A Week of Tides, A Week of Wind

A Week of Tides, A Week of Wind

Last week we were on the building side of a full moon, and along with it came low tides in the evening. Adding to the suspense, there were very few late day thunderstorms as well. Some fine fishing for “tailing” reds was in the making. Yet it wasn’t to be.

All week a stationary low sat right over us. Rare doings.  Yeah the front helped keep the thunderstorms away, but it also supplied a steady diet of strong west winds that killed any chance of seeing “tailers”.  Gotta say it was disappointing to no end.

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Redbreast 12 Year Old, Single Pot Still Irish Whiskey

Redbreast 12 Year Old, Single Pot Still Irish Whiskey

The good tides are returning. By Sunday they will arrive, and if the winds cooperate and the storms stay silent, it will be again time to stalk the flats for “tailing” reds. Love it. While I wait for the moon, however, allow me to digress to an elixir every man appreciates –  good whiskey.

Note I said whiskey with an “e”. Its not that I have anything against Scotch whisky, but the word is more often spelled with an “e” across the planet than without. Hence I have simply sided with the majority.  By preference I like bourbon, especially Knob Creek. Four Roses makes some very nice ones was well. Try their Small Batch. And there are others good ones too. Conversely Jack Daniels is found everywhere too yet is a poorly made American whiskey often mixed with Coke Cola to hide the flaws. But rather than go on about bourbon, lets cross the pond to discuss the virtues of a fine Irish whiskey.

A favorite of mine is Redbreast from County Cork. It is expensive, costly enough that I rarely have it in the house. A shame that. There are a several variations of Redbreast available, but in this post I refer to Redbreast 12 year old. Made in copper pot stills, it is, like all Irish whiskey born of both malted and unmalted barley and then triple distilled. (To my knowledge triple distillation is rarely done outside of Ireland.) Next it comes of age slowly in sherry oak casks, resulting in a wonderfully smooth whiskey of the highest order, a sensual delight on the palate, smooth, gentle, buttery, apricot and honey-like.

In closing, permit me to add this thought. Many aficionados feel adding a splash of water to a good whiskey is a mortal sin. Let them live in error if they must, but science has shown that a dash of water actually helps release the favor of a whiskey. How can that be? Well the flavor molecules are bound to the whiskey’s alcohol. The splash of water allows more alcohol to rise to the top of the glass bringing the flavor with it. Nice. Ice? Another mine field. But an ice  cube just adds water slowly permitting the whiskey’s favor to evolve in the glass over time. Drink up my friends.

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Sunset on the Flats can be your Reward

Sunset on the Flats can be your Reward:

Back on Friday we decided to give those “tailing” reds another try.  No the conditions weren’t right, far from it, but its better to be on the water than sitting home on your butt. So Andy, Dave and I took a ride out to the flats.

Sunset on the Flats can be your Reward

Sunset on the Flats can be your Reward

A light easterly breeze greeted us, along with an ebbing tide, and a thunderstorm gliding by to the north. Water temperature on the sandbar was a rocking 87 degrees. Hot, hot.  Well true to form those tricky reds never showed up, so we settled for a killer sunset that was well worth the ride.

 

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Fishing: It’s all about the Conditions

Fishing: It’s all about the Conditions

When you fish in the salt you learn fast that fishing is all about the conditions. The tide, the wind, the weather, water temperature, the sun and the moon, man everything has an impact. In the last post we looked at the hunt for “tailing” redfish and the conditions needed to make that possible. Let me add to that.

Last light on the Flats

Unfortunately the night after our successful trip was riddled with thunderstorms, making any outing impossible. The next night, however, looked promising for those amazing “tailing” redfish. The thunderstorms had started earlier in the day and were played out by twilight, although a light seabreeze gave us reason for concern. But with fingers crossed,  we forged ahead anyway, reaching the flat about 7PM. Fanning out, the three of us covered over 400 yards of water in total. The search was on for “tailers”. But after an hour it came apparent that the redfish were not going to show. Damn.

We had to face it, the conditions weren’t quite right. Yes, the light seabreeze was one problem, but I think the tide was the real issue. We had low water alright but the tide was still going out. Not good. Why? Last time it was the first of the incoming that lit the fishing fuse. This night the incoming wouldn’t happen until after dark.

Why would incoming help us? The flats were too low and too warm at the moment. The flood would inject a slug of cooler water.  And moreover the incoming creates turbulence and current over the sandbar, pushing food onto the flat. That sparks the fish to feed, especially  along the inside edge of the bar. Yeah it’s all about the conditions.

 

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“Tailing” Reds in the Twilight

“Tailing” Reds in the Twilight:

Summer fishing in the subtropics can be brutal.  Old Helios is a your merciless companion, absolutely furious, baking you to the bone as sweat rains down your face. After a couple hours on the water your energy level drains toward zero. And if that isn’t bad enough, the soaring water temperatures on the flat often kills any hope of finding aggressive fish. You’re cooked and the fish are cooked too.

So as a rule this time of year its best to focus your fishing early and late, especially if you can also get good tides. Well that just happened, amigo. During the last few days we have had strong low tides in early evening, perfect for finding “tailing” reds. But there is always a catch. Reds refuse to “tail” unless it is dead calm. So you pray there is no late day sea breeze to mess things up. And more concerning yet, late afternoon is the time of day we get powerful, towering thunderstorms, and you don’t want to be on the water in one of those. Believe me.

Dave’s “Tailing” Redfish

Luckily, last night the weather gods were on our side. Low tide arrived at 7:30PM and there were no storms on the radar screen. Zero, zilch. Not a one in our area. Plus we had calm winds. Conditions were ripe. Now it was up to us to take advantage of it.

We left the ramp around 6 PM, a tad early perhaps. But as the light lowered, the air grew still and the tide began to move we found “tailing” reds. My, my. They were not spread out on the flat but located mainly to the north of us mixed with large numbers of snook, all of them feeding right along the edge of the sandbar. Dave got a beauty right off and I caught one later right at last light. Good summer fishing!

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