water-hyacinth2

Short, quick fishing trip!

Headed out about as early as I could to the honey hole BB, Diane, and I blasted about a month ago.  We pulled limits of reds out of there on consecutive mornings in June, plus a few bass.  The water was looking very fishy when I pulled up.

As I threw down the Cajun anchor, the water teemed with striped mullet.  They schooled together, individuals leaping out the water at irregular intervals, as they are want to do.  Mullet are used here as bait fish, but folks in Florida eat ’em up!

After about the fifth cast, and observing the fish activities all the while, my fishing mentor’s voice came back to me, “you have to think like a fish”, it said.  The thoughts that followed were these:  If the mullet are bait for larger fish, and they are here feeding, then the larger fish definitely haven’t arrived for breakfast yet.  When the mullet stop jumping and skeedaddle, then the big fish have arrived.

I continued to cast, testing my theory.  And sure enough, the water’s surface was barely rippling with mullet action when I felt a strike on my gold spoon.  But it didn’t feel like a red or a bass.  It was a very wiggly type of strike, and before I could figure out what it was, the fish was leaping out of the water.  I snatched the line into the boat.  The fish was barely bigger than the lure.

Lady FishIt’s called a Lady Fish, maybe because it’s so pretty?  I committed the strike to memory, so I would not be fooled by their deception again.  And there were a couple dozen more strikes from these fish.  The water was teeming with them, as well as larsh and small minnows.  I was thinking with this much bait fish in the water, why would a keeper red want anything fake that I had to offer?

As the false bite of the Lady Fish dwindled, a big strike came fast and hit hard, taking my spoon down to the murky depths.

Rat RedIt was a rat red, who put up a good fight for the size.  This one was not the legal 16-inch keeper size yet. I sent it back to go get its mommy.

blue.heronThis observer came squawking in, fussing at me for some odd reason.  Maybe I was invading her favorite breakfast spot?  Even though she is blue, she is well camouflaged.  Do you see her?

On the other side of the boat was a line of American water lilies.  If you cast just along the edge of the lilies with a flashy bait, you can usually pull a fish out that is lying in wait to attack its prey.  After several casts along the edge, the tactic proved true . . .

basswith this little bass, which I quickly let go, thinking if that worked on this side of the boat, it should also work on the other side of the boat.

The lilies were a little out of my reach, but I let loose with all I had to reach the edge, and then WHAM, ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ!  Something big ripped the line off the reel, racing  away from the boat.  I lifted my rod straight up to eleven o’clock and held it there, and took a second to tighten the drag one click, increasing the resistance, but not enough to break the line.

Big RedI let the fish linger in the water while I maneuvered from the stern of the boat to the bow to retrieve the net and back again .  The hook held fast.

Netted redHere you can see the gorgeous golden colors of the red before it leaves the water.  This fish seemed very tired and possibly ill, so I removed the spoon quickly and returned its watery home–its lucky day.

After about ten minutes of fishing with no hits, I watched a nice red fish swim up from the deep and skirt  just below the surface along the length of the boat.  It crossed in front of the boat and swam long the lilies out of sight.  I cast the shiny gold spoon right in front of that fish several times, and it was not the least bit interested.  I guess breakfast was over.

Before giving up, though, I grabbed the other rod, rigged with a black and chartreuse minnow.  While reeling the lure in, a big red followed it to just below the surface and attacked the lure, biting off the tail.  I watched it happen.  It was pretty amazing.

Eaten baitThe bottom bait is all that was left after that red let go!  It certainly was his lucky day!

As the bite slowed down, I had the feeling I was being watched by more than the helicopter hovering above.

gatorAnd I wondered if this guy had anything at all to do with the fact that the bite had come to a screeching halt?  He parked himself right on the edge of the lilies and stayed there until I left.  I guess I was anchored in his breakfast spot as well.

I was accompanied today by my best friend,

ti-duwho just didn’t feel like fishing.  It’s a dog’s life, for sure!

We departed, another wonderful fishing trip, leaving Miss Blue Heron and Al E. Gator to battle for my honey hole.

On the way out, I encountered this colorful floating island.

Water HyacinthTo the unknowing eye, this would seem like a beautiful floating phenomenon. But to the knowing, it is a clump of non-native, bayou-blocking invasive nuisance called water hyacinth.

Water Hyacinth flowerEven though they boast an attractive flower, they reproduce so rapidly in the summer, they can clog a waterway in days, making it impassable by boat.  One portion of my tour route is totally blocked right now, with no opening in sight.

The rest of the week? Tours, and marsh grass plantings.  Pics and stories afterward!

BW

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11 Comments

  1. I love your fishing photos. Nice shot of Mr. Al E. Gator too! And the blue heron was gorgeous.
    Darn sham those hyacinths are so destructive. They do have a beautiful flower and I love flowers!

    I have been going back thru your blogs and have really been enjoying them. I keep getting side tracked with the links. But with me, that is nothing unusual. I do hope to get caught up on them. I’ll have several weeks soon.

  2. Very nice post, and great pics. I actually like to fish for ladyfish in FL with a light fly rod – they bite well and jump a LOT. they think they’re tarpon!

    wolfy

    1. Yes, they are fun and acrobatic for sure, but such a nuisance because they are too little to keep!!! And I don’t even know if they’re good eating, besides.

  3. Yep, I’m with Wolfy. Ladyfish are fun to catch. They are SO acrobatic. I’ve certainly had more “throw” my hook (when jumping) than I’ve landed. BW, do these fish swim in schools? It has been my experience, if you hook one, others are sure to follow.

  4. I never have caught a ladyfish. Guess its just a continuation of my life style.
    Can you have a life style with no life?

    Got a hand full of black figs and 6 lbs of blueberries.
    Yum.

  5. Food value or not, they are a very pretty fish. Can you use them for bait for bigger fish? Love your fishing buddy, looks very content getting to be out there with you.

    1. Hey Deb? Do you want the French press coffee pot you won? You never sent me your mailing address! Just put it in the contact box at the bottom of the friends page. It will get to me that way.