Offshore Seafood Buffet—Apalachicola, July 13, 2024
Posted: July 14th, 2024, 4:25 pm
Yesterday, July 13, was an offshore seafood buffet—for the SHARKS. We hooked a huge variety of fish, but it seemed like the sharks took every other one from our lines.
After launching the boat at Apalachicola, we loaded the livewell mostly with cigar minnows that we caught in 60-70’ with Sabiki rigs. Then with light winds, calm seas, and friends ready to explore, we headed deep. We didn’t stop until we were in about 220’.
At the first spot, I caught a scamp, the second one ever. With its mouth closed and its tail pinched, it measured just over 16”. Thinking that it was almost an inch short, I vented it and tossed it back.

I found my regulations after that and realized that I had just released a primo legal fish. No problem—I was going to catch more. I hooked two other fish on the spot that felt just like the scamp until the big tug on the line about halfway to the boat. Sharked! The rig I was using was a homemade chicken rig composed of two 2/0 circle hooks and 50 lb. fluorocarbon leader with an 8 oz. bank sinker on the bottom. I use this same rig for vermilion, triggerfish, and lane snapper.
The other guys on the boat were targeting red snapper and playing tug-of-war with sharks, too. It was time to try another spot.

We bounced from spot to spot until we found hungry red snapper in 240’. A few made it into the cooler. The bite slowed and it was time to start fishing our way back to the boat ramp. Some of my old spots produced the fish we needed to catch our limit of red snapper. The fish hit both live cigar minnows and frozen LYs that had been cut in half, but it seemed like the LYs were more productive. We also caught two surprise fish, a short bigeye (looks like it’s a radioactive shade of red) and a 19” yellowtail snapper. Overall, it was a great day on the water with good friends, but I am so sore from fighting sharks and from having to make a special trip to the tackle shop to replace all the hooks and sinkers I lost.



Here's our haul for the day—two bonito, one almaco jack, one vermilion, one yellowtail snapper, one red porgy, one short bigeye, three mangrove snapper, and eight red snapper.

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
After launching the boat at Apalachicola, we loaded the livewell mostly with cigar minnows that we caught in 60-70’ with Sabiki rigs. Then with light winds, calm seas, and friends ready to explore, we headed deep. We didn’t stop until we were in about 220’.
At the first spot, I caught a scamp, the second one ever. With its mouth closed and its tail pinched, it measured just over 16”. Thinking that it was almost an inch short, I vented it and tossed it back.

I found my regulations after that and realized that I had just released a primo legal fish. No problem—I was going to catch more. I hooked two other fish on the spot that felt just like the scamp until the big tug on the line about halfway to the boat. Sharked! The rig I was using was a homemade chicken rig composed of two 2/0 circle hooks and 50 lb. fluorocarbon leader with an 8 oz. bank sinker on the bottom. I use this same rig for vermilion, triggerfish, and lane snapper.
The other guys on the boat were targeting red snapper and playing tug-of-war with sharks, too. It was time to try another spot.

We bounced from spot to spot until we found hungry red snapper in 240’. A few made it into the cooler. The bite slowed and it was time to start fishing our way back to the boat ramp. Some of my old spots produced the fish we needed to catch our limit of red snapper. The fish hit both live cigar minnows and frozen LYs that had been cut in half, but it seemed like the LYs were more productive. We also caught two surprise fish, a short bigeye (looks like it’s a radioactive shade of red) and a 19” yellowtail snapper. Overall, it was a great day on the water with good friends, but I am so sore from fighting sharks and from having to make a special trip to the tackle shop to replace all the hooks and sinkers I lost.



Here's our haul for the day—two bonito, one almaco jack, one vermilion, one yellowtail snapper, one red porgy, one short bigeye, three mangrove snapper, and eight red snapper.

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk