Three Lagoons Fishing Report

Three Lagoons Fishing Report

Finally, a more-or-less full week of fishing. Our travels this week brought us to the Mosquito Lagoon (twice), the Indian Rver Lagoon (twice), the Banana River Lagoon, the Econlockhatchee River (no fishing though) and a brief stop at Port Canaveral. So we have a three lagoons fishing report.

three lagoons fishing report

The boats wait for us to finish the shuttle.

Sunday I joined Tammy and Mike Conneen for a kayak trip down the still-flooded Econ. It had peaked earlier at 18 feet and on Sunday was at 12 feet (https://waterdata.usgs.gov/fl/nwis/uv/?site_no=02233500&PARAmeter_cd=00065,00060), still mostly over its banks. The weather was awesome and everything was going fine until I took a “shortcut”, followed by everyone else.

three lagoons fishing report

Mike Conneen, navigator extraordinaire.

 

three lagoons fishing report

Off we go into the woods.

 

three lagoons fishing report

Don’t trespass!

Before long there was no current to follow and we were darn confused, paddling around in the woods. Mike got the phone out (GPS app). We followed him back to the river, losing about an hour in the process.

three lagoons fishing report

We’re definitely in the woods.

 

three lagoons fishing report

Still in the woods.

 

three lagoons fishing report

Tammy doesn’t care. She always enjoys herself.

When we got to the St. Johns there was no river, only a very large lake. It’s still lapping the sides of SR 46 and the CS Lee boat ramp is still closed.

three lagoons fishing report

Cheryl on the lake that once was the St. Johns River, near SR 46.

 

three lagoons fishing report

Remember to run at idle speed!

Monday Tammy and I went scouting on the IRL, launching at Parrish Park. The water is high (https://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?02248380) and dirty in most places. We fished around some culverts and Tammy got snook, redfish, and ladyfish. She foul-hooked a trophy black mullet. She wanted a seatrout but we could not find one. The mullet may have weighed more than all the other fish combined.

three lagoons fishing report

We converted one redfish on a DOA CAL shad.

Tuesday Scott Radloff and I did a Mosquito Lagoon survey. This lagoon has by far the cleanest water of the three lagoons, and quite a few mullet too. We actually saw a handful of redfish, getting shots at two and converting one on a DOA CAL shad. I got six snooklets on a #6 Clouser minnow, beautiful little fish that would have looked great in an aquarium. We also got a half-dozen slot trout, one on a jig and the rest on a DOA Deadly Combo.

three lagoons fishing report

Scott got a trout on a jig.

Wednesday Miss Chellie Gentry joined me for a fly fishing charter on the IRL. In the morning we hit maybe ten culvert pipes. None of them had fish. She finally got her first saltwater fish, a tarpon, on a gurgler. It was a wonderful moment- I’m sorry I didn’t get a photo.

three lagoons fishing report

The magic pipe produced a couple dozen ladyfish…

Then we hit the pipe I had been looking for all day. The ladyfish were going crazy, and she got three redfish too. They were not very big but they were all on fly. We called the outing a success! Chellie, thanks for fishing with me!

three lagoons fishing report

…and several redfish!

Thursday Mike Conneen and I met to check out the Banana River Lagoon, the third lagoon in the three lagoons fishing report. The water was a soupy olive green. Nowhere could you see the bottom. There was a dearth of baitfish. Mike actually caught a slot trout by blind casting with a Vudu Shrimp. We had the kayaks back on our cars in a little less than three hours.

three lagoons fishing report

Mike battles a trout…

 

three lagoons fishing report

…which was actually a solid fish.

While in the neighborhood it seemed appropriate to check the ramp at Port Canaveral. They are operational, and in spite of the big seas there were several trailers in the lot. I didn’t see any mullet and asked a fisherman who had come in to the ramp if he had seen any. He said, “I fish here regularly. It was dead out there. I used mud minnows for bait all morning and did not get a bite. And no, there weren’t any mullet.”

The obvious question is, where are they? It’s certainly mullet time.

Friday found me back on Mosquito Lagoon with son Alex and his friend John. We fished a couple bars and caught a few trout on spin tackle, then went looking for redfish. We actually found a few (and a few black drum too) but did not convert, and did not get one. About noontime threatening weather caused us to race the storms back to River Breeze. We got the boat on the trailer just as the storms hit us, some darn close timing when lightning is involved.

That is this week’s three lagoons fishing report! Thanks for reading!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2017. All rights are reserved.

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Post-Hurricane Orlando Fishing Report

Post-Hurricane Orlando Fishing Report

This is the post-hurricane Orlando fishing report, such as it is.

