Mosquito Lagoon Gator Trout

Mosquito Lagoon Gator Trout
Mosquito Lagoon Gator Trout

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

New Smyrna Beach - Mosquito Lagoon - Indian River Lagoon Fishing Report December 2017

New Smyrna Beach - Mosquito Lagoon - Indian River Lagoon Fishing Report December 2017

We are about the wrap up 2017, and the fishing couldn’t get much better over the past couple weeks. Fishing in Mosquito Lagoon and the North Indian River Lagoon has been outstanding. My fishing charters in the lagoons have found black drum schooled up by the hundreds, bull redfish and smaller redfish schooled up and tailing on flats, and loads of snook in winter-time holes. December is close to being full booked, don’t wait till last minute for a holiday season charter!!!

Fishing for redfish in Mosquito Lagoon and North Indian River Lagoon has been excellent during the past month. Smaller redfish are finally starting to school up with falling water levels. Tailing activity on the grass flats has improved daily. This makes for great sight casting with lures and live bait for redfish in the 5-10 pound range. There’s still been a couple schools of bull redfish over 20 pounds roaming deeper flats. We were fortunate to catch a bunch this past month sight casting when the weather was right, however, each passing week decreases odds for the right conditions needed. Live bait is practically a must for those this time of year.

Incredible numbers of black drum are being found in the Mosquito Lagoon and Indian River Lagoon. We located schools of 500+ fish a few times during the past month, including a school yesterday that had close to 1000 drum. These fish are in pre-spawn mode for an early spring spawn session. Catching has been outstanding. Average size is in the 10-20 pound range and they can be caught with live bait or flies.

Keeping our fingers crossed in Central Florida for another mild winter. We are seeing superb numbers of snook schooled up in a few areas from Ponce Inlet to Titusville. We are catching 10+ every day on soft plastics and live bait. Sizes can vary because they are mixed together, numerous small ones all the way up towards a rare fish close to 20 pounds. Season closes December 15th on our coast, so it’ll be catch and release after.

Can’t really report much on spotted sea trout over the past month because I haven’t been fishing for them or targeting them at all. With that said, approaching cold weather this weekend will surely change things up for the remainder of the winter as the giants over 10 pounds will flood their way into shallow water to warm up. And usually once they make that move they will be there till early spring. It will be an excellent time of year to try your hand for a world-class trophy gator trout. And I’ll do a lot more of it when that happens.

The current conditions don’t really show any signs of slowing down, in fact, approaching cold fronts may accelerate a bite. Only a handful of days remaining for December and January is filling up quick. While I take last second scheduling if I have open days, DON’T wait till last minute to schedule a trip for you or your family. Call me at 386-212-4931 or email to secure a date. Read my fishing charter page to view the top reasons why you should book your trip with me today. I look forward to fishing with you soon…

Pictures from the past month can be found on my website...http://www.floridasightfishing.com/report.htm

Sunday, November 5, 2017

New Smyrna Beach - Indian River Lagoon - Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report November 2017

New Smyrna Beach - Indian River Lagoon - Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report November 2017

The first cold fronts of the year arrived in Central Florida just before Halloween and the fish went banana’s with red hot bite actvitity! Fishing in Mosquito Lagoon and the North Indian River Lagoon has been phenomenal lately to say the least. My fishing charters in the lagoons have been species grand slam (or even super slam) trips each day targeting snook, redfish, tarpon, speckled trout and black drum. Water levels have dropped considerably and sight casting to all of the above species has been possible. I’ve been super busy with lots of charters. We are quickly approaching the year-end holidays, the calendar will be full. Don’t wait till the last minute, secure openings now.

The early hard cold sent all the snook running for their winter hang outs. If you know where those few places are, they can be caught be the dozens. That’s exactly what happened lately as I had a couple days with over 40 snook landed, and multiple other days with 15-25 snook to the boat. Sizes can vary because they are mixed together, numerous small ones all the way up towards a rare fish close to 20 pounds. More and more will continue to pile into the holes. The catching bonanza doesn’t last forever, but we should continue to post solid numbers daily from now till into January. Plugs, soft plastics, and live bait will be our ticket to success.

Fishing for redfish in Mosquito Lagoon has been excellent. The cold weather sent them quickly to the sand sloughs, sand holes and troughs on the shorelines yielding some fantastic sight casting. Now that it’s warming up a big again, Mosquito Lagoon redfish have been tailing well on grass flats and cruising shorelines. These fish all range from 5-10 pounds and catching can be really good for the foreseeable future. Water levels will continue to drop and schools will continue to get bigger and bigger throughout the winter. The recent full moon grouped up a couple schools of big bull reds over 20 pounds, likely the last time they’ll be schooled up for a few months. We connected on a few giants over 30 pounds recently.

There’s been a lot of baby tarpon from 5-15 pounds piled up in parts of the Indian River Lagoon and behind Ponce Inlet. They will stay there throughout the winter now. They were pretty active and biting well, but the recent cold weather quickly shut them down. They will bite better on some warmer trends, but tarpon fishing the remainder of the year can be unpredictable. Bigger adult fish over 50 pounds have left the region and won’t be back till late next spring or early summer.

Fishing for spotted sea trout in Mosquito Lagoon and the North Indian River Lagoon has transitioned from a numbers game to targeting lesser numbers of giant trophy trout. For the next few months we will see some of the biggest speckled trout in the world laid up in shallow sandy areas. We will have great chances to sight cast gator trout in the 6-8 pound range and spot some giants over 10 pounds. Last winter I saw a three I estimated in the 14+ pound range. Right now, they are biting really well, trying to gorge themselves on thinning bait supplies. As the water gets colder and cleaner they are going to get super spooky and lethargic making things ultra tough.

The current conditions are ripe to continue for an unbelievable month of catching in November and December. I’ve got 7 days left open for November. I’ve got 13 days left open for December. While I take last second scheduling if I have open days, DON’T wait till last minute to schedule a trip for you or your family. Call me at 386-212-4931 or email to secure a date. Read my fishing charter page to view the top reasons why you should book your trip with me today. I look forward to fishing with you soon…

Pictures from the past month can be found on my website...http://www.floridasightfishing.com/report.htm

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

New Smyrna Beach - Ponce Inlet - Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report September 2017

All is well on the east coast of Florida after Hurricane Irma blew through the New Smyrna Beach area a week ago. In fact, I spent the last few days on the water in Mosquito Lagoon and experienced a phenomenal redfish bite with nearly 20 caught each day on lures. Our area received flooding rains and storm surge, so water levels in the Mosquito Lagoon and Indian River Lagoon are considerably higher. Many of the ICW docks near Ponce Inlet and New Smyrna Beach are heavily damaged which may impact snook and trout fishing over time. But the grass flats in Mosquito Lagoon are in great condition with clean water, healthy grass, and loads of baitfish. Since the hurricane I’ve located huge schools of redfish, black drum, saw several tarpon and some giant speckled trout. Fall fishing looks to be outstanding! 
Fishing for redfish in Mosquito Lagoon and near Ponce Inlet has been on fire both before and after the hurricane. We are at the peak of spawn time for redfish on the east coast, so we’ve been targeting schools of big bull reds over 20 pounds. Catching has been outstanding with multiple bull reds landed each day. On the shallow grass flats in Mosquito Lagoon, smaller 5-10 pound redfish have been schooled up by the dozens, if not more. Sight casting and catching has been outstanding with multiple fish landed each day on lures or live bait. Fishing for redfish will continue to be strong all through the fall and winter. 
Prior to the hurricane there was excellent fishing for spotted sea trout in Mosquito Lagoon using live pigfish. croakers, and mullet. The hurricane has severely limited our ability to catch and maintain these baits for the time being. So for now, fishing for trout will strictly be via lures and/or live mullet. While we still catch some, it won’t be by the dozens like during the summer months. Big gator trout over 7-8 pounds will get a lot more feisty in October and November as cold fronts move through, thinning out baitfish supplies and moving them up into shallow water. 
Fishing for tarpon around New Smyrna Beach and down into Mosquito Lagoon also was pretty good prior to the hurricane. During September we were locating fair numbers of 60-100 pound tarpon laid up in Mosquito Lagoon and connecting on soft plastics and jigs. As things have calmed down this past week, they are still here, just a bit more scattered and on the move. Tarpon will only be on the radar for the next few weeks, then approaching cold fronts will drive them south for the winter. 
Prior to the hurricane we were starting to locate a lot of snook in Mosquito Lagoon and catching them regularly around docks in New Smyrna Beach. Since then, snook have been tough to locate. We saw the same thing last year for hurricane Matthew but things stabilized within a couple weeks and took off. Snook fishing should repeat and stabilize over the next week and then take off like a rocket the remainder of the fall and into December. 
Fall fishing is an excellent time to hit the coastal waters around Central Florida, I’ve got 5 days left open for September and around 14 days left open for October. Don’t wait till last minute to schedule a trip for you or your family. I take last second scheduling if I have open days. Call me at 386-212-4931 or email to secure a date. Read my fishing charter page to view the top reasons why you should book your trip with me today. I look forward to fishing with you soon.

