St. Marks 7/8

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dave7
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St. Marks 7/8

Post by dave7 »

Good day on the water! Hoped to eek out a trip today before the storm starts to roll in tomorrow. Put in at the lighthouse at 7:00am and headed straight out to the Bird Rack. The winds and waves were pretty calm and the skies clear and everything looked good to head out a couple of miles or so.
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Having never been right up next to the Bird Rack before, I was really surprised to see a number of really SHALLOW areas nearby. One might assume that by going out three miles you'd be in deep water...not so. :roll:

After reading some suggestions last week about targeting cobia, I figured the Bird Rack would be a good place to start. Also figured this would be a good chance to start experimenting with Sabiki rigs to catch baitfish. Tied the Sabiki to an old Johnson reel and dropped it along side the boat, riding just above the grass. Within 20 minutes I had two scaled sardines in the livewell and landed two trout [15" (released) and a short] on a CT. After that, the bite slowed and the winds had pushed me further off the Rack.

Moved over a few miles to the East Flats and did a number of drifts in there for the rest of the morning. Fished close in, a few miles out and in the middle - just depended on where the bite seemed to be or where it wasn't.

Further out, picked up a nice little shark on one of the sardines. This was the first time I've tried having a live bait line drifting behind the boat - and it paid off! It's a hoot to turn around and run to that rod as the drag is going "zing!" and the bobber is scootin' across the water. Later in the day picked up a nice 21" trout and a my first bluefish on pinfish. Also lost several unknown fish after picking up the "zinging" rod and trying to set the hook.
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In the afternoon, I set up a drift on the rising tide that took me all the way up into Big Cove. On that drift picked up a bunch of shorts, an 18" Spanish (my first one of those too!) and a 22" trout. All caught on DOA under a CT. The Spanish was foul hooked in the side! I couldn't believe he made it to the boat when I saw that... The 22" trout had to go back in the water since I already had the 21"er...

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At the entrance to Big Cove, in about 4' of water, a solid 6' shark cruised under the boat. Another first. That changed my plans about hopping in the water anytime soon... :o

Tried for a Red up in the Cove but no luck. Did one more drift and headed to the hill at 5:00.

The best fights of the day came from the bluefish and the 22" trout. That blue cruised all over the place before I even knew what he was...
:-D
Totals for the day:

Trout:
15"
21"
22"
stopped counting the shorts at a dozen
1 Spanish
1 Bluefish
1 shark
3 catfish

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Thanks to all who posted information about Pinfish and Sabiki rigs. The Sabikis don't work all the time, but they caught fish every once in awhile and that was generally enough to keep a pin or sardine behind the boat most of the time. Tipping the hooks with ham doesn't seem to help. :roll:
"The charm of fishing is that it is the pursuit of what is elusive but attainable, a perpetual series of occasions for hope." - John Buchan
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mjsigns
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Post by mjsigns »

WTG Dave :thumbup:
Good to hear you made it out to the Rack and the wind didn't blow you away. By the looks of the bird rack photo, things were really smooth. Great set of pictures, keep them comming.... :-D

BTW....
I thought I was the only person who has one of them old Johnson reels. :-D
Time is the most precious commodity we have in life, stay focused.
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tin can
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Post by tin can »

Sounds like you're getting the hang of this fishin stuff. Glad ya had a good day while I was workin. :wink:
What was I supposed to do today?
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dstockwell
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Post by dstockwell »

WTG. :thumbup:
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Eerman
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Post by Eerman »

:thumbup: :thumbup:
FindingNemo
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Post by FindingNemo »

Way cool. Good day. Wait until fall and winter and you will see the sandbar (a channel dredge spoil pile I think) on the east side of the bird rack dry during the extreme tides. I have watch more than one poor soul fly past the bird rack and hit bottom not realizing the sandbar was there (at least it was not an oyster bar). There is another one on the other side of the channel. Any good chart will show them clearly. On a real windy day when the tide was low I tried to fly through a little deep trench on the east side that I can sometimes hit just right and sneak through....the wind pushed the water so that by the time I saw that I was not going to make it, it was almost too late. Came off a plane and was stuck...but managed to back into the chop and carefully putt putt into deeper water. :oops: On the bright side, some of the biggest trout I have caught were not too far from where the sandbar ends and the water goes back to two to four feet. That boat sure is getting you out to the fish! :thumbup:
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dave7
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Post by dave7 »

:-D Nemo- I still gotta get a chart... :o
But you're right - It's amazing how many more fish you can get you're not shore bound!
"The charm of fishing is that it is the pursuit of what is elusive but attainable, a perpetual series of occasions for hope." - John Buchan
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Aucilla
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Post by Aucilla »

What a great, and inspiring, report! Thanks.

BTW, are you familiar with Baitrunner reels? They are great to set aside with that pin fish out there.
• Baitrunner is a secondary drag system that allows for controlled freespool with the bail closed. By flipping the lever or turning the handle, the primary drag quickly takes over.
http://fish.shimano.com/publish/content ... unner.html
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dave7
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Post by dave7 »

I've never heard of those...
Basically ... you have two drag systems on the same real?
"The charm of fishing is that it is the pursuit of what is elusive but attainable, a perpetual series of occasions for hope." - John Buchan
birddog
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Post by birddog »

WTG, Dave. I believe you're about to outgrow that SeaArk.
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dave7
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Post by dave7 »

:o :-D Oh Gawd.

Actually....I been thinkin' about puttin' some away for that next boat :-D
"The charm of fishing is that it is the pursuit of what is elusive but attainable, a perpetual series of occasions for hope." - John Buchan
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Aucilla
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Post by Aucilla »

dave7 wrote:I've never heard of those...
Basically ... you have two drag systems on the same real?
Exactly! And one of them, you set real light and it makes a loud noise as the fish sneaks that pin fish away. You have time to set you other rod down, do a sacred dance, and to pick up the live one. Then you can flip it over to your second drag when you are ready!

I think it is great! Nothin' better than the slow "click...............click............click..........click....click..click..click.clickclickclickclicn while you are just bein' cool! 8) :o
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qoutrage
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Post by qoutrage »

Nice report Dave- WTG.
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Fighting Conch
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Post by Fighting Conch »

Some hard earned experience: even at a very high tide watch for obstructions on the spoil mounds on either side of the bird rack. One day I decided to run across the east side thinking there was plenty of water only to strike a ghost trap that basically wrapped around my prop and broke off a blade. Fortunately I had a spare and some tools.

The shallows to the east are a great place to hop in the water and cool off in the summer. Scenic too.
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dave7
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Post by dave7 »

I was talking to my folk's neighbor about fishing out at the Bird Rack - and he said that he has recently been diving at the "St Marks Reef" and that it's only a mile or so further out from the Rack?

Is he right? He said that while he was down there he saw TONS of fish - including a Jewfish the size of HIM. :o

Think I could get the Hopper out there on the right day? :-D
"The charm of fishing is that it is the pursuit of what is elusive but attainable, a perpetual series of occasions for hope." - John Buchan
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