Andrew Roydhouse

There's a multitude of fish showing up on the Fort Lauderdale reefs. First off, on our drift fishing trips, we're catching a lot of mangrove and yellowtail snappers. An occasional big grouper might be caught on one of our drift trips too. Mainly, we're bottom fishing on that trip, but if an angler prefers a top-water rig, you have the possibility of kingfish, bonitos, blackfin tunas and mahi-mahi. All are possible catches this month fishing the water over the 100-120′ reef.

On our sportfishing charters, the stakes go up. Trolling allows us to cover 10X the territory that we can cover drifting in the same time period. We can troll deep lines and surface lines simultaneously, cover all the different water columns on the reef. Trolling the reefs this month yields bonitos and kingfish, sometimes more bonitos than you even care to catch! Also you have the chance at an oddball blackfin tuna, barracuda or wahoo! Even a sailfish or two gets caught on the troll this season.

Mahi-mahi mainly stay further offshore this time of year. Once in a while they may come in on the reefs, but they mainly stay 5-10 miles offshore. There's too many predators on the reefs this month. Going out for mahi-mahi is a gamble. We get them sometimes, but not all the time. And it requires a big investment in time, usually a 6 hour is the least we go that far offshore on as it leaves nothing to fall back on if we don't find them out there. But that's fishing… And it makes it all the more exciting when we do find a school of them and we can crush 'em, fill the whole fish box in minutes. The dolphin are out there to be found, you just have to go looking and cover A LOT of ground. Mostly schoolies this time of year but they're grouped together in schools so you can catch a good amount of them. Sometimes a big one will be out there, a loner maybe with a cow or two with him. Dolphin fishing can be hours and hours of boredom, interrupted by a few moments of chaos and panic.

Wrecks deserve an honorable mention too as they are holding some big fish this month. Amberjacks are still biting on the deep wrecks. It's a worthwhile endeavor to save 1/2 hour at the end of the trip to cherry pick a couple shipwrecks to make a quick drop on with a live bait… to see if anyone is home. Once in a while, a huge warsaw grouper might be caught. These monsters of the deep aren't caught often, but I sure get excited when one of them pops up to the surface. Coming up from so deep, the gases expand inside their belly cavity and it blows the stomach up with air. That's what's poking out of the warsaw's mouth in the picture below. These monsters of the deep are fun to catch as they fight extremely hard (until they get near the surface).

There's a lot biting off the Fort Lauderdale coast this month, especially on the reef. While some days are slow days and some days are great days, the majority of fishing trips this month should be action packed with some great fish stories. Good luck everyone. I'll sea ya on the water.

Tight Lines,

Capt. Andy Roydhouse

754-214-7863

FishHeadquarters.com

Fish Species: Grouper, Wahoo, Sailfish, Dolphin, Amberjack
Bait Used: artificial lures
Tackle Used: seawitches, ballyhoo, squid
Method Used: Trolling, drift fishing, live baiting
Water Depth: 120ft
Water Temperature: 85
Wind Direction: No wind
Wind Speed: 0 mph
Wahoo just caught trolling the Ft Lauderdale reef
Wahoo just caught trolling the Ft Lauderdale reef

Capt Rod with a monster warsaw grouper
Capt Rod with a monster warsaw grouper


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Andrew Roydhouse

About The Author: Captain Andrew Roydhouse

Company: Fishing Headquarters

Area Reporting: Fort Lauderdale South Florida

Bio: I am a 3rd generation fisherman out here off Ft. Lauderdale and have been fishing proffessionally all my life. My company, Fishing Headquarters, runs daily drift fishing trips, sportfishing privae and shared charters, night time swordfishing trips, and any other type of fishing you would like to try.

954-527-3460
Click Here For Past Fishing Reports by Captain Andrew Roydhouse