Oakaloosa Island Pier
Posted: August 13th, 2007, 5:02 pm
I grew up fishing on this pier and my boys have been after me to take them for the last couple years, so we went this weekend. Things have changed in some interesting ways. First, I saw a school of breeder size redfish in the surf which you never saw when I fished there in the late 70s and 80s. People now fish with a "bubble rig" which is a tube lure behind a transparent plastic ball filled with water. Works great for spanish, hardtails, ladyfish. Saw one guy catch a northern mackeral on it as well. Didn't see a single bonito caught which was odd. No Kingfish either. There appears to be a well-trained bottle nosed dolphin that showed up in the evening and ate pretty much every fish that anybody hooked. I personally donated a hard tail and my son gave up a nice Spanish. Pretty amazing to see although I worry about the ingestion of treble hooks.
It was brutally hot. We only fished in the morning from dark until about 8:30 am and then from 6pm until dark and then the next morning. The water is absolutely full of long-tentacled sea wasp jelly fish.
The pier is not as long as it once was, but is longer than it was after one of the hurricanes I remember from the 80s. Long enough to catch a kingfish in the spring and fall I'm guessing. Definitely long enough to see cobia in the spring.
The trip inspired me to try to find a Penn 706 or Mitchell 302 with a manual pickup which is what all the hep cats used when I was a kid. Those things are hard to come by now. Van Staal appears to have persuaded the world that everybody needs a $600 spinning reel. Not all change is for the better, I guess.
Anyway, a big time was had by all. My kids are agitating to go back when the Kingfish run in October.
It was brutally hot. We only fished in the morning from dark until about 8:30 am and then from 6pm until dark and then the next morning. The water is absolutely full of long-tentacled sea wasp jelly fish.
The pier is not as long as it once was, but is longer than it was after one of the hurricanes I remember from the 80s. Long enough to catch a kingfish in the spring and fall I'm guessing. Definitely long enough to see cobia in the spring.
The trip inspired me to try to find a Penn 706 or Mitchell 302 with a manual pickup which is what all the hep cats used when I was a kid. Those things are hard to come by now. Van Staal appears to have persuaded the world that everybody needs a $600 spinning reel. Not all change is for the better, I guess.
Anyway, a big time was had by all. My kids are agitating to go back when the Kingfish run in October.

