Tarpon Fishing – Sport Fishing Mag https://www.sportfishingmag.com Sport Fishing is the leading saltwater fishing site for boat reviews, fishing gear, saltwater fishing tips, photos, videos, and so much more. Fri, 15 Mar 2024 14:19:39 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/uploads/2021/09/favicon-spf.png Tarpon Fishing – Sport Fishing Mag https://www.sportfishingmag.com 32 32 10 Best Tarpon Lures https://www.sportfishingmag.com/10-top-tarpon-lures/ Fri, 08 Mar 2024 02:06:43 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=44287 Experts reveal their favorite tarpon lures and how to fish them for maximum action.

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Expert anglers' favorite tarpon fishing lures
Try a professional’s favorite tarpon lure next time you hit the tarpon wall. Jon Whittle

Tarpon are smart, or stubborn — I’m not sure which. Maybe both? No matter what, a tarpon’s lack of appetite some days makes for frustrating fishing. What I’ve learned over the years is that figuring out the best tarpon lures and understanding which ones work best for your area can go a long way.

I remember one summer trip off a Florida beach when school after school of tarpon swam underneath the boat, completely ignoring our best presentations. Dozens of tarpon patrolled just below and at the surface, often gulping air in defiance to our offerings.

There’s no better way to get out of that tarpon rut than by switching tactics, as my friends and I learned later that month. A local guide let slip that the tarpon were biting white, oversize jerk baits rigged to appropriate-size jig heads. For the rest of the summer, we jumped and released plenty of tarpon along the beaches. I say “jumped” because tarpon are tough to catch, and getting jumps and long runs out of them is still fun fishing, even if they never make it to the boat.

While there can never be 100 percent certainty what tarpon will chew (even if they devoured it last season or last month) I surveyed top captains, fishing-show hosts, tackle shops and lure manufacturers to find the best tarpon lures. To list every valuable tarpon lure would fill an entire book, so we kept it to a mix of 10 hard and soft baits, listed in no particular order.

Quicklook: 10 Best Lures for Tarpon

Bomber

Bomber Badonk-A-Donk High Pitch tarpon fishing lure
Bomber Badonk-A-Donk High Pitch Jon Whittle

Expert: Capt. Chris O’Neill, Englewood, Florida

Weapon of Choice: Badonk-A-Donk High Pitch (4.75 inches)

Color: Depending on the sky conditions, O’Neill’s first choices are silver mullet or speckled trout. If the sky is bright and the water’s flat, he’ll use a color with a bone- or orange-colored throat.

Fishing Conditions: O’Neill prefers the water’s surface to be lightly choppy or flat calm, though such conditions are not absolutely necessary. Look for signs of tarpon rolling at the surface or feeding on mullet or ladyfish. In the waters around Boca Grande, Florida, O’Neill prefers fishing from August through October. There’s zero pressure that time of the year, and migrating fish are happy throughout the estuary, he says. They are far more willing to take a topwater lure.

Technique: Spot the tarpon and try to get ahead of the pod quietly. Work the bait down-current of the fish, just as Mother Nature would, says O’Neill. Baitfish do not swim against current, toward a school of hungry tarpon. Use a twitch-twitch-pause retrieve — and boom! — expect to get hit, says O’Neill.

Rigging: O’Neill, who’s a Penn pro, prefers an 8-foot Penn Legion rod armed with a Penn Spinfisher 6500 spinning reel. He uses 50-pound braided main line, connected to 60-pound fluorocarbon leader with an Albright knot. But before he ties on the Badonk-A-Donk with a loop knot, he replaces the treble hooks with stout short-shank hooks to increase hookup ratios and minimize potential damage to the fish.

D.O.A. Lures

D.O.A. Lures Terror Eyz tarpon fishing lure
D.O.A. Lures Terror Eyz Jon Whittle

Expert: Capt. Ed Zyak; Jensen Beach, Florida

Weapon of Choice: Terror Eyz (regular size; “I have caught more tarpon on this lure than all others combined,” Zyak says.)

Color: Root beer

Fishing Conditions: The lure works great on the beach in clear water, as well as the stained waters of backcountry rivers.

Technique: When using the Terror Eyz, Zyak ­typically casts to rolling fish — long, accurate casts are a must. Cast 4 to 6 feet in front of a rolling fish, and let the lure sink freely for a three- to four-second count, he says. Then use a steady, slow retrieve with no jigging movement at all. The bite is usually very light, but make sure to set the hook hard, says Zyak.

Rigging: Zyak prefers a 5,000-size Shimano Stella spinning reel on a 7- or 7½ -foot, medium-heavy rod. He spools with 30-pound braid and 50-pound ­fluorocarbon leader. The line-to-line connection is a double uni-knot, and the Terror Eyz gets a loop knot at the eye. This setup gives the best balance of distance and accuracy, plus great drag and power from the rod, the guide says.

Tarpon fish jumping

Go Ballistic

Tarpon of all sizes take to the air to free themselves. Some captains recommend “bowing” to the silver king during violent headshakes to prevent hooks from slingshotting free. Others keep the line tight to inhibit fish from accidentally landing on loose line. Tom Lynch

Hogy Lures

Hogy Lures Original Hogy tarpon fishing lure
Hogy Lures Original Hogy Jon Whittle

Expert: Capt. Aaron Snell; Key West, Florida

Weapon of Choice: Original Hogy (10 inches)

Color: Snell prefers bone, followed by bubble gum. He’ll use black in low light or in off-colored waters.

Fishing Conditions: Snell prefers to sight-fish for tarpon over crystal-clear flats. For fishing around bridges, Ross Gallagher, director of retail sales at Hogy, recommends a black Hogy rigged to a jig head. More and more Keys captains bounce the jig along the bottom to catch tarpon in deeper waters, he says.

Technique: When flats fishing, get the lure in the water well ahead of the fish. Retrieve the bait with light twitches right into the fish’s strike zone. Vary the retrieval speed to the fish’s cruising speed, says Snell. Then set the hook down and to the side as soon as you feel the pop, he says. If the tarpon is swimming toward the boat, make sure it turns away before striking.

Rigging: Snell uses an 8-foot, ­medium- to ­fast-action ­spinning rod coupled with a reel that handles 30-pound braid. He ties a Bimini twist into the braid, and then uses a ninja or double slim knot to attach 2 feet of 60-pound fluorocarbon. Sometimes he’ll incorporate a section of furled nylon to add stretch. He rigs the Hogy to a weightless, 10/0 swimbait hook. Leader-to-hook connection is a Homer Rhode loop.

Saltwater fishermen in a fishing boat releasing a tarpon

Single Serving

Soft-bait companies have a slight edge when it comes to tarpon hookups — a heavy-gauge single hook finds better hold in the tough mouths of ’poons. Capt. Aaron Snell lands a Florida Keys specimen, one too large to legally remove from the water, according to state regulations. Tony Ludovico

Z-Man Lures

Z-Man Lures Streakz tarpon fishing lure
Z-Man Lures Streakz Jon Whittle

Expert: Capt. Andrew Bostick; Marco Island, Florida

Weapon of Choice: Z-Man Streakz (5 or 8 inches)

Color: Black or white

Fishing Conditions: Bostick covers the waters from Marco Island to Everglades National Park on the southwest coast of Florida. He searches for tarpon feeding high in the water in both clear and tannic conditions. Since the lure is up in the water column, he says, it’s exciting to see the strikes.

Technique: Bostick fishes the soft bait when sight‑casting to rolling fish or blind-casting in a productive area. During the retrieve, he jerks the bait 6 to 8 inches, lets it sit for a second or two, and repeats. It’s important to wait for the fish to turn after it eats because anglers set the hook too fast at times.

Rigging: Bostick rigs the 5-inch Streakz with an Owner 4/0 Aki hook; the 8-inch is rigged with a 7/0. He uses a medium-heavy setup spooled with 20-pound braid, ending with 60- to 80-pound leader. Super glue the ElaZTech material of the Streakz to the hook, recommends Bostick. Once glued, the bait lasts longer than other soft plastics and has an impressive lifelike look.