Like the rest of Florida, my family was impacted by hurricane Irma. Unlike much of the rest of Florida, the impacts on us were minor inconveniences- no power or running water for three days. We’ve been through hurricanes. We can deal with that.

Yard work in my yard and a needy neighbor’s yard kept me busy for several days. A working chain saw can be a beautiful thing after a storm like this.

The Cassini spacecraft ended its mission to Saturn this week. You can see some of the amazing images it captured here… http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/the-cassini-spacecraft-amazing-photos-of-saturn/ss-AArVtXL?li=BBnb7Kz

Thursday I towed the Mitzi to River Breeze. The park was open, the boat ramp was too. The water was high, the ICW full of manatees.

The Yamaha overheated about three minutes out. I used the trolling motor to take a quick tour of Bissett Bay. Lots of mullet and glass minnows and a few ladyfish were what I saw. I did not catch a fish. Then I put the boat back on the trailer.

On the way home I decided to check some of the other boat ramps. The ramp at Titusville Municipal Marina was OPEN. Parrish Park sustained damage but one ramp is still OPEN. As of Thursday, Kennedy Point Park was CLOSED.

With the exception of the Biolab Road ramp, the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge is CLOSED. See this link for updated information- https://www.fws.gov/nwrs/threecolumn.aspx?id=2147606777

As of Thursday afternoon the St. Johns River ramp at CS Lee Park is CLOSED. If the river rises any more SR 46 will be closed too- the water is almost over the pavement.

The launches on the Econlockhatchee are CLOSED.

The ramps at Port Canaveral were supposed to open Friday. Check their facebook page or website, http://www.portcanaveral.com

Restore Our Shores is looking for volunteers to help with the Indian River Lagoon restoration. See this link for more details- https://restoreourshores.org/importance/

Friday the thermostat in the Yamaha got replaced. I think the overheating problem is now solved, but it will take a water test to be sure.

That is this week’s post-hurricane Orlando fishing report! Thanks for reading!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2017. All rights are reserved.

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greetings from florida!

greetings from florida!

irma passed by. although it has caused much misery statewide, we are fine. we have no power so i may not get a report out this week. Susan and i cleaned up the Mitzi today, and with any luck i’ll get out in the next day or two. yard work can wait!

i hope everyone who gets this is fine too.

we will get back to a normal routine as soon as we can

all the best…

john kumiski
www.spottedtail.com

Orlando no fishing report

Orlando no fishing report

My fantasy of big tarpon off Cocoa Beach this week has not been realized. I spent most of the week getting ready for a (hopefully) quick fling with Irma.

I had four days booked next week- all have been cancelled. I hope to at least get out on my own, but am taking a wait-and-see to evaluate how much damage the storm causes to local infrastructure and my own property.

In the meantime I’ve put a photo essay together of Florida East Coast fishing this time of year, recorded in years past. Fishing along our beaches truly can be world class. That will have to do…

orlando no fishing report

The mullet will be running after the storm passes. Finding mullet may mean…

 

orlando no fishing report

…tarpon!!!

 

orlando no fishing report

 

orlando no fishing report

 

orlando no fishing report

 

orlando no fishing report

There will be sharks out there, too. Lots of them.orlando no fishing report

 

orlando no fishing report

 

orlando fishing report

There may be shrimp boats working out there.

 

orlando no fishing report

Balls of bay anchovies attract all kinds of attention.

 

orlando no fishing report

Finding little tunny working…

 

orlando no fishing report

…almost always leads to…

 

orlando no fishing report

 

orlando no fishing report

…some memorable catches!

 

orlando no fishing report

 

orlando no fishing report

 

orlando no fishing report

Pompano on a Gotcha.

 

orlando no fishing report

Rodney uses a bluefish to make a point.

 

orlando no fishing report

Bluefish will get thick. These two wanted the same Gotcha.

 

orlando no fishing report

Other fish we run into this time of year include…

 

orlando no fishing report

…snook;

orlando no fishing report

 

orlando no fishing report

…Spanish mackerel, lots of them;

 

orlando no fishing report

…and redfish, usually big ones.

orlando no fishing report

That is this week’s Orlando no fishing report! Thanks for reading!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2017. All rights are reserved.

Fishing Bear Lodge Photo Essay

Fishing Bear Lodge Photo Essay

After four flights and three days of travel, I am sitting in my living room. There’s no place like home!

Internet in Alaska remains terrible, so my reports were of necessity short and photo poor. This Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay will share the best images of the summer.

Let’s rock it.

