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http://www.floridakeysnews.info
Fishing Report Offsho Few boats ventured off looking for dolphin this week. The Islamorada Hump is a good bet for a catch of blackfin tuna. The tuna are small to medium and it is worth the time invested if you want to brew up some fresh tuna salad or sizzle some on the grill. Drag black and red "jap" feathers 100 to 150 feet behind the boat. Reefs: The sailfish tournaments are one after the other nowadays. Just as last year, there is a scarcity of king mackerel. A few kings are being caught, but hopefully we will get a better migration soon. The yellowtail snapper continue to bite good along the reef line. Capt. Kerry on the Heidi Baby had a great catch of snapper this week on a half day. Charter captains are putting baits down deep and finding an array of species from wahoo to grouper. Gulf and Bay: Gulf action is good and should continue for months to come, except when those fronts blow and mud up the water. Spanish mackerel activity does not get any better. As usual the bite is around the Sprigger Bank area, but the Spanish can be caught behind Channel Five to anywhere in the Gulf. Of course when mackerel fishing, look for cobia, bluefish, trout, sharks, jacks, ladyfish, tripletail and more to provides lots of action. When anchored in the Gulf, always drop a live pinfish or pilchard to the bottom (away from the chum) the bonus may be a big redfish or cobia. Flats, Backcountry and Flamingo: Flamingo has been very, very good to me ... as most anglers will report! Very good catches of redfish, trout and a snook or two mixed in is a report that lots of guides have given this week. Ditto for the Cape Sable area. The water has been clean and fishy! Tarpon are seen rolling and feeding lackadaisical, but not really on their feed in the back. A better chance of catching a tarpon would be around the Islamorada bridges. Capt. Skip Paxton reports finding and catching bonefish from Tavernier Key to Long Key. Record number in sailfish tourney - Despite calm seas favoring the sailfish, a record 105 anglers on 43 boats competed in the 41st annual Islamorada Sailfish Tournament hosted at the newly renovated Whale Harbor Marina & Restaurant. Warm breezes, one-to-three-foot seas and surprisingly little current tested the skills of virtually all competitors during the tournament that ended Dec. 5. When the action concluded, the overall champions were Steve Cunningham, Rick Arnold, Rob Ruwitch, Alberto Castro and Jeff Voll, all of Homestead. Cunningham captained the 36-foot Contender factory boat No Mercy, with Castro as mate. The team brought six sails to the boat during the tournament's three days of fishing. Arnold caught four and Ruwitch captured two as the teammates drifted live goggleyes under kites. In addition to clinching the overall win, the six fish were enough to win Cunningham and Castro the tournament's high-point captain and high-point mate awards, respectively. Second place went to renowned guide Capt. Ralph Delph and anglers Carl Keldie of Coral Springs, Fla., Chris Keldie of Lutz, Fla., and Richard Mirande of Jupiter, Fla. Anchored and chumming live pilchards, Delph's anglers brought in five sails ranging from about 20 pounds to 65 pounds. The tournament's high-point angler was Robert Richardson of McKinney, Tex., fishing with Capt. Steve Leopold on the Yabba Dabba Doo. Richardson caught five sailfish using trolled ballyhoo -- the last one after he and Leopold sighted the moving fish and Leopold maneuvered the boat from the north side of Conch Reef to the south side, getting into the sail's path. The award for most tagged fish - three fish, tie on time - was won by anglers Andrew Carpenter of Troy, N.Y., Mike Carman of Ballston Spa, N.Y., and Joe Flynn of Greenwood, S.C., fishing on the Jack Pot with Capt. Lee Robinson of Tavernier. Jose Scuvuzzo of Tavernier, fishing on Weez in the Keys with Capt. Benny Spaulding of Islamorada, won the most outstanding catch award with a 23.25-pound bonita. Honors for the largest dolphin, a 23-pounder, went to Ed Rice of Springfield, Mo., fishing with Capt. Marty Lewis of Marathon on the Main Attraction. The award for the largest tuna went to Matthew Neber of Homestead for the 28.25-pounder he caught fishing with Homestead's Capt. Billy Cordes on Contender One. Neber also caught the largest mackerel at 24.25 pounds. A