Banana River Lagoon Fishing Report
The Orlando Area Fishing Report from Spotted Tail 6.2.12
You may have heard about the proposed Pebble Mine. If not, the idea is to have a huge open pit mine, the world's biggest, in southwest Alaska. Great idea, unless you care about trout and salmon.
This link-
http://hosted.verticalresponse.com/262141/1a1f348b3c/1774503119/dd14000b65/
-contains other links and a call for action. With a pre-written letter you can express your opinion about the mine idea to the president, the head of the EPA, your Congressman and senators, etc.
Salmon used to be a common fish along both coasts of North America. Now all that's left is a tiny remnant. Please help preserve that for posterity.
Fishing this week, ah yes. A lady named Beryl came to town early in the week and dumped on us for a couple of days. I was going to go fishing on Wednesday but a minor domestic problem prevented anything more than a trip to the Econ.
In last week's report I asked about bass flies. While no responses came in, I have been doing some research and tied up a few flies based on that. I went to the Econ hoping to test them.
Beryl came to town. The Econ was up considerably, almost not fishable for a wading angler. Especially one with a fly rod. But I found a couple of places where it was feasible.
I actually got two bites. On the second I watched the bass take the fly. I missed them both.
Two bites may not sound like much, but I've never gotten a bass to hit a fly there. So progress is being made. I know I'll never figure it out, because it is fishing. But when I get a handle on it a full report will be filed. It may take a while- it's rained some more.
Tom Van Horn picked me up at 5 AM Thursday morning. We loaded two kayaks into the bed of his truck and headed to the Banana River Lagoon. He had gotten some glowing reports and we were optimistic about our chances.
A light breeze from the southwest greeted us at the launch. The sun was just clearing the trees as we paddled to the first spot. I had tied on a Floozy popper, since the water there was up, and not terribly clean at that first place.
Second cast- Wham! Twenty-four inch trout. Good way to start the day. Fourth cast- Wham! Twenty-three inch trout. It tore the Floozy apart. Another was tied on, but it was the last one in the box.
I quickly lost track of how many casts were made or bites were had, but it was smoking hot for a while. Then it cooled down. It always does. Not to worry, we went somewhere else.
Tom was tossing a surface plug and had three nice trout before I could get organized. The Floozy soon started popping though and the fish were all over it. They soon tore it apart.
I switched to a Hot Head. The trout like it just fine.
The strikes were jolting. The tippet was too light. Only two Hot Heads were in the fly bag and I lost both of them. I had one Electric Sushi and lost that too.
In the meantime Tom had lost his plug and had switched to a DOA Bait Buster. The fish didn't seem to mind.
I stopped fishing and made up a 15 pound tippet. That stopped the bleeding.
The bite slowed as the sun climbed. Since the wind was light and visibility was excellent we went looking for big redfish. Sadly, we did not find any at all.
We did find some slot reds. Using a black Clouser Minnow I got five or six, as well as some more trout.
The boats were back in the truck at 2:30. It was a hell of a day.
In general, the trout bite in the lagoons right now is as good as I have ever seen it for a sustained period. It's been smoking hot for several months and shows no sign of slowing. And the fish are running a large average size, 20 inches or so. Get out and enjoy it- it's sure to slow down!
That is this week's Banana River Lagoon Fishing Report.
Life is great and I love my work!
Life is short. Go Fishing!
John Kumiski
http://www.spottedtail.com
All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2012. All rights are reserved.