ST. Marks 7-1 AND 7-2
Posted: July 3rd, 2008, 8:55 am
7-1 Had a friend in town who had never been scalloping, so we did that on 7-1. My report matches everyone elses. Scallops everywhere, no problem with a limit in short order. We went east and were within 200 yards of Black Rock (beyond the crowd). On the water at 11:00 off at 1:30.
7-2 This is when things got interesting. PUBLIC NOTICE - I was handed a sheet at the entrance to St. Marks refuge that said no more than 90 boat trailer will be allowed in the refuge at one time. This could make things interesting for the 4th and 5th. Anyway on with the fishing. After cleaning scallops for 2 hours the night before my friend thought that he had had enough of scallops. We went west in search of trout and we found them. The trout bite was as good as I have seen from 10:30 till 1:00. We were doing real good catching trout until an eagle ray came by with two cobia in tow. Like a genius I cast at the cobia with a St. Croix light weight trout rod (Falconer Custom Rod). THANKFULLY the smaller one took the bait. The bigger one was easily 60+#. Here is the end result of 15 minutes of excitement. 30" Cobia (he looked like a remora beside the other one)

Back to trout fishing. Another eagle ray and another cobia right behind. I should have learned my lesson the first time, but I threw at him anyway. There was a large boil and I was convinced I had just snagged the ray. Drag started leaving at a scorching pace and we had to crank the boat. After 20 minutes and getting spooled three times we finally saw another boat coming from Shell Point. Whoever these two guys were I thank them. We flagged them down because I didn't have a gaff. Thankfully they did and gladly loaned it to us. After another 10 minutes or so I finally go this dude close enough to get a shot with the gaff. Not bad for 8# tackle and a noodle rod. All I had was a 36" law stick and that didn't come close. He was a wide as the beam of our 16" skiff.

All fish caught in 3' to 5' of water. Gulp jerk shad was the ticket (even for cobia).
7-2 This is when things got interesting. PUBLIC NOTICE - I was handed a sheet at the entrance to St. Marks refuge that said no more than 90 boat trailer will be allowed in the refuge at one time. This could make things interesting for the 4th and 5th. Anyway on with the fishing. After cleaning scallops for 2 hours the night before my friend thought that he had had enough of scallops. We went west in search of trout and we found them. The trout bite was as good as I have seen from 10:30 till 1:00. We were doing real good catching trout until an eagle ray came by with two cobia in tow. Like a genius I cast at the cobia with a St. Croix light weight trout rod (Falconer Custom Rod). THANKFULLY the smaller one took the bait. The bigger one was easily 60+#. Here is the end result of 15 minutes of excitement. 30" Cobia (he looked like a remora beside the other one)

Back to trout fishing. Another eagle ray and another cobia right behind. I should have learned my lesson the first time, but I threw at him anyway. There was a large boil and I was convinced I had just snagged the ray. Drag started leaving at a scorching pace and we had to crank the boat. After 20 minutes and getting spooled three times we finally saw another boat coming from Shell Point. Whoever these two guys were I thank them. We flagged them down because I didn't have a gaff. Thankfully they did and gladly loaned it to us. After another 10 minutes or so I finally go this dude close enough to get a shot with the gaff. Not bad for 8# tackle and a noodle rod. All I had was a 36" law stick and that didn't come close. He was a wide as the beam of our 16" skiff.

All fish caught in 3' to 5' of water. Gulp jerk shad was the ticket (even for cobia).