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Thread: CB's saltwater outfitters, Siesta Key 11-20

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    CB's saltwater outfitters, Siesta Key 11-20

    Captain's Weekly Fishing Report

    November 14, 2010 Fishing Report - Capt. Bruce Burkhart

    This past week was great fishing in Sarasota Bay. Butch and Neil Wilson of Sarasota fished with me on Wednesday. We fished up in the north bay and had a productive day catching bluefish, trout, ladyfish, pompano and very decent mackerel.

    Ken Fergo from Arizona fished Friday morning. We started out at the Middlegrounds casting white CAL jigs and got into a school of bluefish up to four and a half pounds. Our next stop was trolling around the artificial reefs with Yo-Zuri plugs which produced one red grouper and four gag grouper up to twenty-one inches.

    Saturday, John and Kathleen Siegerist from Sarasota and their son Greg from Washington, D.C., fished a middle of the day trip with me. We headed straight for Middlegrounds with DOA Glow shrimp and live shrimp under popping corks. We didn't find the bluefish but the family stayed very busy catching trout, ladyfish and mackerel. Kathleen had the hot hand of the day catching most of the fish and got the "Catch of the Day" reeling in an eighteen and a half inch pompano. (love those gals named Kathleen!)

    In writing this report I just realized that every successful fishing report includes mentioning that I catch most of my fish on DOA shrimp and CAL jigs. Obviously, these lures make up the majority of the contents of my tackle boxes. You can find them at CB's Saltwater Outfitters. If you would like to know more about fishing these lures visit me Saturday, November 20th at the CB's Saltwater Extravaganza which is from 9AM - 3PM. I will be there in the morning. Hope to see you there!

    November 14, 2010 Fishing Report - Capt. Rick Grassett

    Anglers fishing with me on my flats skiff the Snook Fin-Addict, out of CB’s Saltwater Outfitters on Siesta Key, had good action with reds, blues, trout, little tunny and Spanish mackerel on DOA baits and flies last week.

    Longboat Key winter resident, Nick Reding, wade fished in north Sarasota Bay with me a couple of days last week. He caught and released several reds and a sheepshead on one trip and a couple of blues and a snook on another trip on a baitfish fly pattern. Jon Yenari and Kyle Ruffing, both from Sarasota, FL, fished with me in the coastal gulf off Siesta Key on Tuesday, 11/9 caught and released 6 little tunny to 12-pounds on glass minnow fly patterns. Later in the day, they caught and released a nice trout and a 4-lb bluefish on Clouser flies at Stephens Point. Bill Moore and his son, Mark, both from Libertyville, IL fished Sarasota Bay with me on Friday, 11/12. They caught and released numerous trout to 22”, a couple of reds, several blues and a Spanish mackerel on CAL jigs with shad tails and DOA Deadly Combos along the east side of Sarasota Bay.

    Action should continue to be good in both Sarasota Bay and the coastal gulf. Next week’s tides will improve towards the end of the week as we head towards a full moon.

    Captain's Monthly Fishing Forecast

    Capt. Rick Grassett’s Fishing Forecast for November 2010

    Fall fishing will peak this month as hungry schools of Spanish and king mackerel and little tunny feed on southbound baitfish schools in the coastal gulf. Tripletail and cobia will also be options in the same areas. Look for reds and trout in skinny water and you should also find snook staging around sand bars on shallow flats as they move towards their wintertime haunts.

    Snook season remains closed this month due to special action taken by the Florida FWC, although there should be great catch and release action. Handle them gently and use tackle heavy enough to land them quickly. You’ll find them in the ICW around lighted docks and bridges where they will feed on glass minnows and small shrimp. I like to fish the ICW from Sarasota to Venice for snook at night. Small white flies, like my Grassett Snook Minnow, Gurglers and shrimp patterns will all work well. Fish peak tidal flows with intermediate or intermediate sink tip fly lines. Spin anglers should score with CAL jigs with shad tails.

    You’ll also find snook staging around sand and oyster bars in north Sarasota Bay as they move towards rivers and creeks where many of them will spend the winter. I usually use larger lures and flies to duplicate baits found in these areas. Deceivers, EP flies and CAL jigs with shad tails and jerk worms would be my fly and lure choices. Fish seams where grass meets sand along the edges of bars and potholes.

    Reds will spread out on shallow flats where you’ll find them along mangrove shorelines and around oyster bars when the tide is high. Look for them in potholes and edges of flats at low tides, particularly where there is a significant drop off. The negative low tides from Nov. 5-10 and 19-27 should be good for reds in potholes. I like to use CAL jigs with a variety of tails and weighted flies, like my Grassett Flats Minnow. A DOA shrimp rigged weedless and fished backwards is a good lure to fish potholes and the shallow grass that surrounds them. They can be very challenging, especially with a fly, depending on conditions.

    Trout fishing should be strong this month. You’ll find them on shallow grass flats in many of the same areas where you’ll find reds and snook this month. I would use the same lures and flies for trout that I use for reds. You’ll also find them on deep grass flats mixed with blues, Spanish mackerel and pompano. I like to drift and cast ahead of the boat with CAL jigs or weighted flies fished on sinking or sink tip fly lines to locate them. You may see surface activity this time of year, such as diving birds or breaking fish, which makes it easier to locate fish. If that’s not happening, I make several drifts across a flat until I locate fish and then shorten my drift as I get dialed into them. Casting fly poppers and top water plugs are good techniques to make fish show themselves. You’ll need to use wire or heavy fluorocarbon when toothy fish, such as blues and mackerel, are present.

