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Free Range Hunts Vs. High Fence
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<blockquote data-quote="Capt RB" data-source="post: 1536756" data-attributes="member: 85987"><p>How can you compare a fenced hunt to the friggin ocean?? Your in Fla you deal with the stream on the east coast. You should know that the sword bite that was 35 miles south of Stuart yesterday will have that same group of fish off Stuart in less than 18 hours in the spring. For the next 2 months the east side of the stream will have the monster fish running south for the spawn. Know your species well enough and you will see in the data exactly where to be. Know how the tide works over structure in your area and you will know exactly what time to be in that spot to capitalize on it. Fishing the rigs of the gulf will put them on the structure. Knowing what data to look at for your species of choice will put you on the correct rig for that species. Knowing which tide to fish that rig to capitalize on those environmental anomalies to maximize your time/effort takes education. That education needs to be paid for. How you pay is your choice. Guide/charter time on the ocean or both. </p><p> This is the type of information I provide daily during the fishing season. In the last 3 years 3 first overall tournament wins 39 different calcutta pots. Every customer had a 1,2or3rd place in some form in every tournament over those 3 years.</p><p> There are charter capts up here that make there own fad's and because our bluewater fishing starts 80miles from the beach it has it's advantages. But if the water isn't conducive for the target species doesn't really matter. It's the same with a temp break if the salinity level is not right and your underwater temps are not inverted to congregate the bait you go fishless or get 1s and 2's vs a boatload. We had a poor year for swordfish. Yet my clients all caught or hooked swords when they targeted them every trip this season.</p><p>The reason for that relies more on regulations than poor fishing. With the offshore monuments that Obama enacted. He concentrated the longline fleet where the rec boats normally fish. Becaus e they don't have the range to reach the seamounts 190 miles offshore they cannot capitalize on those regulation changes. However even with a constant pressure of 4+ longliners working the same areas we had a few monsters caught as well as 3 of my clients getting spooled due to being in water deeper than their line capacity(in 1 case 13900' of water)</p><p>Don't even get me started on what the wind farm work is doing to our area. Just the electromagnetic interference alone will change the fishing in such a bad way it will put alot of small boat operators right out of business. All this is documented and they are doing it anyway</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Capt RB, post: 1536756, member: 85987"] How can you compare a fenced hunt to the friggin ocean?? Your in Fla you deal with the stream on the east coast. You should know that the sword bite that was 35 miles south of Stuart yesterday will have that same group of fish off Stuart in less than 18 hours in the spring. For the next 2 months the east side of the stream will have the monster fish running south for the spawn. Know your species well enough and you will see in the data exactly where to be. Know how the tide works over structure in your area and you will know exactly what time to be in that spot to capitalize on it. Fishing the rigs of the gulf will put them on the structure. Knowing what data to look at for your species of choice will put you on the correct rig for that species. Knowing which tide to fish that rig to capitalize on those environmental anomalies to maximize your time/effort takes education. That education needs to be paid for. How you pay is your choice. Guide/charter time on the ocean or both. This is the type of information I provide daily during the fishing season. In the last 3 years 3 first overall tournament wins 39 different calcutta pots. Every customer had a 1,2or3rd place in some form in every tournament over those 3 years. There are charter capts up here that make there own fad's and because our bluewater fishing starts 80miles from the beach it has it's advantages. But if the water isn't conducive for the target species doesn't really matter. It's the same with a temp break if the salinity level is not right and your underwater temps are not inverted to congregate the bait you go fishless or get 1s and 2's vs a boatload. We had a poor year for swordfish. Yet my clients all caught or hooked swords when they targeted them every trip this season. The reason for that relies more on regulations than poor fishing. With the offshore monuments that Obama enacted. He concentrated the longline fleet where the rec boats normally fish. Becaus e they don't have the range to reach the seamounts 190 miles offshore they cannot capitalize on those regulation changes. However even with a constant pressure of 4+ longliners working the same areas we had a few monsters caught as well as 3 of my clients getting spooled due to being in water deeper than their line capacity(in 1 case 13900' of water) Don't even get me started on what the wind farm work is doing to our area. Just the electromagnetic interference alone will change the fishing in such a bad way it will put alot of small boat operators right out of business. All this is documented and they are doing it anyway [/QUOTE]
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