High, Dirty Water Orlando Fishing Report

High, Dirty Water Orlando Fishing Report

This is the High, Dirty Water Orlando Fishing Report. I’ve been writing for weeks now that the water is high. It’s always high this time of year, for complex reasons that I do not completely understand.

One of the components of this high water is water temperature. Warm water uses more volume than cold water. When you’re talking the Atlantic Ocean, that’s a lot of water to expand. Right now the southeast US coast has the highest ocean water level of the year.

orlando fishing report

The government says the water is higher now, too.

Just so no one thinks I am just making this up, here’s a goverment website with the data: http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/seasonal.htm?stnid=8721120  This graph spotlights Daytona Beach, but the high water goes up at least as far north as North Carolina. You didn’t really think sea level was level, did you?

The elevation at the power plant in Port St. John is only about two feet higher than at Ponce Inlet. When the water along the beach rises, that water backs into the lagoons too. So the water is high.

Sunday- Makoto Enomoto, a fly fisher from Tokyo, was my angler. We went to the Indian River Lagoon. The water was the highest yet, and so dirty we could hardly see the bottom anywhere we looked, from the power plant to north of the railroad trestle.

I saw something floating in the water. I went to it to satisfy curiosity. It was a baby dolphin, dead and bloated. The sadder thing was, it’s mother was still by it, nosing it, trying to get it to respond. It must have been dead at least two or three days.

In the afternoon, poling down the shoreline, we found a baby manatee, dead and bloated along the shoreline, bobbing in the waves. At least its mother wasn’t there.

We found a few small ladyfish breaking under birds, and a few small ladyfish at the power plant. I saw a single baby tarpon roll. That was it for the day, a very tough outing indeed.

Sunday evening an anonymous but usually very reliable source told me there was clean water at the Thousand Islands in Cocoa Beach. I was there the next morning, and checked along the Pineda Flat too. There was zero clean water anywhere. I did not see a fish, or much of the bottom for that matter.

orlando fishing report

The ramp at Kelly Park. How did they manage to build the dock under water???

There was a small craft advisory, but since I was there it made sense to check the Port. The seas weren’t bad. The mullet run has to be peaking this week. Astronomical numbers of mullet fill the surf.

orlando fishing report

This vessel is not concerned about the small craft advisory.

Tuesday- Scott Radloff and I went to the Port. I brought my castnet. One throw was all it took for a day’s supply of mullet, and a few freezer bags for future reference.

The surf was still up! We saw a vintage Hewes Bonefish go surfing a good 20 feet, close to the north jetty. It looked like a real exciting ride. I would have needed a wardrobe change.

orlando fishing report

The surf was still up.

We got 10 or 12 redfish. Scott simply pinched a couple big split shots near his hook. I used a 3/8 ounce jighead with a finger mullet for a tail. Both ways worked. Scott got a flounder, too.

orlando fishing report

Scott pulls Mr. Redfish aboard.

 

orlando fishing report

Mr. Redfish, before release.

Near the Cape we got Spanish mackerel and bluefish. Scott hooked a couple sharks. The roar of the waves coming across the shoal was impressive. The shape of the shoal changes all the time, but right now it’s running out close to a couple miles.

There are not as many fish out there as I would expect, but there are certainly fish- redfish, some snook, ladyfish, bluefish, Spanish mackerel, and sharks. I got a report of tarpon in the surf. I have not checked it out. Any fish in the surf is pretty safe from fishermen in boats for at least a few more days.

orlando fishing report

Mr. Catfish, caught by me.

Wednesday- smoked the fish I took on Tuesday. Spooled a couple reels and other administrative tasks.

Thursday- wished I hadn’t spooled the reels. In spite of weather and sea conditions that were marginal at best, Dr. Lou Payor and I went out onto the Atlantic. Almost immediately a storm chased us back into the port. We fished on the inside of the jetty for a while, getting a red here, a jack there, as the weather and seas gradually and slightly improved. We were finally able to go on the outside of the jetty.

orlando fishing report

Believe it or not, this storm chased me back to port.

It was on fire.

In spite of the waves that kept coming over the bow, we stayed there three hours or so. Using live mullet we got a lot of redfish (multiple double hook-ups), and hooked two freight trains that spooled two reels. While I’d like to think they were bluefin tuna, sharks or big jacks are actually a more likely explanation. We never saw either one. Bluefish and jacks finished out our catch.

Friday- Went to the airport and picked up Makoto again. We tried to go out of the Port but the seas were rougher than Thursday. We didn’t even clear the jetty before I turned around and put the boat back on the trailer. We drove to the Indian River Lagoon to try our luck there.

A rain squall hit us. I pointed out a rainbow and Makoto said, “There are diving birds at the end of the rainbow!” We rode over and sure enough there were fish breaking. We got several ladyfish on the wire fly before the action stopped. Who knew that the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow was actually ladyfish??

We went against the shoreline. As one might guess, because of the high, dirty water, the east wind, and the clouds it was very hard to see. In spite of that Makoto spotted several redfish. One of the nailed his crab pattern and he got it.

orlando fishing report

Makoto casually fighting his fish.

 

orlando fishing report

He was happy to get it!

 

orlando fishing report

The fly in question, NOT tied by me.

Although we would see fish intermittently all day, it was the only one he would get. Most of the fish we saw required a 10 foot cast, tough to do with a fly rod.

On the way back to the dock we found more diving birds. Using the wire fly Makoto got a nice bluefish. And that was it for the day.

Saturday- 7:30 AM found me at Hidden River RV Park. Tammy and Mike were already there. We put the kayaks by the Econ, then Mike and I did the shuttle to 419. The gauge read 5.5 feet.

We started paddling and quickly learned that 5.5 feet was not enough water to clear many of the blowdowns. There were a lot! It was an obstacle course for paddlers. But it turned out 5.5 feet was too much water for good fishing.

orlando fishing report

It was an obstacle course for paddlers.

We came to a log jam. There was a fat 15 foot log there Mike wanted to paddle down the river. He and Tammy tried to free it up, which they eventually did. Tammy, very not gracefully, fell in over her head during the free-up job, which was hilarious.

orlando fishing report

This little feller was the fish of the day, one of four we caught.

A redbelly (the only one I would catch) hit my Road Runner. As it came close to my boat a LARGE gar came up and ate it. My little five foot fishing rod eventually coaxed the beast to let my fishy go. The poor sunfish was definitely the worse for wear.

At 5:30 PM we finally reached 419, soaking wet, covered with leaves and tree bits, kind of tired, and definitely exhiliarated. In spite of the effort needed to negotiate all the obstructions it had been a wonderful day on the water with good friends. You can see the photo essay of the trip here…

And that is this week’s High, Dirty Water Orlando Fishing Report.

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2015. All rights are reserved.

Share |



High Water Orlando Fishing Report

High Water Everywhere Orlando Fishing Report

There’s high water everywhere, so we have a High Water Orlando Fishing Report.

Our soldiers get wounded while protecting our freedom. View a short, touching, and thought-provoking film on the healing power of fly fishing at this link- http://mentalhealthchannel.tv/episode/healing-waters

I had a Sunday charter with Keith O’Donnell on the Indian River Lagoon. As many readers know the water is quite high right now and rather dirty in places. So I wasn’t sure what to expect.

We found some sporadic surface activity while heading to my first spot. I cast a Chug Bug and was rewarded with a smashing strike- by a gafftopsail catfish. Not expected, nor desired.

I was not expecting an alligator to make a beeline for my boat and follow us for a half mile while we looked for fish along the shoreline. But, one did. Extraordinary behavior. We finally noticed it had a piece of fishing line trailing from its mouth, so probably had one or more hooks in its gut. Sad. We did not feed it anything, though. I didn’t feel bad enough for it to do something that stupid!

orlando fishing report

An alligator like this one followed us around for an hour.

Still poling while looking for his first fish, I told Keith to sit down. We were almost on top of a manatee and I was expecting an explosion. Although we did not touch the beast, we were not disappointed. All this excitement and it was only 9 AM!

Keith sent me an email- “Thanks for a memorable day. There have not been many fishing trips where I have been pursued by an alligator, nearly rammed by a manatee, caught some good fish, lost some great fish, chased tarpon around a bay…”

The tarpon did not bite. We did not catch a lot of fish but the day was anything but boring.

Tuesday morning I launched the canoe on Lake Mills. I’d never fished there before and wanted to be able to say I’d caught a bass on a fly there. The water is high. It was oppressively hot and humid. There were very few signs of life. I did not get a bite. In an hour I was done. I’ve still never caught a bass in Lake Mills.

Wednesday Scott Radloff and I went out of Port Canaveral. Our fantasy, as always this time of year, was to find some tarpon. It did not include waves crashing over the tops of the jetties. The surfers must have been having a blast, though!

