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Flamingo - Raw Thumbs

Capt. Benny Blanco
January 10, 2010
Flamingo - Saltwater Fishing Report

If you can find a current rip in Whitewater or surrounding bays, you will find fish… fishing current rips is a very effective way of targeting gamefish without having to work miles of shorelines. Snook, Redfish, Trout, Tarpon and Grouper regularly use areas with current rips as food supply stations and when conditions are right, they will flock to them like clockwork. Some of the rips I fish are time sensitive, where the tide has to be flowing good first thing in the morning and others are sensitive to water levels. Understanding the conditions that make the spot right is only half the battle… approach and boat positioning for effective casting coverage is the other half. In all cases, it is critical to stake-out up current, just close enough to target the beginning lee edge of the rip and moving the boat up further only when you have covered the area several times. The fish will line the lee side of the rip and where the rip dumps into either a basin or cove, waiting for bait to get flushed to them.

During the Winter months in Flamingo, more fish push into Whitewater and surrounding bays in search of warmer water and food. It's a great time of year to invest in expanding your knowledge of the Flamingo Back Country… the rewards can be bountiful.

With the exception of the first two real cold days just before Christmas, the bite has been exceptional. Before that front, the fish were very active all over the Park and after those couple days of transition, they went right back into feeding mode. We've successfully targeted them on the Florida Bay Flats, in the muddy water of East Cape, in the clean rivers from Ponce Inlet North and all over the back country. As is always the case, wind direction and water clarity determine each days' route… it's hard to pick a bad direction right now.

The Evans crew made the trek down from Jacksonville a couple of days before Christmas… it was Dad's big Christmas surprise for his two eldest sons. The bite a couple days earlier was tough and the weather prediction was not very promising, but they ultimately listened and arrived bundled up, ready to fish. We stopped at a current rip close to the Shark River first thing and got into a serious Gag Grouper bite… they caught several each and were taken to the house a couple of times by fish that simply overpowered our tackle. With the wind shifting to the NE and a decent outgoing tide, the water on the Coast cleared up just enough to allow us to net a ton of good sized white bait. We worked our way North, hitting points, bars, creeks and submerged trees… the boys had very little down time. Most of the time they were doubled or tripled up with Snook and Redfish… it was truly nonstop action. After we reached our Northern limit we headed back South of the Shark to work the middle of a good incoming tide and we immediately got back into the action. Except the fish grew… Snook to 31" and Redfish to 34". The fish were making up for a couple days of hiding out… and the Evans crew didn't give them a break. After the tide on the Coast died, we headed back into Whitewater where they caught too many Trout to count… and at the last stop, before the sun sent us packing, little Hunter Evans caught a baby Tarpon to put a Grand Slam in the books. The boys piled into their Dad's truck exhausted… with grins from ear to ear and very little skin left on their thumbs. It was a great day!

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Mike and Scott were back at it again… doubled up... We had waking and tailing fish all over is in the morning…

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Then, we hit the coast for a bunch more… another double

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We got to test a couple of the new Signature Series Spinning Rods from TFO… I was very impressed! I will be retiring my Loomis' rods for this more economical equivalent. If you're interested, I will have a complete review up on my site within the next week.

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Mike and Chuck had a great day up the Coast… many firsts and lots of quality fish.

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Lance Benson and Charles Foschini got out before a big front and had a phenomenal day. We jumped a large triple digit Tarpon first thing and then banged out 15 or so decent Snook up the Coast before they absolutely cleaned house in Florida Bay. Lance landed this Snook on fly in the middle of an insane Snook feeding frenzy. Charles managed two large Redfish in the middle of all that Snook madness and we called it a day after he was nearly spooled by an unknown beast.

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Tommy Jr. and Rocco were true diehards… fishing from sun up to sun down. This was easily my favorite trip of the year… the boys caught everything, including a ton of Snook and Redfish at the end of the day to register their first Back Country Slams! Booyah, Rocco!

Flamingo Fishing Forecast:

This Winter style fishing will be here for a while... it's the coldest Winter we've had in a long time and it doesn't look like it's going to let up. If you can brave the cold, the fish are there and hungry.

Please visit my website www.FishingFlamingo.com or my Facebook Page for daily updates http://www.facebook.com/pages/Miami-FL/FishingFlamingocom/144271487513?ref=nf ... know when the fish are biting and browse some great pictures!

Target Species:

Snook, Redfish, Trout, Tarpon, Black Drum and Grouper

More Fishing Reports:

 

From 5" of water to offshore wrecks, I will tailor a trip in Everglades National Park that will blow you away. Come aboard one of my top of the line Maverick or Pathfinder skiffs and enjoy the comforts of the best back country boats while we explore some of the most beautiful water in the World.

Contact Info:


8900 SW 124 ST
Miami, FL 33176
Phone: 305-431-9915
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