Pictures from the past month can be found on my website...
http://www.floridasightfishing.com/report.htm

Friday, August 4, 2017

Ponce Inlet - New Smyrna Beach - Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report August 2017

Ponce Inlet - New Smyrna Beach - Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report August 2017

Down to the last little month or so of summer and the bite is still red hot in the Mosquito Lagoon and near New Smyrna Beach and Ponce Inlet. We’re fishing schools of redfish every morning in Mosquito Lagoon and wrapping things up catching bunches of spotted sea trout. Lots of snook and tarpon in the deeper waters around New Smyrna. Fishing is not gonna slow down for the next 6 weeks, then we’ll start to see baitfish thinning out and the fall transition taking place. I’ve got 12 days left open for August and about the same for September. Get in the great catching while you can!!!

Fishing for Mosquito Lagoon redfish have been excellent the last couple weeks. Lower water levels have the fish schooled up big time during the morning. Numerous groups of 75-150 grouped up fish in the 5-10lb range. GIANT bull reds have also been schooled up in both lagoons for their annual spawn with fish in the 20-40lb range coming to the boat each day last week. Summer and early fall is prime time for catching these trophy size redfish. Live bait has been the ticket with mullet, pinfish, pigfish all catching plenty. Soft plastics, plugs and spoons have worked when throwing lures.

The Speckled Trout bite in Mosquito Lagoon is still going strong. It’s also picked up well in New Smyrna Beach around oysters, creek shorelines, and docks. Live bait is producing 15-20 trout per day; many are smaller keeper size fish with some big ones upwards of 7-8 pounds too. Fishing for speckled trout will remain like this until the cold fronts start to roll through and baitfish supplies run out in late September.

Fishing for Snook in New Smyrna Beach and Ponce Inlet has been good around the docks, bridges and shorelines. However, it’s going to get even better next month when cold fronts start to get going and baitfish begin their fall migration. Where snook are hanging out now makes for tougher fishing with heavy gear and lots of lost fish or break-offs but we’re getting a fair number of bites each time we fish them. Snook season reopens on September 1st, so for the next few weeks it’s still catch and release.

Lots of juvenile tarpon in the 10-30 pound range were around last month, then numbers thinned out again last week which tends to be normal. Should see a big increase in numbers of bigger adult fish in the 50-100 pound range this month and September as they start to work their way south for the fall.

Summer vacation season is winding down and kids are heading back to school. I’ve got 12 days open for August and around the same for September. Don’t wait till last minute to schedule a trip for you or your family. I take last second scheduling if I have open days. Call me at 386-212-4931 or email to secure a date. Read my fishing charter page to view the top reasons why you should book your trip with me today. I look forward to fishing with you soon…

Pictures from the past month can be found on my website...http://www.floridasightfishing.com/report.htm

Sunday, July 9, 2017

Ponce Inlet - New Smyrna - Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report - June 2017

