Randy Honaker of Centerville, Ohio caught this largemouth bass on a Myakka Minnow in The Everglades. |
There still are a few Mayan cichlid left in The Everglades. |
The bad news is we’ve only got a little more than a week left before the weather will be too hot and the rainy season starts.
The water is very low in The ‘Glades. And that makes for excellent fishing. The fish are concentrated in canals and very cooperative.
I ventured down a week ago and caught “who knows how many fish?” I mean the action is so fast and furious that it’s impossible to keep even a semi-accurate count. I caught largemouth bass, bluegill, shellcracker, stumpknocker, gar and Mayan cichlid.
The fact that I caught a Mayan cichlid is good news. The record freeze of 2010 wipe out a majority of the exotic species in The Everglades. Prior to the freeze, a trek south usually resulted in several hundred Mayan cichlid and oscar. I haven’t caught an oscar in two trips, but I have read reports there still are a few around.
I figure it will take a couple of years for the exotics to rebound.
My Myakka Minnow has been accounting for a majority of the fish. Just cast it along the shoreline, allow it to sink for a second, then strip it in – and hold on!
Randy Honaker of Centerville, Ohio fished with me on Wednesday and had an excellent day. Honaker started the day using a No. 10 popping bug – a fly on which he’d never caught a fish. He scored quickly and often, connecting on a variety of fish. His largest was a 2-pound largemouth.
He then switched to the Myakka Minnow for the rest of the day and caught more fish than he could keep track of. He caught a number of bass to 3 pounds.
Trips to the Everglades make for long days, but I enjoy them because of the fast action and numbers of fish. It’s rare when you make more than five casts without getting a fish. Often, fish will come on five or six casts in a row.
When we’re not fishing in The ‘Glades, we’re walking the beaches and sight-fishing snook.
Honaker joined me this week and had a good day. He caught one snook, four spotted seatrout and a couple of ladyfish. He had another snook hooked, but lost it. And he had a number of snook try to eat his fly.
The fly of choice for beach snook is my Gibby’s DT Variation.
There is a good population of snook in the surf, with fish ranging from 20 inches to 20 pounds or more.
Greg Earl of Sarasota fished with me earlier in the week on Sarasota Bay. He’s a new kayak angler and wanted to learn to area. We caught a good number of spotted seatrout, jack crevalle, Spanish mackerel, flounder and ladyfish. What was impressive is that Earl usually uses live bait and he caught all fish on D.O.A. CAL Jigs with gold paddle tails.
I’ve also been taking redfish to 25 inches on the grass flats on D.O.A. 5.5-inch jerk worms on 1/16-ounce jig heads.
June’s outlook calls for improved snook action along the beaches and at night around lighted docks. Spotted seatrout, Spanish mackerel, ladyfish, jack crevalle and a few bluefish will provide action over the deep grass flats. Redfish will be the main targets on the shallow flats.
Steve Gibson
Southern Drawl Kayak Fishing
www.kayakfishingsarasota.com
http://gibbysfishingblog.blogspot.com/
(941) 284-3406
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