Yo-Zuri

Yo-Zuri Crystal 3-D Minnow Magnum tarpon fishing lure
Yo-Zuri Crystal 3-D Minnow Magnum Jon Whittle

Expert: George Large, general manager, Yo-Zuri America

Weapon of Choice: Crystal 3-D Minnow Magnum

Color: In clear water, Large uses the holographic sardine color; in tannic water, he uses the holographic bunker; and in dirty water, he chooses holographic chartreuse.

Fishing Conditions: Spring and fall are the best times of the year, especially around new moons and during flood tides, says Large. As far as water conditions go, the lures work well in most waters, but tannic tints really set off the ultraviolet colors.

Technique: It’s as simple as casting and retrieving. Work the lure with a consistent retrieve — fast or slow, says Large. The tarpon will let you know what they prefer. Sometimes incorporate intermittent pause-jerk-pause actions to increase strikes, he says.

Rigging: It’s really up to the user, says Large. He uses a medium-heavy rod rigged with 60- to 80-pound braid, paired with a strong baitcasting or spinning reel. Large ties 80- to 130-pound ­fluorocarbon leader to a heavy-duty split ring attached to the lure’s line tie.

Tarpon underwater with fisherman releasing fish into the ocean while deep sea fishing

Gulp

While it’s easier to photograph tarpon underwater in the crystal-clear waters of the tropics, often they’ll roam tannic-colored brackish environs. Tom Lynch

Rapala

Rapala Glidin’ Rap 12 tarpon fishing lure
Rapala Glidin’ Rap 12 Jon Whittle

Expert: Capt. Rick Murphy, host of the Chevy Florida Insider Fishing Report and Sportsman’s Adventures

Weapon of Choice: Glidin’ Rap 12

Color: Gold shiner

Fishing Conditions: Capt. Rick Murphy spends plenty of time fishing Everglades National Park in South Florida for the silver king. He targets laid-up tarpon in the back bays, swirling with clear to tannic-brown waters, during the prime months of May to October.

Technique: Murphy prefers blind- or sight-casting to rolling fish with shallow-running lures that feature strong side-to-side action. He casts out in front of the tarpon and twitches the rod tip to give the lure a walk-the-dog presentation, a forced zigzag motion that many lure anglers are familiar with. Often, tarpon hit the lure during the pause. So far, his largest lure-caught tarpon is 140 pounds.

Rigging: Murphy prefers plug tackle, opting for a 7-foot rod paired with a 400-size baitcasting reel. He rigs up with 20-pound braid main line tied to 60-pound fluorocarbon leader. All line connections use the time-tested uni-knot.

Tarpon fish underwater

Wide-Eyed

Big, silver-sided plugs pay dividends for the silver king. Tarpon slurp the plugs, literally, using a characteristic suction feeding method. Check out that underslung lip. Adrian E. Gray

MirrOlure

MirrOlure Series III Suspending Twitchbait tarpon fishing lure
MirrOlure Series III Suspending Twitchbait Jon Whittle

Expert: Capt. Rhett Morris; Port Charlotte, Florida

Weapon of Choice: Series III Suspending Twitchbait (S25MR)

Color: Morris prefers chartreuse, red-head-and-white back, or apple-red-and-gold

Fishing Conditions: The best time of year to catch tarpon is April through June, as well as in fall, says Morris. He looks for glass-calm waters so the lure leaves a surface wake while being worked toward the boat. Still, the suspending twitchbait works in choppier waters too, so don’t fret when waters aren’t dead calm.

Technique: Cast the lure 10 feet in front of a rolling fish, then slowly work it with a series of twitches. Morris tries to follow a one-second pause with a three-second pause. He’ll change to a one-two count when retrieving the lure more erratically. Try hard to make the bait look like injured, easy prey, says Morris.

Rigging: Morris removes the front hook of the MirroLure and replaces the back treble with a 3x-strong Owner treble hook. That single, rear hook has a better hookup ratio, he says. He attaches the plug to 6 feet of 60-pound leader with a no-name loop knot. Make sure to use at least a 7½-foot rod that can handle 50-pound braid and an 8,000-size reel, he says.

Tarpon fish hooked on a fishing lure caught while deep sea fishing

Pretty in Pink

Oversize poppers are a forgotten lure when targeting tarpon, but they excel in scenarios such as when fish feed at the surface. Julien Lajournade

Sebile

Sebile Magic Swimmer Fast Sinking 145 tarpon fishing lure
Sebile Magic Swimmer Fast Sinking 145 Jon Whittle

Expert: Patrick Sebile, founder of Sebile Lures

Weapon of Choice: Magic Swimmer Fast Sinking 145

Color: A natural shiny color for the daytime. At night, Sebile chooses white so he can see the lure in the water.

Fishing Conditions: The best time of the year is during spring and fall, or anytime tarpon are active in shallow waters.

Technique: Sebile rigs his lures to fish in a number of ways. Cast and reel in the lure with a straight retrieve, or slow-troll the lure behind the boat. If anchored, let the bait sit still so the “Magic Swimmer can do its magic,” says Sebile. The natural wobble of the Magic Swimmer in the current draws strikes from tarpon.

Rigging: Sebile developed this rig years ago when guiding for monster tarpon in Guinea-Bissau, West Africa. Sebile connects a circle hook to a swivel, holding the hook onto the swivel with a rubber stopper. On the other end of the swivel, a split ring attaches to the lure. The rig allows anglers to change sizes and models but still allows total freedom for the lure to swim, he says. Once the fish is hooked, there’s no leverage on the lure’s body and less of a chance to break off. The hook lips the tarpon when they swallow it, minimizing intrusion of the hook in the fish’s mouth, Sebile says.

Live Target

Live Target Scaled Sardine Wakebait tarpon fishing lure
Live Target Scaled Sardine Wakebait Jon Whittle

Expert: Henry Waszczuk, host of Fishing the Flats

Weapon of Choice: Scaled Sardine Wakebait (4½ inches)

Color: Ghost amber

Fishing Conditions: Waszczuk prefers stained water, where tarpon can’t overanalyze his presentation. He targets fish in Florida Keys backcountry waters near tide rips, mangroves and other holding areas, plus near bridge structure.

Technique: Tarpon are notorious for keying in on live baits such as crabs, threadfin herring or scaled sardines, so it’s no surprise that Waszczuk recommends twitchbaits, swimbaits and wakebaits that mimic them. Waszczuk makes long casts to the tarpon, staying as far away as he can from the pods, and then utilizes a quick-pause erratic retrieve. The height of the rod tip off the water dictates the various depths your lure swims, he says.

Rigging: A medium-heavy rod matched to your favorite spinning reel is all that’s necessary. Waszczuk uses braid in the 40- to 50-pound class but recommends the angler determine the line weight based on the size of tarpon in the area. Tie a fluoro leader to the terminal end, and then add the plug. Waszczuk works the bait with the rod tip for the best action.

Tarpon fish jumping with fishing lure slided up on leader

Head Turner

A lure rigged to slide up the leader (cut off in this photo) means less weight around the hook, increasing your chances of landing a tarpon. Jenni Bennett

Storm Lures

Storm Lures WildEye Swim Shad tarpon fishing lure
Storm Lures WildEye Swim Shad Jon Whittle

Expert: Robert Lugiewicz, manager at Fishin’ Franks tackle shop in Charlotte Harbor, Florida

Weapon of Choice: WildEye Swim Shad (4 to 6 inches)

Color: Lugiewicz prefers bunker or mullet colors but says the best color changes from year to year.

Fishing Conditions: Sight-or drift-fishing in the harbor or along the beaches offers the best of both worlds in summer. Lugiewicz prefers a bit of a breeze and some chop on the water, and looks for schools of mullet or threadfin schools. In Charlotte Harbor, he’ll search out deeper holes, ranging from 6 to 20 feet deep.

Technique: Besides casting in front of tarpon schools and letting the bait sink, Lugiewicz offers a tip you might not have considered. Put a float above a swimbait, cast it out, and stick the rod in an ­out-of-the-way holder while drifting. Forget about it while casting to other fish in the area. He’s caught countless tarpon this way, he says — Rodney the Rod Holder to the rescue.

Rigging: Rigging is a cinch with the line-to-­swimbait connection using a basic uni-knot (no leader). Lugiewicz uses an 8-foot rod, such as a Shimano Teramar, and pairs it with a Penn Battle spooled with 50-pound braid. (He’s not affiliated with either manufacturer.) Leader strength is 60- to 80-pound fluorocarbon.

Take this Lure Out of Your Tackle Box

Boca Grand jig tarpon fishing lure
One lure that you won’t cast to tarpon in Boca Grande Pass, Florida, is the jig popularized by pass fishermen targeting traditional hot spots like the Hill or the Lighthouse Hole. Known as the “Boca Grande” jig, the lead-head features a ­soft-plastic tail and a weight that hangs lower than the hook. Anglers dropped it on top of tarpon schools and jigged straight up and down. The weight attached to the hook with a zip-tie, breaking away once the fish was hooked. In November 2013, the controversial jig was banned for all species year-round within Boca Grande Pass. Increasing numbers of anglers believed the jig snagged tarpon, while others vehemently disagreed that snagging intentionally happened. The state of Florida included this new rule for Boca Grande when it amended language clarifying snagging definitions for tarpon. Courtesy FWC

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The Beauty of Belize https://www.sportfishingmag.com/travel/incredible-belize-fishing/ Wed, 13 Sep 2023 16:08:17 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=52951 This Central American hotspot has some of the best flats fishing for bonefish, permit and tarpon.

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Fly fishing is fun in Belize
Belize is a fly angler’s paradise. In fact, it’s paradise for all types of flats fishermen, with bonefish, permit and tarpon catches real possibilities in a single day. Bill Doster

Tucked away in the southeastern corner of the Yucatan Peninsula, this tiny Central American nation (about the size of Massachusetts) was known as British Honduras until 1973. Belize boasts the second largest barrier reef in the world (after Australia’s Great Barrier Reef) with dozens of cays and islets. The country’s 174-mile coastline offers huge areas of sandy flats dotted with patches of turtle grass — ideal habitat for bonefish and permit.

Among anglers, Belize is known for its consistently productive, year-round fishing for both of those prized inshore trophy species. Add tarpon to the mix and it’s understandable that Belize ranks near the top of places in the world where anglers can accomplish a coveted shallow-water slam: permit, bonefish and tarpon in one day. But don’t limit yourself! Belize boasts a good population of snook in its rivers and mangrove-lined bays. Add snook to the other three species and join the ranks of super-slammers. Slam or not, fishing Belize is particularly popular with fly fishermen.

Mangroves and the water and corals underneath
Crystal clear shallows buffered by mangroves are what anglers can expect in Belize. Nearshore, the world’s second-largest barrier reef system is home to world-class bottom fishing. Bill Doster

Unique among Central American nations, at least 40 percent of the country’s mainland and coast is protected. The barrier reef system has been designated as a UNESCO World Heritage site since 1996. The reef runs for more than 180 miles, in places only 1,000 feet from shore but in other areas 25 miles out.

Some popular areas include Turneffe Atoll, the country’s largest atoll, located about 20 miles off the coast, near Belize City. It’s renowned for big schools of bonefish, but also numbers of permit. A marine reserve, Turneffe remains pristine, with vast expanses of mangrove and seagrass habitats around the island. Ambergris Caye is Belize’s largest island, famed for white-sand beaches and turquoise shallows. It’s perennially popular with tourists, being a mere 15-minute small-plane flight from Belize City. Nevertheless, it remains a solid spot for inshore fishing, particularly for sight-casting to tarpon on its extensive flats. Some of Belize’s other outstanding spots for anglers include the Placencia peninsula, and Hopkins and Glover’s reefs in the south.

Tarpon caught in Belize
Belize’s larger tarpon show from late spring to summer, but smaller fish can be caught anytime on flats, in channels, creeks and bays. Courtesy Adobe Stock/Jan Oor

Planning a Trip

When to Go

As noted above, this is truly year-round fishing. Larger tarpon tend to be more seasonal, given their migratory nature; late spring and summer is a peak time but smaller fish can be caught anytime on flats, in channels, creeks and bays. Winter can be tougher for bones, while fall is prime time for permit. Because fishing can be good throughout the year, timing a trip may come down to weather more than anything. Spring tends to be a bit windier (prevailing trade winds are generally from an eastern quadrant). From late February into May is the dry season, and June through much of the fall, is the wet season. It’s worth noting that the northern part of Belize receives considerably less rain than the south. Also keep in mind the possibility of hurricanes summer and fall. Direct strikes on Belize are rare, but tropical wind and rain spun off by big storms can hinder fishing.

Where to Go and How to Get There

Major airlines offer regular flights from several U.S. cities into Belize City’s international airport. Once in Belize, there are regular flights and ferry service to Ambergris Caye, but more distant resorts are reached primarily via chartered flights that the resorts provide or arrange.

Grand Caribe Belize is a beautiful resort in San Pedro Belize, located 2 miles north of town on Ambergris Caye. The condo style accommodations cater to anglers and families, plus the barrier reef sits just a half-mile offshore their beaches. This year, the resort hosted their 7th annual Deep Sea Classic fishing tournament in July.

Flats fishing in Belize
Spot that tail? Flats anglers have the opportunity to complete a Grand Slam (tarpon, permit and bonefish) on Belize’s crystal clear flats. Bill Doster

What to Expect

English, for one thing: While you’ll hear Spanish and creole, English is the primary, official language, making Belize the only country in Central America where this is true. You’ll find plenty of hotels in Belize City. Most resorts provide tackle, though serious fishermen often bring their own (and fly fishing is particularly popular in Belize’s shallow waters). Though largely overlooked, reef and bluewater fishing await just beyond the flats. Besides fishing, in Belize’s forested interior you can plan visits to the country’s amazing Mayan ruins, remnants of a great ancient Maya empire. Note: upon leaving, you’ll need to pay a departure tax (unless included in the airline’s fare), and only cash is accepted.

Helpful Links

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What You Might Not Know About Your Favorite Flats Fish https://www.sportfishingmag.com/game-fish/what-you-might-not-know-about-your-favorite-flats-fish/ Fri, 07 Jul 2023 13:00:00 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=52454 Facts about flats fishing favorites.

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If you get the opportunity, jump at the chance to target and catch these gamefish. Here are some details you might not know about these top flats species.

Indo-Pacific permit
The Indo-Pacific permit is not for the weak. Jim Klug

The Not So Common Permit

For permit addicts, the Florida Keys is a special place. But the holy grail is somewhere else entirely: the Seychelles. The Indo-Pacific permit, with its yellow-tipped fins, thrives here on the remote Poivre and St. Joseph atolls. Sometimes called the snubnose pompano, it’s a top-five fish for any globe-trotting flats fly angler.

But this Indian Ocean adventure is not for the weak, requiring plenty of planning and travel to get there. Then, it’s wade-fishing all day on shallow flats, searching for a fish known to laugh at a perfectly placed crab fly. Once you hook and hold one, all that frustration disappears. —Sam Hudson

Tarpon being released
Tarpon have survived for so long thanks to their ability to adapt. John Rohan

In Honor of the Toughness of Tarpon

Tarpon are survivors. After all, they’ve been swimming the seas since dinosaurs roamed the earth. They can live more than 70 years. How have tarpon survived for so long when so many other species have gone extinct? It’s their ability to survive in a wide variety of conditions, and on a wide variety of sustenance.

The silver king can live in full fresh or full salt water, but most important is its special ability to breathe air at the surface using a row of lunglike tissue in the swim bladder. As juvenile fish, this allows them to live in stagnant, low-oxygen waters with fewer predators and competition. Canals, ditches, ponds—waters that don’t connect to salt water for most of the year—are no problem for them.