Other than the four to five foot swells the sea was pretty calm. We ran south down the beach, in the rain, as far as the steeple without seeing anything.

We ran back up to the jetties. There were a lot of mullet in Canaveral Bight and we looked for feeding fish. We did not find a goldmine, but by diligently casting live finger mullet we got a mixed bag of bluefish, ladyfish, crevalle jacks, and Spanish mackerel. We also got very wet, since it rained most of the day.

Last week I put in my report that I was looking for a canoe in the 12 to 14 foot range. A gentleman by the name of Tim Martino emailed me and told me he had a 12 foot canoe that he had built. He was moving. So if I came over and picked it up it was mine.

I went over Thursday night. Obviously a perfectionist, Tim was not happy with the way it turned out due to some minor cosmetic blemishes. I thought it a gorgeous little boat. And it only weighed 30 pounds! I couldn’t wait to try it!

orlando fishing report

It’s a beautiful little boat. But this was far as I got.

Friday I went to Peacock’s Pocket to take it on a test drive. Tim had told me it was tippy but I wasn’t expecting it to be completely unstable. I literally could not pick up the paddle. Even though I sat on the bottom of the boat I almost rolled it twice in four inches of water. Very disappointed, I just put it back on the roof of my van and drove home.

On the way I called Jay Herrington. Jay owns Fish on Fire in Orlando, and I thought a beautiful little boat would be an awesome piece of decor in his dining room. He agreed, so expect the little canoe to show up there soon.

And that is this week’s High Water Orlando Fishing Report.

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2015. All rights are reserved.

Share |



  • Port Canaveral CEO apologizes for remarks

Nasty Weather Orlando Fishing Report

Nasty Weather Orlando Fishing Report

We had several days of nasty weather this week, thus the nasty weather Orlando fishing report.

People tell me, “I miss the change of seasons.” Geez, folks! Open your eyes!

The beauty berries are ripe now, gorgeous purple clusters of berries surrounding the stalk. Beauty berries are edible, but certainly not delicious. Goldenrods are blooming all over the place. I haven’t seen any purple asters yet but they ought to be around. Orion is high in the sky before first light. He’ll be in the eastern sky right after dark in a few months. And the autumnal equinox is this coming week- the quality of the light will be noticeably different from that of say, July. Finally, there are some serious mullet running along the beach, always a harbinger of autumn.

Nasty Weather Orlando Fishing Report

The beauty berries are ripe now, a sign of approaching fall weather.

Monday found me in the canoe on my favorite bass pond. Fishing was real slow. In five hours three small bass, one bluegill, and one spotted gar came to hand. For a change of pace, most fish took a bassquid streamer. That’s two slow trips in a row there. I guess I’ll give it a few weeks before returning.

Nasty Weather Orlando Fishing Report

This was the fish of the day…

 

Nasty Weather Orlando Fishing Report

…and the fly that did the job.

Tuesday found Alexandre Pinto, a fly fisher from Sao Paulo, in the Spotted Tail. He wanted to add redfish to his life list. Based on the forecast I thought it would be a tough day. On the Indian River Lagoon, we had clouds and wind, and high, dirty water, not a good combination for finding redfish you can see and cast to. First spot- nothing. Second spot- nothing. Next spot- a few spooky fish and zero shots. Next spot, a few spooky fish and zero shots. Now desperate, I just picked a piece of shoreline at random and started poling along, watching the clouds get ever higher, wondering when the lightning would start…

Nasty Weather Orlando Fishing Report

Senhor Pinto got his first-ever redfish with lightning flashing in the background.

There were a few fish there. Alex had a few shots and got an eat. Oh, no, he missed it! He had a few more shots and got another eat. He stuck this one, and good thing, too- the storm was about a mile off and coming our way. The fly was the redfish worm, the fish was about two feet long, and after releasing it we raced the storm back to the ramp, barely staying ahead of it. Once the boat was on the trailer all hell broke loose. Made it!

Nasty Weather Orlando Fishing Report

Release technique, all important!

Wednesday saw atrocious weather. Several honey-dos got done.

Thursday saw more atrocious weather. Since unlike most of you I am aging, and because my wife asked me to, I read Social Security for Dummies. Not exactly compelling reading, but it did tell me several things I certainly need to know. If you’ve hit the magic six-oh, you should probably get a copy and spend an afternoon perusing it.

