I started by throwing a cajun thunder with a pink jig and Jason started with just a straight jig. We immediately started catching everything under the sun and until the tide turned were catching it pretty steady in 7-8 feet of water. Trout, ladyfish, mackerel, blue runnners, lizardfish and rockbass were all willing to oblige.
After the tide turned about 9, we decided to start chumming in hopes of a cobia. The first 2 takers on the live pinfish were 18" trout. The next was a 3 pound bluefish. We continued to catch rockbass, sharks and the occasional ladyfish. Something grabbed one of the pinfish and slowly started to swim away and I qucikly recognized it to be a garfish so I just steady pulled until he let go.
About 10 minutes later the same rod was slowly moving off again and I thought here we go again. So I did the same steady pull to get it away from the garfish, only this wasn't a garfish as I saw the tell tale brown and white coloring. I told Jason cobia and the fight was on for about 15 seconds when he came loose. Then I remembered I didn't set the hook. Oh well, he didn't look legal anyway. That at least made me feel better.

Over the next hour the spanish moved in and after I landed the first one that went 5 pounds, they decided they liked lip jewelry and broke us off the next 4 times. They would not touch the heavy leaders today, only the 20 # flouro. After no real bites for about an hour Jason and I decided to call it a day. And judging by the traffic on the radio we did better that a lot of folks that reported a very slow bite.
Ran back to the lighthouse and met up with Running Bare along the way and stopped to chat. Good thing I did because he was fishing on credit.

Back at the ramp at 1:30
Total Tally:
4 trout to 18"
2 Spanish to 5#
1 3# bluefish
1 14" rockbass
Not a bad day for a full moon and we weren't trying really hard. Just sort of relaxing and shooting the breeze.
_________________
Tom Keels
Owner, Webmaster
BigBendFishing.Net