And the juvies make do with whatever food they can forage in these backwaters. Baby tarpon are opportunistic feeders, eating ants, shrimp, crabs and fly larvae. In fact, in 2020, Bonefish & Tarpon Trust highlighted a study that looked at the diets of juvenile tarpon in seven Florida locations. The conclusion: Tarpon will eat whatever fits in their mouths. —Nick Roberts

Bonefish on the flats
Proper handling ensures a healthy bonefish population. Jason Stemple

Bonefish Slime Matters

Props to conservation organization Bonefish & Tarpon Trust, which recently launched the Save the Slime campaign to promote proper bonefish handling techniques, developed in collaboration with top guides and bonefish lodges. Poor handling can remove their protective mucus layer and leave them vulnerable to sharks after release.

The techniques boil down to this: Avoid touching the fish, and if you want to hold one for a quick photo, then do so without sun gloves and limit air exposure to less than 10 seconds. Research shows that a bonefish held out of water for longer than that is six times less likely to survive once released.

As the campaign slogan proclaims: “The important part isn’t how you catch them. It’s how you let them go.” —Nick Roberts

Large redfish on fly
Bull redfish are found throughout Louisiana marshes. Mike Conner

Pumpkins With Fins

Over my 40-plus years of feeding flies to redfish in five coastal states, little compares to the Louisiana marsh. The shallow-water, bull redfish in bright auburn hues are like nothing else in inshore fishing. I call Venice “the Pumpkin Patch” due to the color and size of the red drum willing to eat a fly any day of the year.

On my first cast to a string of 30-plus-pounders one November morning, I made the typical “Florida cast,” leading the oncoming fish by 5 feet. They were gliding slowly, pec fins out, glowing golden orange in the muddy water.

“Mike, pick up and go again. Give the lead fish a mustache,” urged Capt. Brian Esposito from the poling platform. I picked up my line and slapped my big, bushy streamer between the fish’s eyes. The take was immediate and explosive. I cleared my running line to the reel and held on as it towed the skiff. After a couple of bulldogging runs, Esposito staked the pole and grabbed the fish. It weighed 31 pounds.

“A pretty good one,” Esposito said. “But we’ll see bigger, I promise.”

And we did. The pumpkin parade went on all day—singles, pairs, small schools. Out of about 40 shots, we landed 30 or more reds.

This happens year-round in Louisiana, with the biggest fish common from fall through spring. I once fished with a guide on a January week when the Roseau cane lining the outer marsh was covered in ice all day, with highs in the upper 30s. And amazingly, the fish ate flies. So, book a Louisiana poling guide, dress right, and be damn sure to give ’em a mustache. Chances are you’ve fished for reds, but haven’t experienced anything like Louisiana’s Mississippi river mouth monsters. —Mike Conner

Striped bass chasing eels
Sand eels are a favorite of striped bass. John McMurray

A Striped Bass Favorite: Sand Eels

Sand eels are one of the baits that cause stripers to abandon caution and venture into dangerously skinny water. Correctly known as a sand lance, these thin, eel-like fish burrow directly into the sand. While some stretches of the coast have sand eels all season long, fall brings in large schools that hug the shoreline, and stripers follow.

Schools of 20- to 30-pound stripers are often right on their heels, slipping along the lip of an open beach with their backs and pectoral fins cutting the surface, massive tails wagging back and forth. These feeding frenzies look like something out of a BBC wildlife documentary, and offer some of the most exciting fishing of the entire season. —Joe Albanese

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The Evolution of Tarpon Fishing https://www.sportfishingmag.com/game-fish/the-evolution-of-tarpon-fishing/ Fri, 16 Jun 2023 13:00:00 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=52425 Highlights of top tarpon catches and other milestones in the history of tarpon fishing.

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Tarpon on fly
The angling history of tarpon is relatively short, but packed full of excitement. Kevin Dodge

Despite the Atlantic tarpon’s 120-million-year existence, it has a relatively short angling history. Not a revered food fish and sometimes freakish in size, it took time to develop strong tackle to tame such beasts. New York architect William Halsey Wood couldn’t have imagined that his trip to southwest Florida in spring 1885 would birth an entire industry. But it did, and the rest is quite literally history.

1885

The first tarpon caught on rod and reel was documented by angler William Halsey Wood in 1885 on a bamboo rod, a conventional reel and a live mullet. It weighed 93 pounds. Fittingly, the site was Tarpon Bay near Sanibel Island, Florida.

1894

Southwest Florida ­tarpon fishing catches fire, and the fish fueled the region’s ­economy. For many, tarpon were essentially the first fish of a big-game ­fishing addiction. Local newspapers reported weekly lists of ­tarpon catches, with 438 caught in 1894.

1902

The techniques and tackle evolved at a fast clip. The silver king started a revolution. The star drag reel, invented by reel-maker Edward vom Hofe in 1902, replaced the “knuckle-busters” that made fighting big tarpon a painful endeavor.

1911

Outdoor writer A.W. Dimmock’s The Book of the Tarpon is published, bringing tarpon fishing to the general public. Dimmock came up with a weight formula for the fish (girth squared times length divided by 800), allowing anglers to release their catch alive.

Angler fly fishing for tarpon
Do whatever it takes to make the perfect presentation. Especially in places where tarpon are heavily pressured. Sometimes the boat is the problem, but you still need the height of a ladder. Better keep your skiff close by for what happens after the hookup. Cavin Brothers

1982

Billy Pate set a fly-fishing record on 16-pound tippet with a 188-pound tarpon caught off Homosassa in 1982. That catch started the frantic world-record chase on fly by the best fly-fishers in the business. Pate’s 16-pound tippet record was broken on May 13, 2003, with a 190-pound, 9-ounce tarpon caught by Tom Evans Jr.

1994

The biggest tarpon specimen landed by a woman stands at 249 pounds, caught by Frederique Jarland, fishing out of Sherbro Island, Sierra Leone. The fish was fought on 30-pound line. Sierra Leone holds nine ­tarpon world records.

2001

Capt. Steve Kirkpatrick guided angler Jim Holland Jr. to the first tarpon over 200 pounds ever taken on fly tackle. On May 11, Holland landed a ­202-pound, 8-ounce tarpon on 20-pound tippet fishing off Florida’s ­central west coast near Homosassa.

2003

The all-tackle world-­record fish was certified as the 80-pound line-class record at 286 pounds, 9 ounces. It was caught by Max Domecq in Rubane, Guinea-Bissau, Africa, on March 20, 2003. Lure designer Patrick Sebile was the guide.

2021

On May 8, 2021, a giant tarpon was caught off Bahia Solano, Colombia, in South America. The angler was American Josh Jorgensen, who runs the BlacktipH YouTube channel. He and his companions took turns fighting the fish to competition. It measured 87 inches long with a 54-inch girth. Modern tarpon calculators estimate that the fish weighed 312 pounds.

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Hammerhead Sharks Versus Tarpon https://www.sportfishingmag.com/game-fish/hammerhead-sharks-versus-tarpon/ Wed, 26 Apr 2023 21:05:44 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=52172 There’s a one-sided battle playing out in the Florida Keys each spring and summer.

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Atlantic tarpon in Colombia
Florida Keys anglers target Atlantic tarpon for catch and release. Growing numbers of hammerhead sharks might be using those hooked tarpon as an easy meal. Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

If you spend any time in the Florida Keys from March to May you know about the hot tarpon fishing around the bridges. Islamorada’s Channel 2 and Channel 5 bridges consistently produce. Near Marathon, the Seven-Mile and Bahia Honda bridges can be packed with boaters, soaking live crabs and silver mullet to hookup. At night time, some anglers cast and jig eel imitations around bridges with success. 

But a second, ever-growing attraction has spliced itself among the tarpon bonanza — hammerhead sharks. What first started years ago as isolated shark encounters have become as regular as the tides. Viral videos show triple-digit tarpon attacked by hammerhead sharks as long as a bay boat. Those videos or real-life experiences used to produce audible gasps, now they generate groans and anger. Boat-side interactions are happening more frequently, so much so that the routine hammerhead encounters have become an issue for anglers and tarpon alike.

Tracking Sharks Movements

hammerhead shark
Hammerheads are apex predators, capable of eating full-grown tarpon. Researchers tracked their migrations, along with interactions with gamefish. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, NOAA permit 20556-0

Investigators wanted to study the interactions where hammerhead sharks attacked and ate tarpon, known as “depredation,” so they set out to track Florida’s sharks’ movements. An international team of researchers, led by the University of Massachusetts Amherst, compiled a massive dataset covering the position, migration and interaction of sharks and game fish. The researchers focused on the Florida Keys over a three-year period. In all, the team deployed nearly 300 acoustic receivers and tagged 257 fish (including 73 sharks) with transmitters on bull sharks, hammerheads, tarpon and permit.

Here’s how it worked: Every time a tagged shark or fish swam within range of the receiver, its location was recorded and tagged with the date and time. Using acoustic telemetry gave the team long-needed stats on the migratory, reproductive and feeding patterns of sharks. Then, the team ran their raw data through a unique machine-learning algorithm to model the complex interaction of environmental factors, such as time of year, lunar cycle, water depth and temperature.

“Combining acoustic telemetry and machine learning helped us to answer a host of questions about predators and prey,” said Grace Casselberry, the paper’s other co-lead author and a PhD candidate at UMass Amherst’s Department of Environmental Conservation.

Tarpon and permit repeat the same spawning migrations and return to the same spawning grounds, at the same times of year, every year. “[Sharks] seem to remember where and when the tarpon and permit aggregate,” said Casselberry.

That’s no surprise to tarpon anglers who have been outspoken about their increasing encounters with sharks, often in the form of their hooked fish getting chomped.

Bahia Honda’s Hammerhead Sharks

Bahia Honda tarpon fishing
Researchers tracked plenty of other variables to understand when a hammerhead shark was most likely to attack a tarpon. Mike Mazur

From April 2019 to July 2021, Casselberry was focused on acoustic telemetry. But from April to May in 2019, she conducted a visual survey of hammerhead sharks and tarpon at the Bahia Honda bridges to quantify depredation rates and identify factors that most influence depredation.

The survey spanned 211 hours of fishing, recording 394 hooked fish. A total of 104 fish were observed being landed. Twenty-fish depredations occurred, with 4 post-release mortalities. Any subsurface post-release mortalities were not able to be observed or recorded.

“The average time to land a tarpon was 12.7 minutes,” said Casselberry. “Depredation was most likely to occur after 9.5 minutes; post-release mortality after 9 minutes.”

Casselberry tracked the tides, currents, fight time, number of boaters fishing, number of fish hooked at one time, number of times a tarpon jumped, time of day, and plenty of other variables to try to understand when a hammerhead shark was most likely to attack a tarpon.

“Hammerheads are modifying their use of Bahia Honda in response to tarpon presence,” said Casselberry. “Their daytime presence overlaps with angling pressure. I observed a 15 percent mortality rate [of hooked tarpon].” Casselberry’s tracking data also showed that hammerheads took up residence the longest in the Florida Keys from March to June. Each month saw increased resident hours from hammerheads until a decline occurred in July.  

Potential solutions to hammerhead attacks could be policy or management based, behavior based, or technology based (shark deterrents), said Casselberry. “For anglers, try to use heavier tackle to get that fight time under 9 minutes; be aware that the outgoing tide is when the hammerheads are most likely to be around; or try night fishing when hammerheads aren’t as active.”

Tarpon caught with bait rigged on leader
Many Florida anglers and guides have reported a declining tarpon fishery since the 1970s. Chris Woodward

A recent UMass Amherst survey received answers from nearly 1,000 anglers and guides who target Atlantic tarpon. Tarpon are not part of any formal stock assessment, so talking to avid anglers is one of the best and only ways to get a pulse on the fishery. Overwhelmingly, respondents answered that the quality of the fishery has declined considerably since the 1970s.

Other results from the survey included:

  • On average, guides lost 2 to 7 tarpon per year to sharks over the last five years.
  • Respondents perceived water quality and habitat availability as the greatest threat to Atlantic tarpon; restoration efforts should be a top conservation priority.
  • Respondents supported regulations that prohibit harvest of tarpon (such as catch-and-release only). 
  • Respondents want increased science efforts to understand Atlantic tarpon ecology for conservation solutions.

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Magical Marathon Memories: Tempting a Tarpon and Trolling the Hump https://www.sportfishingmag.com/sponsored-post/magical-marathon-memories-tempting-a-tarpon-and-trolling-the-hump/ Tue, 01 Mar 2022 14:00:00 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=50333 Beauty above and below the waterline draws anglers and divers to Marathon’s rich natural resources.

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Tarpon fishing in the Keys
Spring means tarpon season in the Florida Keys. Doug Olander

Spring magic in The Florida Keys means tarpon. And there’s no better place to find the acrobatic, hard-fighting fish than Marathon.

A 10-mile-long community in the middle of The Keys that features both prime amenities as well as an Old Florida feel, Marathon serves up hot offshore, inshore, reef, wreck and backcountry fishing. But the species known as the silver king duels for top billing.

From March through June, schools of tarpon, which often weigh more than 100 pounds, congregate everywhere from the pilings of the Seven Mile Bridge to the banks in the Gulf of Mexico. Tarpon fishing also flourishes from September through November, but for fishing guides, the spring season is sheer frenzy—with many running charters mornings, afternoons and nights.

Bridge anglers anchor their boats between pilings and drift back live mullet, which often launch airborne during a tarpon attack. Hookups can be numerous, but tarpon use the pilings to their advantage to break off and get away.

To avoid line-tangling structure, anglers can head to the grass flats in the Gulf and Florida Bay, where they cast live shrimp, pilchards and pinfish and wait for a bite. Captains set up around the banks, which are like coral reefs. On outgoing tides, small fish and crustaceans sweep through breaks in the banks, known as passes, and tarpon, as well as bonefish and permit, wait there to intercept an easy meal. Fly-rodders look for tarpon swimming along the banks and cast relatively tiny flies to them, which the big fish don’t hesitate to inhale.

Anglers with a billfish
Marathon serves up hot offshore, inshore, reef, wreck and backcountry fishing. Kevin Falvey

During winter, the banks attract Spanish mackerel, which can be caught on live bait, jigs, spoons and flies. Reel the macks quickly to the boat, though, to avoid a pick-off by hungry goliath grouper.

Offshore fishermen troll ballyhoo or drift live bait for sailfish, dolphin and wahoo year-round. Many captains take the 27-mile run into blue water to fish the Marathon Hump, an underwater mountain that ranks among the top spots throughout The Keys. The hump attracts blackfin tuna and amberjack throughout the spring. Late spring through early fall, captains troll up blue and white marlin.

Large grouper on a boat
Closer to shore, reefs and wrecks hold grouper and more. Scott Salyers

Closer to shore, reefs and wrecks hold kingfish, grouper and snapper, including yellowtail, mangrove and mutton. Those reefs, which also host a variety of tropical species, make for great diving and snorkeling. With their beautiful variety of coral formations, Sombrero Reef, Delta Shoals and Coffin’s Patch lure underwater explorers.

Given the abundance of fish, Marathon’s restaurants specialize in serving local seafood. Visitors can sample fare such as shrimp, lobster and stone crabs at the Original Marathon Seafood Festival, held March 12-13, and then overnight at a full-service resort, motel, inn or even a houseboat. Stay longer and load your itinerary with additional outdoor experiences.

Patient in the Turtle Hospital
Tour the Turtle Hospital, which provides respite and medical care for injured sea turtles. Andy Newman

Hike trails at Crane Point Hammock, or schedule a guided golf-cart tour; and then visit the Marathon Wild Bird Center. Take a tour of the Turtle Hospital, which provides respite and medical care for injured sea turtles. Swim with dolphins at the Dolphin Research Center on Grassy Key, and at Pigeon Key, learn about the incredible engineering and effort that built the railway bridges connecting The Keys more than 100 years ago.

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Tracking Texas Tarpon https://www.sportfishingmag.com/story/howto/tracking-texas-tarpon/ Thu, 05 Aug 2021 00:51:30 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=47542 Late summer, early fall signal peak times for migratory silver kings.

