Kingfish and Cobia
Capt. Tom Van Horn
August 8, 2009
Indian River Lagoon - Saltwater Fishing Report

Mosquito Creek Outdoors Indian River Lagoon Coast Fishing Report, August 7, 2009
By Captain Tom Van Horn
Events and Seminars:
Tuesday August 11, 2009, Free Natural Bait Fishing Seminar, 7 pm to 9 pm Mosquito Creek Outdoors in Apopka Florida, call 407-416-1187 for more details.
Saturday, August 15, 2009, Ghost Crab Pot Removal, Haulover Cannel Ramp 8 am, call 407-416-1187 for more details.
This past week my adventures started out with several early morning inshore charters on the lagoon, and when I say early, I'm talking about being on the water casting to fish before the morning sky begins to light up. I know this adds a certain degree of difficulty to the equation, launching your boat, traveling across the lagoon safely, and locating and catching fish in the predawn darkness, but don't knock it until you have tried it. The predawn hours during the summer are one of the most enjoyable and productive times to fish, and if properly planned out ahead of time, perfectly safe. Life is there to live, how we live our lives is up to us, and remember nobody gets out of it alive.
The top water trout bite was good last week with a number of handsome over slot fish devouring Rapala Skitter Walks during low light periods. The floating and matted sea grass is a hindrance, but our patience paid off with some specks in the 5 to 6 pound range.
In addition, we found some nice sea trout, redfish, and snook, holding under the floating mats of widgeon grass in close to the shoreline, and a fluke style bait like the DOA CAL rigged weed less on a #4 Copper Head hook, retrieved over the top of the grass resulted in some explosive strikes. Many of the redfish were also located in very close to the shoreline harassing finger mullet, and a well-placed plastic fluke style bait worked well as long as you get into a position to present the bait ahead of the fish.
Moving out near-shore, the kingfish bite is as good as it gets. The near-shore water is clean and clear with heavy concentrations of pre spawn smokers settling in along the beach in depths ranging from 15 to 40 feet, and on the reefs of 8A and Pelican Flats with bonito, blacktip sharks, large yellow jacks and cobia mixed in. The best action has resulted from slow trolling live pogies (Atlantic menhaden) on steel stinger rigs, but here's where the problem lies. The bait schools have been located south of the Cocoa Beach Steeple , so many anglers are spending a lot of time and fuel running the beach looking for bait. What bait I found this past week was located in very close to the beach, so I would suggest bringing some large diving plugs and spoons, or purchasing some frozen Spanish sardines before you leave the dock, so you are not left empty handed.
Lastly, the cold water has moved in a bit pushing the manta ray in on the shoals off of the Cape bringing the cobia in with them. Finding the rays has been tough, but for those anglers who found them last week, they were rewarded with limits of cobia.
As always, if you have any questions or need further information, please contact me.
Good luck and good fishing,
Captain Tom Van Horn
Mosquito Coast Fishing Charters
http://www.irl-fishing.com
407-416-1187 cell
Mosquito Creek Outdoors, it's where your fishing and outdoor adventure begins, visit http://www.mosquitocreek.com.
More Fishing Reports:
