The highlight of the month has been the 50+ lb permit we caught in the Florida Bay off of a wreck! Photo coming soon.
Let's get you hooked up this winter.
Captain Ron Howell
305-896-1507
The winter fishery is in full swing! There is plenty of bait in the area to keep the rods bent for customers! I have been running several Florida Bay (Gulf of Mexico) charters and inshore reef trips. In the Gulf we can find Spanish Mackerel, permit, jack crevalle and sharks. The Spanish Mackerel are responding to chum and hitting jigs tipped with shrimp. Last week we caught a few nice cobia and tripletail also. The tripletail tend to hang out by the stone crab traps - the older the trap, the better! In the mornings there is a great snook and mangrove snapper bite. Just before lunch we switch over to fish near Cape Sabal for tarpon in the 20-50lb range, snook and trout. Redfish are laying low in the channels and runoffs staying warm and can be caught with a live bait or well placd soft plastic bait.
The highlight of the month has been the 50+ lb permit we caught in the Florida Bay off of a wreck! Photo coming soon. Let's get you hooked up this winter. Captain Ron Howell 305-896-1507
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We have been hooking up to a steady number of tarpon in the area as well as filling up the coolers with mangrove snapper. In Everglades National Park we have found some juvienile tarpon 10 to 30lbs, snook tucked under the mangroves and snook also on the flats in sand beds. Redfish and trout bite has been excellent.
-Capt. Ron Howell Happy Mothers Day! Tarpon fishing has been great in the backcountry as well as around the ocean side flats and bridges. Live mullet have been the most successful bait of choice for tarpon right now. You can also catch a variety of fish such as grouper, sharks and snapper by having a bottom rig set up with a chunk of dead mullet/bait. The migratory tarpon are 75 to 100+ lbs. Permit are stacked up on the rock piles and wrecks ocean side, they put on an excellent fight for my clients once hooked up. Tripletail are still around until the middle of the month. The mangrove snapper and seatrout are biting great. Along the mangrove edges in Everglades National Park we are catching some decent sized snook as well using live bait and softplastic jerk baits.
Captain Ron Howell Robbie's Marina www.captronhowellfishing.com Tarpon fishing has been ok with the most consistent bite coming on live mullet around the bridges and channels near Islamorada, but live pilchards are the ticket in Flamingo and the Cape area of Everglades National Park. We have had several front move through which causes the water and air temperature to cool down. It also creates a very low atmospheric pressure. Snook fishing is really good in the backcountry and the trout and snapper bite is also strong. Yesterday I fished a private boat for dolphin offshore, we found some nice school and also got into some slammers! Those are dolphin over 25 lbs.
Capt Ron Howell Give me a call 305-896-1507 www.captronhowell.com ![]() Fishing report for this week: The FL Keys offers such a variety of fish to be found between fishing the Everglades National Park and the Gulf! The snook bite remains strong in the creek mouths, tarpon are in those same creeks and can also be found around the bridges and channels. The snapper and trout bite is excellent and the tripletail are continuing to stay around in the past couple weeks around the Gulf. Cobia should be showing up in the Gulf soon again too! www.captronhowellfishing.com Snook season is now open on and we have been catching plenty in the past 2 weeks. The areas we have been getting hooked up are Sabal Creek and out front of Flamingo - both part of Everglades National Park. Mangrove snapper have been filling up the coolers, we're using live shrimp and the tripletail also started to show back up under the crab buoys. Tripletail will hit live shrimp, artificials and fly too. Tarpon are in the creeks and eating on a falling tide - we released a 40 lb tarpon last Friday using a live pilchard. Over the weekend we caught a few spinner sharks which always make for an action packed fight!
The weather has been beautiful. There are places to hide from the wind and still easily catch fish. Spring Break is coming up for the kids - give Captain Ron a call and get the family out on the water! 305-896-1507 We are still continuing to catch plenty of big Spanish mackerel in the Gulf along with a ton of mangrove snapper, jacks and grouper! The grouper are not in season but make a great fight! In Cape Sabal, located in Everglades National Park we are catching black drum, trout and snook. We caught a really nice snook in East Cape, also in the park using live pilchards and pinfish. In Flamingo, we caught a nice snook too.
There have been large schools of sheepshead in the flats along with tailing redfish. For the sheepshead we are using a live shrimp, they usually will not eat a soft plastic jerk bait. A lot of sharks around, make for a fun fight with clients. It's still early for tarpon season but that doesn't mean they aren't around - we can find them at a falling tide in the channels with live mullet or by resting a dead ladyfish at the bottom. Book a trip by calling: 305-896-1507. Captain Ron Howell Nice #snook we caught in Everglades National Park. Call 305-896-1507 to book your next fishing adventure!
Last week Fred & Jane from London joined me for a day of fishing. They caught snook, redfish, snapper, trout and mackerel. Their targeted species was shark. Here in Islamorada the most common sharks we find blacktips and spinners. They are very aggressive and a true gamefish! When they strike at the bait is explosive usually sending them high in the air. The strike is followed by long fast runs and punctuated by spinning leaps that rival any tarpon or billfish. One day we fought 9 in a row before we could land one. The bonus with gamsters is they are great to eat. We also caught a couple lemon sharks. Fred and Jane were a lot of fun to have on the boat and I look forward to seeing them next year. I also fished Paul & Dave - we caught trout, snook, black drum and snapper. We scouted out for tripletail - found 2 and were able to get 1 to the boat. They are fun to sight fish, provide an excellent fight and even jump! One of my favorite fish to eat as well. Towards the end of the week, Tom and his son Brett fished with me. Brett caught a beautiful pompano and his dad caught his first snook measuring in at 33 inches. We have a new week ahead so please check back for the latest fishing reports in Islamorada! Aerial view of lemon sharks.
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Capt. Ron
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