So we decided to head further west, down a couple of miles. We decided to try 2-3' of water. There were two other boats in the area, but I didn't notice who it was at the time. After trying this area for another 45 minutes or so, and picking up nothing, we decided to move again. But then I realized that one of the boats was JT and Butch.....so I let my partner know that we were definitely in sailcat territory
We moved a bit further--around the bluff. Once again, there were a few other boats in the area. But the action was slow. We found a couple of flounder
We figured we'd spend the last couple of hours fishing around the main beach of carrabelle. Just as we got back across the sound and into shallower water, my engine died. I couldn't get it to turn over. The fuel gauge was reading just under a quarter tank--though I'd never ran it that low. We finally made the call to Sea-Tow--and got voice mail
After finally getting Welby and Skeeter's attention....Welby asked if we had any fish to weigh. I told him no trout, and one decent sailcat. He offered to tow us in. But it was only 2, and we didn't want to cut in on there fishing time. Besides, I had the membership to sea-tow
Welby and Skeeter were sincere about towing us in, and Welby even called Sea tow to get an ETA. It turns out it was going to be at least another hour. So we tossed Skeeter the rope.

At this point the trip was looking like a bust. No trout, towed in, and one heck of a rough-slow-day.
When we got to the scale, Welby, Skeeter, and little Skeeter had the biggest sailcat. Their fish took the lead by .02 lbs--I think. But then our sailcat beat theirs by .02 lbs. to take the $400 jackpot
And thanks to Bad Behavior for sponsoring the very generous mystery fish jackpot. Certainly made a tough day worthwhile. Can't wait till next time.

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