total of 150 hookups produced 115 releases and 10 tagged fish during the tournament. The Islamorada Sailfish Tournament is the first leg of the three-tournament Florida Keys Gold Cup Sailfish Championship, which includes the upcoming Cheeca Lodge Presidential Sailfish Tournament Jan. 20-22, 2005; and the Islamorada Fishing Club Sailfish Tournament set for Jan. 26-27, 2005. Currently in first place for the Gold Cup is No Mercy with six fish. In second place is Jack Pot with five fish and in third place, also with five fish, is Catch 22. Robert Richardson leads the field for the Gold Cup's high-point angler award. Bokor wins grand champion honors again - Jim Bokor garnered grand champion honors for the third time Dec. 5, at the Mercury Outboards Cheeca Redbone Celebrity Tournament in the Florida Keys. Bokor, fishing with Capt. Tim Hoover, released five bonefish and six redfish on bait during the two-day tournament that attracted 128 anglers. The 2004 Redbone Blue Jacket, awarded for most points amassed in the trilogy of Keys Redbone series tournaments, went to Dr. Mike Gallops of Naples. Guided by Capt. Rich Tudor, Gallops scored best among all anglers who participated in the 2004 editions of the Southernmost Light Tackle Anglers Masters in Key West, the Baybone in Key Largo and the Mercury Cheeca Redbone. Bokor, of Tavernier, has won the jacket four times and was particularly satisfied with this year's Redbone victory. "Because this tournament has so many anglers and so many boats, this is the toughest of the three," Bokor said. The Redbone's top celebrity angler was a proven winner, but not in backcountry and flats fishing. Pro football Hall of Fame quarterback Jim Kelly, formerly of the Buffalo Bills and University of Miami, not only competed in his first Redbone tournament, but caught his first-ever bonefish and redfish. Kelly, who still resides in Buffalo, N.Y., gave all the credit to guide Capt. Steve Thomas of Islamorada, and fishing partner Bill Barto, also of Buffalo. "I just listened to what they told me to do," said Kelly, motioning with his throwing arm. "I plopped a couple of casts straight down, but kept at it. Then it came down to the two-minute warning and the casts were right there." Linda Denkert of Tavernier, guided by her husband, Capt. Dave Denkert, won top honors in the ladies division, while Glenn Flutie of Islamorada, guided by Capt. Mark Gillman, captured the Pro Grand Champion Angler award. Tournament director Gary Ellis said 32 bonefish and 106 redfish were caught and released. Proceeds from the Redbone series helps fund cystic fibrosis treatment and research, the prime genetically inherited killer of children and young adults in the United States. The grand champion angler and celebrity winners of the Redbone advance to the Rolex/IGFA Inshore Championship Tournament set for July 2005 in Islamorada. The Rolex event is to feature winners of 55 inshore sal****er fishing contests staged on four continents. Keystone Stater wins Classic - A big first day of fishing helped John Dailey of Camp Hill, Pa., become the overall top angler in the Ocean Reef Bonefish & Tarpon Unlimited Backbone Classic. Dailey's first day included a backcountry slam of snook, redfish and tarpon all caught on fly. He was guided by Capt. Andy Thompson of Homestead. For the fifth straight year, the tournament's celebrity grand champion team honors went to the legendary Stu Apte of Islamorada, and Steve Stanley of St. Petersburg guided by Capt. Rick Murphy of Homestead. Stanley also captured the award for the longest tarpon, boating a fish that measured 76 inches. Harvey Karen of Naples won awards for the most fish tagged and the most bonefish releases. Karen was guided on the tournament's first day by Capt. Dave Sutton of Islamorada, and on day two by Captain James Koch of Homestead. Karen caught all five of his scoring fish on the second day. The tournament benefits the bonefish and tarpon conservation research programs of Bonefish & Tarpon Unlimited, the conservation efforts of the Ocean Reef Foundation and the South Florida Council of the Boy Scouts of America. The three-day event, which drew 80 anglers from around the world fishing on 42 boats, is a qualifying tournament for the Rolex/International Game Fish Association Inshore Championship, to be held in May 2005 in Islamorada. |
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