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Tarpon school around jetty
Tarpon congregate around jetty rocks along the Texas coast. Adrian Gray

Tarpon: No word uttered on the Texas Gulf Coast stirs as much excitement for anglers. Yet, while virtually all of the region’s fishermen know about the presence of the silver king, relatively few pursue them.

“There’s a real mystique about tarpon,” says South Padre Island guide Capt. Brian Barrera. “Some people think the possibility of catching them is out of reach. But the reality is, especially down here, there are lots of tarpon, and anyone who studies up on them, puts some time in and has a little bit of luck can score on these awesome sport fish.”

Tarpon Time

The Gulf shoreline of the Lower Laguna Madre from Port Mansfield down to Port Isabel and into the Brownsville Ship Channel ranks as prime tarpon country. When waters calm from late summer into early fall, Barrera directs his focus to tarpon.

“We often start off at the Port Isabel jetties throwing lures like a D.O.A. Bait Buster. We’re optimally looking for rolling fish and sight casting to them,” he says.

Tarpon caught on D.O.A. Baitbuster
The D.O.A. Baitbuster is a favorite tarpon lure on the Lower Texas Coast. Courtesy Kelly Groce

Bait Busters are a jigging-type lure that also work as swimbaits. The shallow version comes with a single upright hook and operates at a medium sink rate so you can fish it near the surface, mid-range, or on the bottom. The deep runner weighs ¾ ounces and comes with a 5/0 Mustad hook with line-entry on top of the head, which keeps the lure sub-surface for bottom bouncing.

“I’ve caught a lot of tarpon on the Bait Buster. Throwing it is a great way to start the day,” Barrera says.

Look for tarpon facing the current outside and inside jetty walls; they also hang around large eddies and deep-water current breaks caused by displaced jetty rocks. A big fish behind the rocks just off the main wall — probably a tarpon.

Tarpon take everything from Coon Pops to Rat-L-Traps and certainly well-placed flies. But sometimes only live bait lights up the bite.

“I bring a cast net and let the water tell me what to fish. Sometimes when the pinfish are thick we’ll put one on. Other times, it’s mullet. But I’ve also seen tarpon sitting in the current sucking up blue crabs funneling out of the jetties. The angler that pays close attention to what’s going on bait-wise and doesn’t have an agenda will, more often than not, do better than those with a rigid fishing plan,” Barrera says.

Tarpon being released
As in most locations, tarpon exhibit the same schizophrenic nature in Texas — aloof one day and super aggressive the next. Adrian Gray

Jetty Fish

Other areas that hold tarpon this time of year include the jetties near Port Aransas and Port O’Connor along the central coast. My first encounter with a big school of tarpon occurred at the Port Aransas jetties, where 25 to 30 fish in the 4- to 6-foot class fed just a few feet off the jetty wall.

I’d like to tell you I caught one of the six-footers but they didn’t take anything we threw at them. We tried everything in our tackle box. That’s simply the nature of tarpon: aloof one day and super aggressive the next.

Surprising numbers of tarpon can also be found from High Island, just north of Galveston, down to Surfside, near Freeport. Anglers affectionately call this “Tarpon Alley.’’ Fishing a mile to 5 miles from the beach can prove productive, if you can get past the sharks and rough seas. Anglers often drift live or dead bait — usually mullet, pinfish or sand trout — through schools of menhaden that dominate the area during summer.

“This year we’ve had some periods of calm days already so maybe that speaks of good things for the upcoming prime tarpon season,” says Galveston guide Capt. Derek York.

Tarpon caught on a plug
When the bite is on, tarpon take a wide range of plugs and lures. On other days, only live bait will do. Adrian Gray

Tarpon Studies

Aaron Adams with Bonefish & Tarpon Trust (BTT) says that while many mysteries still cloud tarpon migration and life history, studies such as those one conducted recently by Lucas Griffin and Andy Danylchuk provide some fascinating answers.

The researchers have attached acoustic receivers to the ocean bottom throughout the tarpon’s range. These receivers detect signals from acoustic tags surgically implant into tarpon. In Texas, listening devices have been positioned from the Louisiana border to the Mexico border on the outer edge of every major bay system.

Large tarpon being tagged
The tarpon tagging research has been the result of much effort from several institutions. Here, officials with the Texas Tarpon Tagging Initiative based out of Texas A&M-Galveston place a tag in a big tarpon. They’re partnering with Texas A&M-Corpus Christi, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley and Louisiana State University. Funding has come through the Bonefish & Tarpon Trust, Pelagic Fisheries Institute and the Lyons Charitable Foundation with Mark Lyons — all for the sake of conserving the silver king. Courtesy Texas Tarpon Tagging Initiative

“The transmitters are the size of a AA battery and have a lifespan of five years, meaning not only can we implant them in a wide size range of tarpon, including those around 15 pounds, we can also track them over multiple years,” Griffin and Danylchuk wrote. “As the tarpon swims past the network of receivers, a unique ID code and date and time are saved on the receiver.

“With thousands of these receivers deployed across the Gulf of Mexico and southeastern United States, we can now track tarpon across the Gulf and adjacent waters and build a more detailed understanding of what really makes a tarpon move or, in some cases, stay,” the researchers say.

Early results show a southern migration of Texas tarpon toward Mexico each fall. The Mississippi River Delta appears to divide east and west populations.

Large tarpon are caught in the summer
Look for bigger tarpon later in the summer — August and into September. Doug Olander / Sport Fishing

Massive Monsters

Barrera says he sees bigger fish arrive off South Padre a little later than smaller ones. True monsters show in August and September. He sight-fishes for these behemoths, spending as much time on the water as possible to decipher their patterns.

Read Next: More Tarpon Fishing Tips

The current state record, caught by Michael Shane LaRue II in 2017, measured 90 inches long and weighed 229 pounds.

“The biggest fish I’ve had in my boat was easily over 200 pounds,” Barrera says. “It was an absolute monster. Its scales were as big as my hand. In Texas, we can keep one tarpon 85 inches or larger, which lines up with a potential record fish.

“I didn’t know if it was a record or not. It was on the bubble. It was a true monster but to me it was better to see that fish go back to maybe even get bigger and thrill another angler.”

That kind of conservation ethic as well as support from groups like BTT appear to be generating a tarpon renaissance of sorts in Texas. As more anglers learn that they too can enjoy the tarpon action, fishing dreams will come true and appreciation for this already legendary species will grow. And that’s good for Texas anglers and the silver king.

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Finding and Catching Trophy Tarpon in the Florida Keys https://www.sportfishingmag.com/story/howto/finding-and-catching-trophy-tarpon-in-the-florida-keys/ Mon, 15 Mar 2021 20:45:56 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=47767 Scout the bridges and the backcountry to home in on migrating silver kings.

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Tarpon caught in the Keys around a bridge
Sizeable tarpon start migrating through the Florida Keys in spring. Catch them around bridges or in the backcountry on live bait. Capt. Rick Stanczyk / islamoradatarpon.com

March means big tarpon in the Florida Keys—around the abundant bridges and in the backcountry shallows. Flats and bay boats cluster around the bridges throughout the island chain. Anglers stage near these ambush spots where tarpon pick off baitfish and crustaceans carried by the tide.

But bridges offer challenges—like when a big fish grabs your bait and decides to run toward the structure.

Capt. Rick Stanczyk, who guides tarpon anglers out of Bud N’ Mary’s Marina in Islamorada, has developed proven tactics for landing those powerful fish. For starters, he says, take it easy on the tarpon.

Unusual Tactics

Many anglers assume they must hammer the drag and pull the fish from the structure. “Actually no,” says Stanczyk, “you really want to let that fish go through the bridge and keep the drag loose, and then if the line rubs on the bridge it’s probably not going to break. If you’re pulling real hard, then the line is going to fray and break.”

Bridge tarpon generally fight harder than those hooked on the flats because of the stronger currents at the bridges caused by water funneling through the narrow openings. As Stanczyk notes, the moving water revitalizes the fish during the fight, prolonging it.