So after that chore, some fishing needed to get done. I grabbed a four-weight and a couple flies and went to a retention pond not too far from Mud Hole tackle. In forty minutes I got exactly one chunky little bass on a popping bug, a very satisfying fish from a spot I had never fished before.

Friday the weather was supposed to be bad again. I couldn’t stand being home again so tossed the kayak on the roof of the van and drove to KARS park. The park is closed for repairs. 🙁

I went to Banana River Drive, launched the kayak, and started looking for fish. To my pleasant surprise the water, although high, was fairly clear in most places. The grass looked great, both the manatee and widgeon grass. And I found a spot that had a few fish. To my surprise, a redfish took my Gurgler, the first red I’ve gotten on a surface fly in years. To show it wasn’t a fluke I would get another later. In between a little snooklet and a baby tarpon took a popper as well.

http://www.amazon.com/Social-Security-Dummies-Jonathan-Peterson/dp/1118205731

This fish took a popper, surprisingly delicately. Then it jumped six times!

To finish the day a school of reds came by and one took a bucktail streamer. So I got a hat trick on the reds with a snook and a tarpon thrown in. How do you spell S-L-A-M?

orlando fishing report

The last red of the day was fooled by a simple bucktail streamer.

Not only that, but I got to watch an alligator eat a horseshoe crab. It seems like an odd thing for a gator to eat, but they can eat whatever they want I guess.

orlando fishing report

Tammy battles a lady

On a rare Saturday fishing trip, Tammy met me at the Port just before seven am. We went into the bight, hoping to fly fish for breaking fish. There were a load there, all ladyfish, nice big ones. We got six or eight each on streamers, then went looking for other types of fish. That was not happening. We found acres of menhaden and absolutely nothing was feeding on them that we could see, other than pelicans.

orlando fishing report

The wire leader and the wire bodied fly meant we got every fish on the same fly. What a time-saver!

And that is this week’s Nasty Weather Orlando Fishing Report.

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.comhttps://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2015. All rights are reserved.

Share |



  • Rare ‘Super-Harvest Blood Moon’ To Shine On September 27, 2015 | Video

Port Canaveral Nearshore Fishing Report

Port Canaveral Nearshore Fishing Report

Did not take a photo this week. These are photos from the files.

Sunday- Went canoeing with sister Cheryl, Tammy, Mike C., Jeff the crematory builder, and several others on the Econ. The water was high enough that Cheryl and I were able to paddle the canoe up on to the foot bridge that spans the river in the state forest. Because of the high water I didn’t bring a rod, but Mike C. got one small bass in two days of casting.

Tuesday- Steve and Janice Murphy of Calgary joined me for some fishing on the Indian River Lagoon, he with a fly, she with a spin. The water is still kind of dirty, and kind of high, so spotting fish is hard. They were there, though. Janice, blind-casting with a DOA CAL shadtail, got a slot redfish and several trout. Steve only had one decent shot. Unfortunately it did not work. We all wilted shortly after noontime. The boat was on the trailer about one PM.

Port canaveral fishing report

Thursday- Anton Faith joined me for some fishing along the beach out of Port Canaveral. The weather was hot but otherwise awesome. Early there were large numbers of fish near Cape Canaveral- bluefish, Spanish mackerel, ladyfish, and crevalle jacks. They were feeding on glass minnows. We did some damage with the 3/8 ounce Sting Silver from Haw River Tackle. I pulled out a seven-weight with a sinking line and a simple bucktail streamer and did some more damage.

port canaveral fishing report

We found some tarpon, feeding on glass minnows. They did not want anything we offered.

Friday- Scott Radloff joined me for some fishing along the beach out of Port Canaveral. The weather was hot but otherwise awesome. Early there were large numbers of fish near Cape Canaveral- bluefish, Spanish mackerel, ladyfish, and crevalle jacks. They were feeding on glass minnows. We did some damage with the 3/8 ounce Sting Silver from Haw River Tackle. I pulled out a seven-weight with a sinking line and a simple bucktail streamer and did some more damage.IMG_8119

We found some tarpon, feeding on mullet, just spectacular. They did not want anything we offered. Using a mullet, Scott jumped one that tossed the hook on that first jump, a battle that lasted about one second. It was the only one that bit. We did hook a couple of sharks. That was it.

IMG_0022

Saturday- the Brinkman is running, smoking some Spanish mackerel and bluefish. I love to smoke those fish, and love the beach fishing this time of year. It should remain good through October.

And that is this week’s Port Canaveral Nearshore Fishing Report

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2015. All rights are reserved.

Share |