIS E XCLUSIVE REPORT p50 p48 p44 Gunner Guthrie, mate aboard the Kalex out of Bud N Mary’s in Islamorada, holds the line on a frisky sailfish before release. Sue Sweetman from Fort Lauderdale visited Islamorada with her twin sister for some fun red grouper fishing. Caught on chunk ballyhoo in 80 feet of water. KEYS By Al Herum Summer Siesta, Fall Fiesta Put your face in our pages—Send us your photos We welcome your fishing and hunting photos for publication. We look for photos of scenes of fights, landings, releases and scenics. Keep a copy. We can’t return them. We prefer digital pictures, 600 KB to 1 MB in jpeg format. For smartphone photos, email the Actual Size—highest resolution shot. Billy Permenter in PutImages must not have nam County with the northeast region’s Best appeared or been Bet, catfish. submitted elsewhere. Send photos to photos@floridasportsman.com. Include names of people pictured, hometowns, location of catch and any key details, such as weight of big catches. 44 FLORIDA FLORIDA SPORTSMAN SPORTSMAN SEPTEMBER SEPTEMBER 2011 2011 F ind the sardines this month and you will find fish. The sardine run should peak near mid-month. Sardine schools will be prevalent along the reefline as sailfish, kingfish, tuna and other predators push the schools to ball up for safety. An early morning departure from about anywhere along the island chain and a few minutes’ ride will put you in sight of bait schools dimpling the surface. Cast sabiki rods into the schools from a distance to avoid putting them down with the boat. A couple aggressive anglers should be able to fill a livewell in short order. Use a dehooker and drop the sardines right into the bait tank water to limit handling. Blackfin tuna are one offshore species that certainly love beating up sardine schools wherever they are found, including the shallow water just off the main reefline all the way out to their usual hangouts like the Islamorada Hump, West Hump or Sub Wreck off Key West. In the shallow water beside and even inside the main reef you will very likely find pods of sailfish, mackerel and bonito pounding the sardine schools hard. Sailfish will often work together to ball up a school of sardines and then charge in individually to take a swat at a few. This all takes place in water as shallow as 30 feet. Sight casting a live bait into the melee will get an instant reaction. Backcountry anglers find that seasonal flooding of certain Upper Keys flats presents prime poling and sight fishing opportunities this month. Flats around the Crocodile Dragover and west to around Buoy Key are good places to start a search for fishy waters. Every self respecting redfish, trout, snook, jack and shark will be on the prowl for food here. Sight fishing becomes the sport of choice in these areas whenever possible. Sight fishers using spinning gear should rig up with a rod spooled with at least 250 yards of 10-pound monofilament. Finish the rigging by doubling the main line and adding a few feet of 30-pound fluorocarbon leader. Tie on a ¼-ounce jig to aid in casting and tip the jig with shrimp or crab to add some smell. Backcountry fly anglers should rig up with a versatile rod, reel and leader combination since you just never know what fish is going to present itself as you pole a www.floridasportsman.com 45