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Fishing Bear Lodge, the logo.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Steve and Brock celebrate a northern pike.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Sockeye salmon in a frenzy in a small creek.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

A rock bowl in a small creek.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Moosage in Lake Beverley.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Mountain view from Lake Beverley.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

The Kulik Spire from Lake Kulik.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Jeff with a fat Arctic char.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

We caught lots of Arctic grayling on dry flies.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Stacy rocks a sockeye salmon.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Misty mountains were a recurring theme through the summer.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Blaine says this fly box is the most organized thing in his life.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Grayling on dry fly.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Another fat grayling in the net.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Bushwacking up hills while wearing waders is hard work. The view makes it worth the effort.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Water rushes toward Lake Beverley in a small creek near the lodge.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Gene, Gene, the fishing machine, with a nice Arctic char.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

No flowers yells “ALASKA!” to me like fireweed.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Ellie filets a sockeye salmon.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Trout fishing along Lake Beverley’s shoreline.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

This fine rainbow trout attacked a faux mouse.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

This trout, the best I saw all summer, also fell for a mouse.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

A released grayling regains its equilibrium.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

A fleet of Fishing Bear boats crosses Lake Beverley.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Craig hides behind a fat grayling.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

I never saw a dog who loves water the way Boone does.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

I photographed Blaine photographing Steve.

 

Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay

Arctic char release.

 

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Angie found this moose horn on Lake Beverley’s shoreline.

That is this week’s Fishing Bear Lodge photo essay!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2017. All rights are reserved.

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Last 2017 Fishing Bear Lodge Fishing Report

Last 2017 Fishing Bear Lodge Fishing Report

This is the August 27 Fishing Bear Lodge fishing report, my last from here this year.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

An Alaskan classic, this sockeye salmon was caught by Jeff.

The last of our fishing guests left this morning. The quality of the light borders on autumnal. A few cleanup days and a few travel days separate me from central Florida, friends, and family.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Angie found this moose horn on Lake Beverley’s shoreline.

The fishing this week past was the toughest of the season. The Agulapak was slow two days, even breaking out every technique we knew. The grayling actually exhibited some symptoms of hook avoidance. Pike fishing for us produced but a single fish. It did break a rod, however. Only the char bit well, fat, healthy fish with an attitude.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Jeff got this big char on a pink bunny leech.

While we caught char on nearly everything we tried, the best char fly by far was a cerise bunny leech, an Alaska standard. Sinking lines produced more fish after flies presented on floating lines stopped producing.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Katie with a nice pike on a very rainy day.

Feeder creeks are mostly empty of live salmon. Dead ones litter the banks. Sockeyes are still staged at creek mouths, though. I have to wonder if there’s a second push of spawners in the future. I won’t find out.

That is 2017s final Fishing Bear Lodge fishing report!

There will be no report next week. The next one will be coming from Florida’s space coast! Thanks for reading!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2017. All rights are reserved.

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Fishing Bear Lodge Fishing Report 5

Fishing Bear Lodge Fishing Report 5

fishing bear lodge fishing report

A view from Beverley Lake.

This is the August 20 Fishing Bear Lodge fishing report.

There hasn’t been any frost yet, but the fireweed has mostly gone to seed. Alaska’s short summer hurtles toward autumn.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

The colorful fireweed blossoms are mostly gone.

Fishing has remained excellent. Anglers using dry flies still catch grayling by the score, lovely fish in equally lovely surroundings. After a relatively rain-free week, the streams are running low and clear.

Dead sockeye salmon litter the banks of creeks. Plenty of fish still guard redds, and they are still dropping eggs. Trout and char are still in creeks, pigging out. Beads are still working well. I suspect a flesh fly would work well, too.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Jerry Grodin caught this fat char on a bead/wooly bugger combination.

The Agulapak River has been fast and steady for grayling and rainbow trout. Nymphs, streamers, and dry flies are all working.

Piking remains hot, but not in all locations. When you hit the right spot, action has been furious on poppers and streamers. A few folks even use spin tackle!

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Anita and Blaine with a fat pike.

I’ve a fortnight left here before returning to Florida, and should re-hang my guiding shingle there around September 15. Although it’s great being here, there’s no place like home!

That is this week’s Fishing Bear Lodge fishing report!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2017. All rights are reserved.

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Fishing Bear Lodge Fishing Report 4

Fishing Bear Lodge Fishing Report 4

This is the August 13 Fishing Bear Lodge fishing report.

We wait inside the lodge, watching the rain and waves come down Lake Beverley. After a week of catching fish, no one is anxious to get out in this nasty, 54 degree weather. We did have a wind- and rain-free day this week. It was delightful, if short-lived.

