Archive for January, 2008

Central Florida Fishing Report

Friday, January 25th, 2008

flyfishingfl.com 

The weather has been up and down here in east central Florida with some days sunny and warm and others cloudy, cool, and windy. We have been getting decent catches most days despite the weather and high water.

Last Wednesday, Chris, from Buffalo , left the snow behind and joined his friend Debra for a day of fishing Mosquito Lagoon. High winds limited our options but we did manage to catch a black drum around 20 pounds along with a few redfish.

Thursday’s weather was terrible but the forecast for Friday looked decent. Dr. John from Texas wanted to try some fly fishing for redfish. Unfortunately, the conditions were not as predicted. Winds of 15-20 made for some tough fly fishing. We saw a few tailing redfish but as the weather deteriorated, so did our shots at fish. We tried our best but ended up skunked.

Monday, the winds were blowing over 20. I fished the St. John’s River with friend Paul. The narrow winding stretch of river northeast of Orlando provided some shelter from the wind. We were hoping to target American Shad with fly and ultra light tackle. We caught a lot of fish but only two shad. The variety, however, made up for the lack of the target species. We landed a few speckled perch, eight or nine nice bass, redbreast sunfish, Nile perch, and a few sailfin catfish. These prehistoric looking creatures are often mistakenly called armoured catfish. They have a tough skin and normally feed on algae and other plant material. On this day, however, we caught them on jigs and mini DOA shrimp. Quite an unusual hook and line catch.

We ended up catching only one more fish, a 24 inch trout but our lack of numbers was certainly made up for in size.

Mosquito Creek Outdoors will once again be holding a Women’s fishing clinic and wine tasting on Saturday February 9 from 9-2. Pre-registration is required. Call the store for details. Capt. Tom Van Horn and I will be teaching the ladies the basic fundamentals of fishing.

Capt. Chris Myers

Central Florida Sight Fishing Charters

 www.flyfishingfl.com

Indian River Lagoon Coast Fishing Report, January 22, 2008

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

Compliments of Mosquito Creek Outdoors, Apopka Florida

Winter clearly had a firm grip on most of America this past week, including Central Florida, and its influence has dominated our weather with snotty conditions all week. Although the weather was tough, I did manage one outing on Wednesday as part of a 15-boat group charter.  The morning greeted us with 50-degree temperatures and east winds of about 15 knots, not the best conditions by far.

We met our group at Parrish Park in Titusville around 7am, and as they unloaded from the buss I could immediately tell they weren’t from Florida.   My anglers, Keith and Sean were some of the first to department the buss, and Keith was wearing a short sleeve shirt. One of the great things about guiding anglers on the Indian River Lagoon is meeting folks from all walks of life and from distant locations, and the less they know about the our diversity of our fishery the more enjoyable the experience.  As it turned out, both Keith and Sean we from Minnesota, and they were fishing through a hole in the ice just a few weeks earlier.

 www.flyfishingfl.com

The weather conditions were not bad at first, and as I attempted to poll into our first spot we could see redfish tailing and pushing in the distance.  Currently water levels on the Lagoon are extremely low, and as hard as I tried, we couldn’t reach the fish.  Next, we departed the flat to fish in deeper water, and finally caught the two largest redfish in the group.

My good friend and lagoon mentor Captain Rodney Smith once said “as a fishing guide, on some days you are a hero, and on some days you a zero”, which sums up this weeks charters. Yesterday, I had the pleasure of fishing Catherine and Jim from Canada, and the weather was a bit windy but enjoyable.  The only problem was we couldn’t buy a bite, and after fishing hard for six hours, our net result was one redfish.

Seminars and Events

February 10th, Gander Mountain, Meet Your Maker Event

March 1st, 2nd, and 8th Bass Pro Shop Spring Fling, Orlando Florida

April 18th, 19th, 20th, Coastal Angler Magazine Boating and Fishing Expo, Melbourne, Florida.

As always, if you have any questions or need more information, please contact me.

Good luck, good fishing,

Captain Tom Van Horn


Mosquito Coast Fishing Charters
http://www.irl-fishing.com
407-366-8085 landline
407-416-1187 on the water
866-790-8081 toll free

Book a charter, and let’s go fishing.

www.flyfishingfl.com

Indian River Lagoon Coast Fishing Report, January 14, 2008

Thursday, January 17th, 2008

Complements of Mosquito Creek Outdoors, Apopka Florida

 

Although some nice fish were caught on every outing this past week, the catching was very slow for the most part.  Over the past 8 days, I had the pleasure to fish on the St. Johns River for American shad on three occasions, the east side of the Banana River No-Motor Zone, and a solo scouting trip to the Indian River Lagoon in Titusville.