Wow…can the fishing get any better than what we’ve experienced over the past couple months. It’s been a Fishing in Mosquito Lagoon and around New Smyrna Beach has been a CATCH FEST! Loads of big speckled trout, bunches of redfish, and several snook were caught in June. Nearly every trip I’ve done since mid-April has seen 25+ fish brought to the boat. The best news…it’s not gonna slow down for at least a couple months. The only thing holding you back is my jam packed summer charter calendar. But I’ve still got a few dates open in July and more in August so don’t delay! 
The Speckled Trout bite in Mosquito Lagoon is still going off! Nearly every trip is producing 20+ trout. Lots of keeper size fish for eating, but a bunch of big ,catch and release, trophy size, fish in the 25-30” range. Boated two 30” long trout during the past couple weeks and several more in the 28-29” range. Baitfish bite is where it’s at (mullet, pigfish and croakers). Topwater plugs and soft plastics can produce some too. Trout bite will stay strong all summer. In fact, last July was phenomenal for big trout in the 28-30” range. 
Mosquito Lagoon redfish have been schooled up around bait pods throughout the area. Lower water levels can produce some big schools, while other days they are loosely scattered. Regardless, they’ve been biting well. We had a couple days recently with 20+ redfish landed. While that’s out of the norm, most other days are seeing 4-8 redfish being landed. Just like trout, live bait like pinfish, pigfish, mullet, croakers, and shrimp are getting them caught. Targeting the bridges around New Smyrna, as well as the jetties at Ponce Inlet with baitfish is catching big bull redfish over 20lbs. Summer months are prime time to catching giant bull redfish as they school up in massive numbers to spawn over the next few months. 
Snook action is really picking up steam as the bigger fish move closer to Ponce Inlet for a summer spawning session. We’re targeting docks, bridges, and shorelines along the way. This style of fishing is not easy, it’s pure combat fishing with heavy gear and hard fights to pull them from structure. As such, many get lost or broken off. But the ones we do catch are in the 5-12lb range. Snook are also widely scattered in the Lagoons as well, but bites can be more random and tough to predict. We did catch a couple this past week on live bait. Snook season remains closed for the summer so it’s all catch and release. 
We’re in the peak of the summer vacation season and it’s super busy. My calendar was booked full for June and July is almost fully booked as well. I’ve got 8 days open in July and 14 days open for August. Don’t wait till last minute to schedule a trip for you or your family. I take last second scheduling if I have open days. Call me at 386-212-4931 or email to secure a date. Read my fishing charter page to view the top reasons why you should book your trip with me today. I look forward to fishing with you soon…

Pictures from the past month can be found on my website...
http://www.floridasightfishing.com/report.htm

Saturday, April 22, 2017

Ponce Inlet - Indian River - Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report April 2017


Almost to April now…w’re in the peak of spring break travel season, so the calendar is super busy. Fishing in the Mosquito Lagoon and Indian River Lagoon has been going off! Water levels are really low and gin clear, making for some big schools of redfish. Spring bait run is getting underway and with warming temperatures the speckled trout has been really heating up with big gator trout being caught. Black drum are almost ready to spawn so there are multiple schools hanging around the Lagoons. Also catching some nice snook here and there as well. April, May and June calendars are filling fast and usually are full booked…don’t wait till the last second to try and schedule!

Redfish fishing in Mosquito Lagoon has been the best thing going! The water levels have been pretty low for a couple months now and with the gin clear clarity it’s making for big schools of redfish. Sightfishing as you can expect has been fabulous. Live shrimp and mullet have been putting the most fish in the boat. Soft plastic shrimp, jerk baits and swim baits have also been working well. It’s been a bit windy the last week or so to look for schools of big bull redfish over 20 pounds that are forming on deeper flats in the Indian River Lagoon. Things should really take off for them during April and stay consistent through the summer.

Warmer temperatures are leading to increased numbers of bait fish moving around. That’s a recipe for big speckled trout to get active and bite well. April and May are two of the best months to target giant trout, with higher odds to catch a trophy over 30 inches. It’s all about live mullet if you really want to catch some big ones. Although you’ll see a few being caught on soft plastics as well. Smaller schooling size trout in the 10-20 inch range are piled up along creek, slough, and channel edges. Live shrimp, plastic shrimp or jigs will catch plenty.

Black drum are getting ready to spawn, so there are a bunch of schools in the Indian River Lagoon and Mosquito Lagoon right now. They don’t fight as well as a redfish, but they pull good and can provide a nice change of pace. Most of the fish are in the 5-10 pound range with a couple groups holding fish over 20 pounds Live shrimp and cut crabs will both make catching easy.

Snook that were schooled up over the past few months are now scattering throughout the ICW and Lagoons again. We’ll find them scattered around docks and shorelines from now through the early fall. Live shrimp and soft plastic shrimp are the two best bets before we start targeting them with Mirrolure plugs.

I’ve got 2 days open next week. April is getting full and is typically one of the two busiest months of the year. May and June have really been booking lately. I take last second scheduling if I have open days. Call me at 386-212-4931 or email to secure a date. Read my fishing charter page to view the top reasons why you should book your trip with me today. I look forward to fishing with you soon…

Pictures from the past month can be found on my website...http://www.floridasightfishing.com/report.htm

Friday, March 24, 2017

New Smyrna Beach - Indian River - Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report March 2017


Almost to April now…w’re in the peak of spring break travel season, so the calendar is super busy. Fishing in the Mosquito Lagoon and Indian River Lagoon has been going off! Water levels are really low and gin clear, making for some big schools of redfish. Spring bait run is getting underway and with warming temperatures the speckled trout has been really heating up with big gator trout being caught. Black drum are almost ready to spawn so there are multiple schools hanging around the Lagoons. Also catching some nice snook here and there as well. April, May and June calendars are filling fast and usually are full booked…don’t wait till the last second to try and schedule!

Redfish fishing in Mosquito Lagoon has been the best thing going! The water levels have been pretty low for a couple months now and with the gin clear clarity it’s making for big schools of redfish. Sightfishing as you can expect has been fabulous. Live shrimp and mullet have been putting the most fish in the boat. Soft plastic shrimp, jerk baits and swim baits have also been working well. It’s been a bit windy the last week or so to look for schools of big bull redfish over 20 pounds that are forming on deeper flats in the Indian River Lagoon. Things should really take off for them during April and stay consistent through the summer.

Warmer temperatures are leading to increased numbers of bait fish moving around. That’s a recipe for big speckled trout to get active and bite well. April and May are two of the best months to target giant trout, with higher odds to catch a trophy over 30 inches. It’s all about live mullet if you really want to catch some big ones. Although you’ll see a few being caught on soft plastics as well. Smaller schooling size trout in the 10-20 inch range are piled up along creek, slough, and channel edges. Live shrimp, plastic shrimp or jigs will catch plenty.

Black drum are getting ready to spawn, so there are a bunch of schools in the Indian River Lagoon and Mosquito Lagoon right now. They don’t fight as well as a redfish, but they pull good and can provide a nice change of pace. Most of the fish are in the 5-10 pound range with a couple groups holding fish over 20 pounds Live shrimp and cut crabs will both make catching easy.

Snook that were schooled up over the past few months are now scattering throughout the ICW and Lagoons again. We’ll find them scattered around docks and shorelines from now through the early fall. Live shrimp and soft plastic shrimp are the two best bets before we start targeting them with Mirrolure plugs.

I’ve got 2 days open next week. April is getting full and is typically one of the two busiest months of the year. May and June have really been booking lately. I take last second scheduling if I have open days. Call me at 386-212-4931 or email to secure a date. Read my fishing charter page to view the top reasons why you should book your trip with me today. I look forward to fishing with you soon…

Pictures from the past month can be found on my website...http://www.floridasightfishing.com/report.htm

Sunday, February 19, 2017

New Smyrna Beach, Indian River, Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report February 2017

2017 is flying by…spring is right around the corner! If you’re looking to schedule dates for March and April…don’t delay, it’s the two busiest months of the year!!! Our inshore water around East-Central Florida has mostly returned to normal; with clear water in both Lagoons providing excellent sight fishing. Water levels have dropped considerably over the past month creating big winter time schools of fish. It’s been awesome fishing for redfish, black drum, and big spotted sea trout. Many days have yielded 10-20 redfish caught with some trout and drum mixed in Not much is going to change over the next month except daytime temperatures. Spring leads to continued daily fishing for the same species, however we’ll get an uptick in activity for big bull redfish over 20lbs and better bite activity out of the big trout. 
Fishing for redfish in Mosquito Lagoon has been super good! There’s been big winter time schools of redfish all over the place with many holding 100-200 fish. The lower water has them condensed in deeper sloughs, basins, creeks, and deeper flats and really clean water has allowed for awesome sight casting. They’ve been ravenous for live mullet, shrimp and mud minnows. We’ve also been catching them on spoons, soft plastics, and crankbaits. Have had several days over the past month with 10-20 redfish landed. Big bull redfish over 20 pounds in the Indian River Lagoon and Mosquito Lagoon have been starting to assemble into small spring schools. This will increase in March and April creating bigger groups of 50-100 fish anticipating summer time spawn. It’s two of the better months to catch trophy size redfish in the 20-40 pound range. 
Bunches of big speckled trout have been laid up on super shallow flats in Mosquito Lagoon. They were really lethargic for the first couple months of this month because of the cold water, but they are starting to eat better with warmer temps and increasing numbers of mullet on the flats. The best fishing for a trophy size trout will really get going in the next 6-8 weeks with increasing chances for a trout over 10 pounds. We’re catching most right now on live mullet with others coming on soft plastics. 
There’s been a crazy amount of black drum schools in the Indian River Lagoon and Mosquito Lagoon during the past month. A couple of the schools have 20-30 pound fish, while the others are average fish in the 5-10 pound range. Thhey don’t run out the drag like a redfish will, but they pull hard on the light tackle equipment we use. Live shrimp and cut crabs will both make catching easy. 
A recent hard cold snap shut down the snook bite for a bit. Now an increase in warmer weather, is quickly breaking up winter schools of snook as the scatter around our region. We’ll still catch them every day, just not in the 20-30 snook per day numbers like we did over the past two months. Had some better days a couple weeks ago that produced some quality fish in the 25-30” range. Live shrimp and soft plastic shrimp are the two best bets before we start targeting them with Mirrolure plugs. 
Only have 2 days left open for February, and 11 days left open in March. April is peak spring break vacation months and my calendar will be full so don’t wait till last minute. I take last second scheduling if I have open days. Call me at 386-212-4931 or email to secure a date. Read my fishing charter page to view the top reasons why you should book your trip with me today. I look forward to fishing with you soon…
Pictures from the past month can be found on my website...
http://www.floridasightfishing.com/report.htm

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

New Smyrna Beach Area - Indian River Lagoon - Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report January 2017


Happy New Year to everyone, hopefully it’s a prosperous 2017 to all. The new year is off to a great start for us fishing daily in East-Central Florida. It’s been a rather warm winter thus far, with only a few passing cold fronts. The fish are going back and forth between winter and fall patterns because it’s been so warm. Water clarity has cleaned up considerably in both the Mosquito Lagoon and North Indian River Lagoon which allows for great sight casting on the grass flats. It’s been a daily dose of redfish, black drum, snook and speckled trout over the past two months. There shouldn’t be much change in that over the next 4-6 weeks as we await spring’s arrival. 
There was some crazy good snook action the last 6 weeks in few areas I routinely target them during winter months. In the Indian River Lagoon that action is starting to wind down lately as the fish break from schools and move back to their normal summer hangouts. However closer to Ponce Inlet we should be able to keep it going for another month in the creeks before they too scatter. We’ve caught loads of snook up to 30”, with many guests catching 10-15 per day with me. Shrimp, mullet, soft plastics and crank baits are top choices. 
We’ve been finding a bunch of schools of black drum over the past few weeks in the Indian River Lagoon and Mosquito Lagoon. We’ve plucked fish from at least a dozen different schools that have 50-100+ fish. Most of them are in the 5-12lb range with a few mixed in approaching 20 lbs. They don’t run out the drag like a redfish will, but they pull hard on the light tackle equipment we use. Live shrimp and cut crabs will both make catching easy. 
The daily redfish scenario in Mosquito Lagoon has depended on the weather. Water levels have dropped quite a bit so the schools have been getting bigger. In between the fronts they are tailing in groups over grass flats. When the cold fronts come they are laid up in sand sloughs or troughs. Clean water is yielding some great sight casting though. Most days we’ve caught 5-10 and could certainly be more if we didn’t spend a lot of time fishing for other species. Pre-spawn schools have been forming in the Indian River Lagoon on fish in the 20-40lb range, although the groups of 15-25 fish are loosely put together and a little tough to target with wind and cloud cover lately. Based on what I’m seeing though we’re poised for a strong March-May on giant bull reds, but until then it may be a little hit or miss based on weather. 
Seeing some good numbers of big speckled trout on flats in both the Mosquito and Indian River Lagoon. Truth be told, haven’t spent much time on them lately. Just catching some here and there while blind casting soft plastic lures instead of sitting and targeting exclusively with live mullet. Have seen some whopper gator trout laid up in sand spots around the cold fronts, several fish over 10lbs, with a few definitely in the 12-14lb range.
Have been slammed for January, only 4 days still left open. February has been booking really quick, 13 days still available before it’s full. March and April are peak spring break vacation months and my calendar will be full so don’t wait till last minute. I take last second scheduling if I have open days. Call me at 386-212-4931 or email to secure a date. Read my fishing charter page to view the top reasons why you should book your trip with me today. I look forward to fishing with you soon…

Pictures from the past month can be found on my website...
http://www.floridasightfishing.com/report.htm