Fishing has remained excellent. Yesterday’s trip to the Agulapak River bordered on epic, with at least one angler leaving early after getting tired of catching rainbows to 23 inches on dry flies. Now that is a nice problem to have!

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Owen battles a trout on a local creek.

Sockeye salmon drop thousands of eggs in feeder creeks, and trout and char follow them gorging on those eggs. Beads have been extremely effective in fooling these fish.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Dave Bousfield with a nice char taken on an egg-sucking leech.

Dry fly fishing for grayling remains excellent, although streams are swollen from all the rain. This lovely fish remains a staple for our anglers.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Ellie and Ellie with a fat grayling.

I only fished for pike one morning this week. It was good, with a fish over 36 inches. Justin and Conner had a half-day pike outing and had excellent results on both streamers and poppers.

I effected a rescue this week. I had two gentlemen out fishing. We were wading above a rapid and a deep pool. I was working with one, and turned around to see the other out in water deeper than he should have been, obviously in some distress. “What are you doing out there?” I asked. “I’m over my waders.” “Try to come back to us.” He couldn’t do it. I waded out after him and grabbed his hand. The other guy grabbed my hand. With all of us pulling we all got back into shallow water. More excitement than I need!

One of our guests this week (not involved in the above incident) was Randy Lint, owner of Big Creek Coffee Roasters. He brought product that we’ve been drinking all week and it was excellent. He offers a subscription service where the highest quality coffees are delived to your door via USPS Priority mail. If you enjoy a fine cup of java you ought to check it out at BigCreekCoffee.com.

The days get noticeably shorter. Leaves will soon start changing color. The end of my Alaska season is on the horizon.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

The timing is never bad for a prayer like this.

That is this week’s Fishing Bear Lodge fishing report! Thanks for reading!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2017. All rights are reserved.

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Fishing Bear Lodge Fishing Report 3

Fishing Bear Lodge Fishing Report 3

This is the August 6 Fishing Bear Lodge fishing report.

It rained all this past week, every day. We got wet, stayed wet. Wah wah. The fish didn’t care much, except for one creek that got blown out. We fished elsewhere.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Ethan Price got this fine rainbow trout on a mouse fly. Yes, it was raining.

Mousing for rainbow trout has continued great, with fish running to over 20 inches, If the mouse action slows, switching to streamers has worked too. The egg-sucking leech has worked well.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

This rainbow also took a mouse. Yes, it was raining!

The char fishing has not picked up yet. Salmon have begun to spawn. Where are the char?

Dry fly fishing for grayling has been a dependable and entertaining way to spend a few hours. Caddis and mayfly imitations both work well. Grayling are such lovely little fish!

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Greg used a caddis imitation to entice this grayling. You know it was raining!

The pike have been reliable and entertaining. AND, I didn’t cut my fingers this week, which is awesome.

I should write an ode to sleeping bags. At the end a long day in the rain, nothing feels better than climbing into a delicious, warm sleeping bag.

That is this week’s Fishing Bear Lodge fishing report! Thanks for reading!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2017. All rights are reserved.

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Fishing Bear Lodge Fishing Report 2

Fishing Bear Lodge Fishing Report 2

This is the July 29 Fishing Bear Lodge fishing report. The Lodge sits approximately 60 miles north of Dillingham, Alaska.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Fly fishing with the back drop of the Kulik Spire.

The report this week is not much different than last. Pike fishing was off the charts. I get piked every time we fish for them, which is to say I end up with bleeding fingers. Their teeth resemble razors. Ouch.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Steven and Brock Garrity celebrate a fly rod pike.

Dry fly fishing for grayling has continued excellent, every single trip. We have been getting grayling on the mouse fly while mousing for trout.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Young Sook with a dry fly caught grayling.

Mousing for rainbow trout has also been great, with fish running to over 20 inches, If the mouse action slows, switching to streamers has worked too. The dolly lama has been popular.

A few char and sockeye salmon have been caught as well, although not much effort was expended on these species this week. I expect the char fishing to pick up as the salmon begin to spawn.

fishing bear lodge fishing report

Michael and Young Sook Garrity show off a sockeye salmon.

Many thanks to the Garrity family, our guests this week!

That is this week’s Fishing Bear Lodge fishing report!

Life is great and I love my work!

Life is short- Go Fishing!

John Kumiski
www.spottedtail.com
http://www.spottedtail.com/blog
www.johnkumiski.com
www.rentafishingbuddy.com
https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/jkumiski

All content in this blog, including writing and photos, copyright John Kumiski 2017. All rights are reserved.