 

For starters, I fished the St. Johns River in the area south of Lake Harney, and the American shad have arrived, but they are not in good numbers yet.  On both of these excursions we caught several nice shad each and a mix of some nice bass, speckled perch, and even catfish, but the catching wasn’t on fire.

 

Billy’s No-Motor Zone Redfish Caught on a Salt and Pepper RipTide Flats Chub

 

On Friday, I had a charter with three brothers Chris, Tom, and Billy on a quest for a large redfish, so we paddled in to the east shore of the No-Motor Zone.  Although it was a nice morning, with light winds from the south at about 5 knots and a marine forecast of 5 to 10 knots in the afternoon, I was a little concerned about this wind situation because paddling in would be a breeze; paddling out would be a challenge.  In the afternoon my apprehensions proved true as my experience with the marine forecast is a prediction of 5 to 10 knot winds means you add the two together, and in this case, as we faced at least 15 knots right down the teeth on our return trip.  Notwithstanding the wind situation, we did not see a single tail the whole day, and our final score was 6 puffers and one nice upper slot redfish caught by Billy on a RipTide Salt & Pepper/ Chartreuse Flats Chub.

 

Due to the windy conditions today, I returned to the St. Johns River with Captain Chris Myers.  I wish I could tell you the bite was on fire, but the truth be known, it was not.  We fished hard in the area of the old Marina Isles Fish Camp, and I caught on shad on a pink crazy Charlie, and between us we boated a half dozen speckled perch.  As my good friend Captain Chris stated, “It was a good day to be out of the offices”.

 

 

Seminar and Event Schedule:

 

January 17th, 18th, 19th, and 20th, Central Florida Boat Show Orlando Convention Center.

 

            No Motors, No Problem Seminar Friday the 18th at 700 PM.

 

January 22nd, Orlando Kayak Club Meeting, Gander Mountain in Lake Mary 7 PM, Rigging Soft Plastic Baits for Redfish and Sea Trout.

 

March 1st, 2nd, and 8th Bass Pro Shop Spring Fling, Orlando Florida

 

April 18th, 19th, 20th, Coastal Angler Magazine Boating and Fishing Expo, Melbourne, Florida.

 

As always, if you have any questions or need more information, please contact me.Good luck, good fishing,

Captain Tom Van Horn


Contact US HERE

 

Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report

Thursday, January 17th, 2008

Last week, coldest weather of the season came through the area causing the water temperature to drop twenty degrees in twenty-four hours. High winds and cold made for unpleasant fishing conditions so I stayed off the water. This week, however, was the complete opposite. For the most part, it was sunny, warm, and calm. I spent four days on the water with some excellent results.

Monday, Capt. John Kumiski and I spent the day fly fishing the Mosquito Lagoon. We began the day targeting tailing redfish in very shallow water. After spooking the first few fish, I caught one around four pounds on an olive #2 crab pattern. Capt. John quickly followed up with a redfish of similar size on a black redfish worm fly. As we were looking for the redfish, we came upon numerous large trout lying in shallow sand holes. I switched to an unweighted bendback style fly and managed to convince one of them to eat. With both trout and redfish having been landed, we went looking for some black drum. We found a school of them and Capt. John made several casts with a brown Merkin style crab. The lone redfish among the black drum was the first fish to grab the fly. The drum moved off and we were unable to find them but I was able to get my crab in front of a 27 inch redfish which grabbed it as I let it fall. John got a nice trout and I followed with one more redfish before some rain arrived and we headed in.

Tuesday, I was joined by brothers Rob and Gray from South Africa . Rob wanted to fly fish and his brother stuck with spinning tackle. We came upon numerous redfish and big trout throughout the morning. Rob was used to fishing in more remote locations with fish that are much less wary than our shallow water redfish. Although he made a valiant effort, most of his casts didn’t quite get to the fish quick enough. I elected to give them a shot at some black drum and we found a school of about 50 fish. Rob cast an olive Merkin crab to them and hooked up with a drum around 20 pounds.

I left the big fish happy and finning and got out the 5wt flyrod for some light tackle action. The green crab fly fooled a trout and a few more redfish to finish out another great winter day on the Lagoon.

This weekend, I will be at the Central Florida Boat Show at the Orange County Convention Center . Look for the Mosquito Creek Outdoors booth. In addition to the boats, there will be fishing seminars all weekend long. I will be speaking Sunday at 3pm on fishing soft plastic baits in Mosquito Lagoon.

Capt. Chris Myers

Central Florida Sight Fishing Charters

321-229-2848