    You might also find pompano, blues and Spanish mackerel in passes where you’ll need to use heavier jigs and faster sinking fly lines, such as 300 or 350 grain Depth Charge fly lines. These fly lines have 30’ of fast sinking fly line with intermediate (slower sinking) fly line behind it. Drift with the tide and vertical jig with spinning tackle or cast perpendicular to the drift when fly fishing to get your fly close to the bottom.

    Along the beach, usually a few hundred yards from shore to no more than a mile offshore, look for schools of breaking fish that could include Spanish and king mackerel and little tunny. Watch which way the birds are moving to get ahead of fish and let them come to you. They often move so fast that they are gone if you cast to where you see them, so you need to cast to where they are headed. Avoid getting too close to schools of breaking fish with your boat or you may put them down. Stop your boat parallel to moving schools of fish so that you can effectively move your fly or lure. If you don’t find them on the surface, try drifting over one of the many artificial or natural reefs in the coastal gulf to find them.

    You might also encounter cobia or tripletail when fishing in the coastal gulf. Look for tripletail and cobia around crab trap floats and buoys. Cobia might also be free swimming on the surface or hanging over structure. I would use DOA shrimp or CAL jigs for tripletail on spinning tackle and a slow sinking fly on a floating or sink tip fly line for tripletail. Cobia are suckers for bigger baits, such as DOA Baitbusters, BFL’s or CAL jigs with 5” jerk worms. Fly anglers should score with large profile baitfish patterns, such as EP Peanut Butter flies. The key to being successful is to be rigged up and ready for these fish, so that when they show up you can make a quick presentation.

    This is a great month to fish both flats and the coastal gulf. I like to fish the coastal gulf when conditions are good since there are many different things you might encounter there. If conditions aren’t good in the gulf, there should be plenty of action on shallow and deep grass flats of Sarasota Bay. Whatever you choose to do, limit your kill, don’t kill your limit!

    Capt. Jim Klopfer’s Fishing Forecast for November 2010

    The calendar may say that autumn begins in September, but here on the Suncoast of Florida, November is the month that first feels like fall. Shorter, cooler days and dropping water temperatures result in fish feeding heavily in preparation for winter. This also triggers both resident and pelagic species into making their fall migrations.

    Pompano are a prime target in November, especially with speckled trout being closed to harvest. These delicious and hard-fighting fish respond to the cooler water temperatures. Big Pass, New Pass, and the deeper flats throughout the area are reliable spots to catch pompano, but they can be encountered almost anywhere. Small yellow, white, and gold jigs either drifted in the passes or cast out over the grass flats will fool pompano, as will a live shrimp. For best results, fish the passes when the tide and wind are moving in the same direction, resulting in a nice drift. Live or frozen sand fleas are a deadly bait for pompano off the local beaches.

    Along with pompano, anglers working the deeper flats should catch speckled trout, bluefish, Spanish mackerel, jack crevelle, ladyfish, small grouper, and mangrove snapper. Traditional spots in the north bay such as Buttonwood Harbor, Bishop’s Pt., Stephen’s Pt, the Moorings, the Middlegrounds, Radio Tower, and Bird Key flats will all produce fish in November when the weather is good. We will get some severe fronts this time of year which will bring cold, dirty water into the bay. When these conditions exist, a move south to the flats between Stickney Pt and Blackburn Pt will often provide better action, particularly on high, afternoon tides. Gold, rootbeer/gold, and olive 1/4 ounce Cotee jigs work very well, allowing anglers to cover a lot of water. Live shrimp under a cork or free lined will also catch plenty of fish.

    Snook will be moving towards their winter backwater residences in the creeks and canals. Oyster bars, mangrove shorelines, and docks along Siesta Key south to Albee Rd should produce snook on shallow diving plugs such as Rapala X-Raps and soft plastic baits. Redish will also be feeding on these shallow bars and will hit these same lures along with gold spoons and live shrimp. Reds will still be found on the very shallow flats up north around Long Bar and Whale Key, although the large schools will probably be dispersed. Scented soft plastics such as Gulp baits work very well on a light 1/8 ounce jig head.

    The fishing just off the beaches should be outstanding, providing the weather cooperates. Calm seas and clear water will result in the inshore artificial reefs being loaded with king and Spanish mackerel, false albacore and the occasional cobia. Trolling Clark spoons behind a planer and large Rapala plugs will account for plenty of mackerel and schoolie kings, while most of the larger kings will be taken on slow trolled live blue runners. Anchoring over the reefs and chumming with live pilchards practically ensures success, if the bait is still available. Frozen chum and live shrimp will work, too.

    Just south of Big Pass is Point of Rocks, another terrific area to fish the beach. The bars in the pass will often times have breaking mackerel, bluefish, and ladyfish on them. The area off the public beach south to the point is usually stacked with large bait. Use a Sabiki rig to catch a few, then free line one out on a heavy spinning outfit. Use either a heavy 100 pound monofilament or wire leader and a 4/0 hook. Kings, blacktip sharks, and even tarpon will give you a great tussle!

    CB's saltwater outfitters
    1249 Stickney Point Road on Siesta Key
    (at Stickney Point Bridge)
    Sarasota, Florida 34242
    941-349-4400
    http://www.cbsoutfitters.com
    Last edited by Fishing Report; 11-20-2010 at 08:33 PM.

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