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October Fishing at its Best!

Capt. Alan Sherman
October 12, 2008
Miami - Saltwater Fishing Report

October is here and the Fall Migration continues to excite South Florida Fishermen. Head over to Biscayne Bay or any of the Ocean Inlets and take a look across the water and you are almost guaranteed to see fish activity somewhere in your sights. Schools of baitfish from the smallest glass minnows to large black mullet have been and will continue to migrate along the Southeast Coast and into the bays as hungry large fish gorge on them until they are full. Just a few days ago I took my wife on a walk along the beach at Haulover Inlet and saw anglers catching snook, bluefish, Spanish and king mackerel, bluerunners, jacks and permit right from shore. Gulls were diving everywhere and baitfishes were being pushed to the surface where hungry predators were anxiously waiting to eat them. The fishermen were in a frenzy too quickly making casts or unhooking fish as fast as they could so they could make another cast to the hungry fish that were eating the baitfish.

In the ocean a few days before we were treated to calm waters and hungry kingfish and quickly limited out with kings to 13 pounds and in the bay one quick cast of my 10 foot Lee Fisher Net filled two live wells with large pilchards. Jacks, bluerunners, sea trout, barracudas and snappers were forcing the baitfish to the surface and then crashing into them with an explosion of whitewater. On Friday my anglers were hooking up on almost every cast using ¼ ounce Hook Up lures tipped with a Gulp Pogy. Just yesterday my anglers from the West Coast of Florida got in on the action or at least got to see the Fall Migration action taking place as the predators had too much to choose from and at times seemed full and not interested in what we were throwing. Again the bait was thick and one cast filled the well with large pilchards. It was too rough for us to go offshore and get in on the kingfish action and too rough to get close to where Spanish and small king mackerel, bluefish, jacks and ladyfish were crashing baits in the rough outgoing tide in the inlet but we fished inside and watched an angler fishing from the rocks catch two snook. Later we had tarpon rolling around us and big jacks crashing into monster schools of finger mullet. We threw Hook Up lures, Rapala X Raps and live baits at the tarpon and large jacks but there was too much bait for the fish to single out our offerings. Toward the end of our short 4 hour charter the two anglers had caught a bunch of bluerunners and jacks on Hook Up lures tipped with a Gulp Pogy a few barracudas and a short gag grouper plus a 9 pound jack crevalle on a live pilchard.

Flamingo will continue to be hot with action from tarpon, snook, redfish, sea trout, sharks, snapper, jacks, ladyfish and many other species right up to the first real cold cold fronts and then the migratory species like the mackerel, bluefish and pompano become part of the catches well.

If your in the market for a new landing net then you need to check out the Stow Master landing net line. I have owned two Stow Master landing nets in the last three years and the only reason I don't have my origional net is because I allowed it to catch a mangrove tree in a small creek with a lot of current and it tore the net and broke the handle. The Stow master landing net is a knotless net that is coated with a material that almost makes hooks getting stuck a thing of the past. It has extensions and folds in half taking up half the space of a normal landing net and easily stows in a rod locker or hatch making it impossible to be blown out of you boat while traveling. Stow master nets can be bought in many of your local tackle dealers or on line at http://www.stowmaster.net/

Do you live on the water? Do you have a dock or sea wall behind your home? If your answer was yes and you have read my report then you need the Super Fish Light on your dock or sea wall. The Super Fish Light easily attaches to your sea wall or dock and runs off of a 110 volt power cord and once set up to go on at night and turn off at a specific time will have snook, tarpon, snappers, jacks, ladyfish and baitfish like pilchards, shrimp and glass minnows right at your back door. From there you can either name your new pets or catch them for catch and release or dinner. www.superfishlight.com I hope to have some pictures real soon of my Super Fish Light and the fish it has attracted.

Captain Alan Sherman"Get Em" Spotfishing Charters
7864362064
[email protected]
www.getemsportfishing.com

Check out my report in the Miami Herald's Sports section under Fishing Updates each Thursday, the Florida Sportsman Magazines South Florida Internet Fishing Report (www.floridaspotsman.com), my monthly Action Spotter Fishing Report for the South Region in the Florida Sportsman Magazine each month or tune into the Florida Sportsman Magazines Live Radio Show on 1080 WMCU or WKAT 1360 on the AM dial or listen on the internet at www.1080wmcu.com every Saturday morning from 7 to 8 AM and here the up to the minute fishing forecasts from some of the top Capt.'s in South Florida like Capt. Jimbo Thomas on the Thomas Flyer, Capt. Bouncer Smith on Bouncers Dusky, Capt Skip Bradeen on the Blue Chips Too out of Whale Harbor Marina, Capt. Wayne Conn on The Reward Fleet, the Newport Fishing Pier and more.
Check out my new web site and see the monthly catches! Sponsors: Yamaha, Bob Hewes Boats, Maverick, Minn Kota, Lowrance Electronics, Daiwa, General Motors & Chevrolet, Rapala, Mustad, Ande Lines, Pure Fishing, Gulp, Berkley, Precision Tackle, Capt. Hank Brown's Hook Up Lures, Hydro Glow Lights, Costa Del Mar Sunglasses, Saltwater Assassins, Key Largo Rods, Lee Fisher Cast Nets, Smartshield, Master Repair in Stuart Florida, Power Pole, Stow Master Nets, superfishlights.comCapt. Alan Sherman"Get Em" Sportfishing Charters

Miami Fishing Forecast:

Count on this action to continue right into November and maybe longer and with the large amounts of baitfish that have infiltrated our area this year I look for the baitfish to stay in the bay hopefully throughout the year keeping the mackerels, bluefish, ladyfish and large jacks in the bay and of course our residential fish like the snook, tarpon, snappers, grouper, sea trout and barracudas will always be nearby in North or South Biscayne Bay.

Target Species:

Tarpon, Snook, Sea Trout. Mackerel, Sharks, Cobia Snapper

More Fishing Reports:

 

Capt. Alan Sherman is Coast Guard Licensed and Insured and specializes in No pressure calm water light tackle fishing in the prestine waters of North & South Biscayne Bay, Offshore and Flamingo in Everglades National Park from his 2005 22' Pathinfinder Bay Boat named "Get Em", powered by a 2006 Yamaha V MAX 200 hp outboard engine. The "Get Em" is loaded with all updated features and all fishing tackle is top of the line. The "Get Em" targets tarpon, snook, redfish, sharks, sea trout, dolphin,etc

Contact Info:

"Get Em" Sportfishing Charters
1286 NE 99th St.
Miami Shores, FL 33138
Phone: 786-436-2064
Alt. Phone: 305-757-5503
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