Tarpon jumping near a bridge
Bridge concrete can sever fishing lines, giving tarpon ample chances to escape. Keeping a tarpon on the hook takes equal measures of strategy and strength. Capt. Rick Stanczyk / islamoradatarpon.com

If the fish shows no sign of turning as it heads for a bridge piling, Stanczyk employs an extreme tactic that’s not for the faint of heart. He puts the rod on a seat cushion, puts the cushion in the water, and then follows the fish as it zigs and zags around the pilings.

“Loosen the reel’s drag and just put the rod through the straps of the seat cushion. As long as the drag’s loose, it won’t pull out,” he says. “It floats through the pilings, then you pick it up. Sometimes if you’re lucky, it doesn’t even get wet.”

For that reason, Stanczyk purposefully uses older tackle, such as beat-up Daiwa BG90 reels packed with grease and spooled with 50-pound braid and 60- to 100-pound monofilament or fluorocarbon leaders (depending on the water clarity).

Stanczyk says that on one evening trip, when his angler hooked a 100-pound tarpon by a bridge, they had to deploy the rod on the seat cushion five times before finally landing the fish.

Nice tarpon brought boatside
Besides fishing at bridges, captains often head to the backcountry to find spring tarpon. Capt. Rick Stanczyk / islamoradatarpon.com

Keep it Lively

Preferred locations in Islamorada include the Channel 2 and Channel 5 bridges. In the Marathon area, try the Seven-Mile and Bahia Honda bridges. Most anglers use live crabs around bridges and channels early in the morning and in the evening. During the day, the majority fish with live silver mullet.

Stanczyk sets up where he sees tarpon rolling on the surface, swimming under his boat or showing on his sonar unit. Novice bridge fishermen “could probably set up anywhere near the bridge and catch resident fish traveling back and forth,” he says.

When fishing live crabs, Stanczyk drifts because of the strong current. Mullet can swim in the current, so he can anchor in front of, under, or on the back side of a bridge, depending on the tide and where he sees fish.

Captains who anchor must tie a buoy to the end of their anchor line or use an anchor-retrieval system. When they hook a tarpon and the fish takes off, the mate can release the anchor line from the cleat to chase the fish. When the crew returns to the bridge, the buoy marks the location of the anchor.

Once set up at a bridge, give your spot 20 or 30 minutes. If you don’t get bites, try another spot, and then another, Stanczyk says.

Tarpon rolling at the surface
A hooked tarpon rolls at the surface. Chris Woodward

Open Spaces

Stanczyk finds less boat traffic as well as abundant tarpon in the backcountry, which comprises Florida Bay and Everglades National Park. “We get a lot of fish back there in the late winter, early spring,” he says. “These days there are definitely other boats back there but it’s more open water.”

As he runs his 25-foot Contender bay boat north from the Keys, he looks for tarpon rolling at the surface. If he sees that, he anchors in front of the fish and drifts back live baits, preferably pinfish.

He spools his heavy spinning outfits with 300 yards of 50-pound braided line. He ties 20 feet of 60-pound monofilament to the braid and attaches a swivel. To the swivel, he adds a 6- to 8-foot leader of 100-pound monofilament with a foam float. In clear water, he bumps that down and uses a 60- or 80-pound fluorocarbon leader. He pins the bait on a 5/0 to 8/0 J hook, using the bigger hooks for bigger baits.

“In spring, we generally catch larger fish on average. The migrating fish are showing up, which are a lot of the bigger females (80 to 120 pounds) coming in to spawn,” Stanczyk says. “You can still catch plenty of smaller ones, too. July through the fall we have resident fish that are 30 to 50 pounds.”

When anglers hook a big female tarpon, they often immediately apply pressure, but that can be a mistake.

“Fighting big fish, it’s contrary to what a lot of people think,” Stanczyk says. “In the beginning you don’t want to be pulling real hard and use a lot of force because that fish is using a lot of force. So if she’s pulling hard and you’re pulling hard then something’s probably going to break or a hook’s probably going to pull.”

Stanczyk keeps the drag light to start, reeling enough to keep the line tight and to apply a little pressure. Once the fish settles a bit, he begins to tighten the drag and pull harder.

Large tarpon targeted using electronics
Captains scout tarpon using their electronics and their eyes. If they don’t see fish at the surface, they study their side-scan sonar. Capt. Rick Stanczyk / islamoradatarpon.com

Electronic Assist

If he doesn’t see tarpon on the surface as he runs in the backcountry, Stanczyk studies his side-scan-sonar returns, which not only indicate individual tarpon and schools, but also likely fish hangouts.

“There are areas where there might be hard bottom or there might be a little dip,” he says. “It might be a bend in the channel.”

Once he locates a good spot, if he doesn’t see fish, he marks and stores the waypoint so he can return on different weather and tide conditions. If he sees fish rolling or free-jumping, he looks at the sonar and charts to determine what attracted them to the location.

“They kind of have their areas that they like, where you know you’re going to find them if they’re around,” he explains. “A lot of times it’s just kind of running from spot to spot and looking.”

Read Next: Fishing in the Florida Keys All Year Long

Stanczyk’s advice to anglers scouting bridge-fishing locations applies to the backcountry. Give a spot 20 or 30 minutes before trying another area.

“If nothing’s happening then I’m usually moving,” he says. “It’s kind of like playing pool. When you’re good at it you’re thinking three moves ahead… Sometimes plan A, B and C don’t work so you’ve got to have a D, E, and F that you feel confident in.”

And there’s no better time or place to build your tarpon-finding and fishing confidence than right now through May in the Florida Keys.

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Fishing Florida’s Fall Mullet Run https://www.sportfishingmag.com/story/howto/fishing-floridas-fall-mullet-run/ Wed, 07 Oct 2020 22:27:02 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=46570 Tarpon, snook, jacks, mackerel and sharks stalk the ceaseless waves of migrating baitfish.

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Large school of mullet underwater
Each fall, thick schools of mullet migrate south along Florida’s east coast. Every predator in the area from snook and tarpon to sharks and bluefish feast on the smorgasbord. jasonarnoldphoto.com

People who complain that South Florida doesn’t enjoy a change of seasons don’t fish the annual fall mullet run.

To anglers from Stuart to Key Largo, nothing signals that fall has arrived like the migration of these baitfish. Silver and black mullet move south in enormous schools along the Atlantic coast, all the while dodging a host of predators such as snook, tarpon, jacks, sharks, Spanish mackerel and bluefish. October marks the prime time to fish the mullet run, both offshore and inshore.

The Game Plan

Anglers never know what they might catch from one cast to the next. They don’t even need live mullet to catch the gamefish species. Half a mullet, topwater plugs, spoons, and soft-plastic bait imitations can be as effective if not more.

“There’s definitely a wave of mullet coming in,” says Capt. Chris Murray of Stuart, who fishes offshore as well as in the Indian and St. Lucie rivers. “They come in in droves, and then they’ll pause, and then there’ll be another drove.”

“We’ve got them both inshore and offshore right now,” adds Capt. Mark Nichols, founder of D.O.A. Fishing Lures. “It seems like there are a lot of mullet in the rivers. They could be here for another several weeks or a month. It just depends on whether the weather pushes them south.”

Murray usually nets several dozen mullet wherever he sees the baitfish pushing water. After catching bait, he cruises around until he spots another mullet school. Then he closely watches to see what the baitfish are doing and what’s feeding on them.

Tarpon often jump completely out of the water, then come crashing back into the middle of the school. Snook hang below the school and suck in mullet with an audible pop. Jacks charge into the school and send mullet flying.

Large mullet brought boatside
Tarpon often create a frenzy when they jump and crash into the mullet schools. When using live mullet as bait, captains often cut the fish’s tail fins to slow them, or skip them off the deck or cowling to stun them — anything to make them look erratic in the water. Chris Woodward

Murray likes to fish live mullet on a 7-foot, light- to medium-action spinning rod with a 4000-size reel spooled with 20-pound braided line. He usually attaches a 40-pound fluorocarbon leader with a 3/0 Owner Mutu Light circle hook and clips an indicator float to the leader, which allows him and his anglers to keep track of the bait.

“I vary my leaders. I like to actually start lighter,” Murray says. “Normally I rig up two that are 25-pound, two that are 30, two that are 40. When I know what kind of fish are there and what kind of heat I have to put on them, normally 40. If they’re short snook, 25 or 30 is fine.”

When drifting or slow-trolling, he hooks a mullet through the upper lip and casts it to the edge of a submerged oyster bar, which snook, tarpon and other species use as ambush spots. Murray then opens the bail of the reel and slowly lets out line.

Mullet run from overhead
The mullet run phenomenon can be an incredible spectacle. jasonarnoldphoto.com

Jacks Are Wild

On one trip I took in the St. Lucie River with Murray and Anthony Javarone, we cast out, and only moments later, I felt my mullet get very nervous. Suddenly violent splashes erupted, and whatever had scared my mullet nailed Javarone’s bait.

Following Murray’s instruction to let the fish swim for a few seconds before closing the bail and reeling tight, Javarone hooked up to what turned out to be a 15-pound jack. The fish took Javarone from one end of Murray’s bay boat to the other before it finally tired.

“Those big jacks are great practice for people who want snook and tarpon,” Murray says. “They’re a guide’s best friend. They just give you every chance to develop your rhythm.”

When jacks, tarpon and Spanish mackerel successfully raid the schools for a meal, they often stun and maim a few of the baits, which fall to the sea floor. That’s when fishing a mullet head on the bottom can be extremely effective.

The Change-Up

Fishing around the rocks at the mouth of Stuart’s St. Lucie Inlet, Capt. Greg Snyder uses a D.O.A. plastic shrimp to catch all sizes of snook, from under the minimum size limit of 28 inches to over the maximum of 32 inches. He fishes the shrimp on a spinning outfit with 30-pound braided line and a 40-pound fluorocarbon leader.

“They use the rocks as a trap,” Snyder says of the snook. “The bait hits the rocks and gets confused, and the snook take advantage of it.”

Let the shrimp drift with the current and be aware of any taps or hesitation in the drift, because that means a snook has taken the lure. “Let the tide do the work, and keep in contact with the shrimp,” he says, “because you need to be able to set the hook when they eat.”

Why would a snook eat a shrimp when mullet are abundant? I posed that question to D.O.A. luremaker Nichols. “During the first of the mullet run, the fish are all over the mullet,” he says. “But after three weeks of eating mullet, they’re ready for something different.”

Snook caught on shrimp lure
Why would a snook eat a shrimp during the mullet run? Change of taste. Steve Waters

I witnessed that fishing with Nichols in the north fork of the St. Lucie River on the last half of a falling tide. His flats skiff was surrounded by mullet and rolling tarpon, but after we threw some DOA soft-plastic mullet imitations such as a Bait Buster and a TerrorEyz without a bite, Nichols switched us to DOA glow shrimp.

Standing at the front of the boat, we waited until a tarpon rolled within casting distance. Then we cast the shrimp just ahead of the tarpon. Instead of steadily twitching the shrimp back to the boat, Nichols advises working it slowly.

“You want the shrimp to go down,” he says. “Then snap the rod and jerk the shrimp sharply, but don’t crank the reel and move the shrimp away. You want it to stay right where the fish was.”

Picture it in these terms: Here’s a shrimp, slowly sinking in the water. Suddenly it jumps up, then sinks right back down. The next time it jumps, thinking it might get away, the tarpon eats it. Using that technique, Nichols and I enjoyed about two dozen tarpon bites.

“I think it’s just easy for them to eat a shrimp,” he says. “They have to work hard to catch a mullet. It doesn’t take anything for them to catch a shrimp.”

Read Next: Mesmerizing Drone Video Shows Tarpon Attacking Mullet

Two other advantages of fishing an artificial shrimp around a mullet school: Bait stealers don’t peck at a plastic shrimp like they do a live shrimp, and Nichols can fish his shrimp exactly how he wants.

To make a D.O.A. shrimp more appealing to a fish keying on a school of mullet, Nichols fishes it below the school or on the edge of the school. That makes the shrimp look vulnerable, which makes it an easy target.

“If you’re not catching fish with a shrimp, you’re fishing it too fast,” Nichols says. “No matter how slowly you think you’re fishing it, fish it slower.”

The post Fishing Florida’s Fall Mullet Run appeared first on Sport Fishing Mag.

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Florida Everglades Houseboat Fishing Adventure https://www.sportfishingmag.com/story/travel/florida-everglades-houseboat-fishing-adventure/ Fri, 13 Mar 2020 21:49:24 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=47294 Savage Gear and SF take on snook, redfish and tarpon in the backcountry — with a little extra convenience and comfort.

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What’s better than fishing out of Flamingo in the Florida Everglades? Staying on a houseboat to fish out of Flamingo in the Florida Everglades.

Magnus Gunnarsson and Jose Chavez from Savage Gear lures had always booked a hotel room in Homestead and slogged the daily 48-mile drive between that town and the remote Flamingo Visitor Center in Everglades National Park — the jumping-off point for backcountry fishing. But one week in late January, Gunnarsson decided to try renting a houseboat from Flamingo Adventures.

According to the outfitter’s website, each 42-foot houseboat sleeps four adults and two children, with prices starting at $350. However, Chavez — Savage Gear’s head of product development — invited Sport Fishing’s Doug Olander along as well as photographer Adrian Gray and Savage Gear head of digital assets Sam Root.

Root, Chavez and Gray all brought skiffs so they could leave the houseboat tied to the marina dock to run out front for snook and redfish. To better reach tarpon on the backside of Flamingo, they took the houseboat and the skiffs to an anchorage overnight.

They also took aboard a FireDisc Cooker, a lightweight portable propane-powered unit, to prepare outdoor meals as weather permitted.

Read Next: How to Plan a Multiday Camping/Fishing Adventure in the Everglades

Chavez says their larger group of five adult males felt a little snug in the accommodations, but “it’s just so much of a timesaver not to go back and forth to Homestead,” Chavez says.

Judging by the photos, the group got into a variety of species, all on Savage Gear baits such as the Pulse Tail Mullet, Twitch Reaper, 3D Shrimp, and Baitfish.

Houseboat in the Everglades backcountry
Floating in the backcountry aboard a rental houseboat puts you right on the water when you need to be. It’s easy to tie up several skiffs, although to move the mothership, the skiffs must be piloted separately. Adrian Gray
Hell's Bay snook boatside
A Hell’s Bay snook caught on a floating Savage Gear Twitch Reaper, a sub-surface twitchbait with 4X hooks and through-wire construction. An apt small-profile lure for targeting big fish. Adrian Gray
Cooking bacon on a FireDisc
The best kind of dawn wakeup call — sizzling bacon on the FireDisc Cooker. Root took the chef honors Adrian Gray
Flamingo redfish caught on Pulse Tail Mullet
This Flamingo redfish was caught on a Pulse Tail Mullet, a weedless loose-body lure fished with a wide-gap hook. The tail design imparts a realistic swimming action and excels at drawing strikes from pressured fish, Chavez says. Adrian Gray
Running skiff from houseboat
To fish the backcountry, the group anchored the houseboat and ran to fish optimal locations with the three skiffs they brought. The water was a bit cold for tarpon, though they did manage to score. Adrian Gray
Tarpon caught in the Everglades
Gray hooked up to a backcountry ‘poon. The fish ate a Twitch Reaper. Jose Chavez
Baits for fishing in the Everglades
The trip’s arsenal included weedless and ready-to-fish Pulse Tail Mullet (left), Baitfish (which resemble scaled sardines), and Mud Minnows as well as Twitch Reapers, in floating and suspending versions, which work well for shallow flats or deeper potholes. Adrian Gray
Releasing a redfish
Chavez prepares to release a redfish caught on a weedless Pulse Tail Mullet as Gunnarsson clears the gear. Adrian Gray
Juvenile Goliath grouper
A juvenile Goliath grouper that fell prey to a weedless 3D Shrimp rounded out the multispecies trip. Adrian Gray
Cooking steak on the FireDisc
There’s nothing wrong with adding a little beef to the plate once the catch-and-release is done. Root tends to the steaks and vegetables in the FireDisc Cooker back at the marina dock. Adrian Gray

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