Black Grouper

groupers-jetty-017 Been awhile since I have been able to get out on the water – got out the last couple days and had some good luck. First I went out the day before yesterday with Andy, Catherine, and Eddy on Andy’s boat. Mike and Dan also joined us, also known as ghost and the darkness. We headed out to a spot where the mangroves were spawning. The fish were there but after we shot a couple the big ones took off. Water was chalky but you could make out the bottom in 45 feet.

After a bit we moved to the 18 spot which is one of my favorite spots. I call it that because that is how it’s listed on Andy’s gps. On mine I think its listed as “big rocks”. The water was chalkier, but Andy and I jumped in and headed down. I got down near the bottom and was slowly drawing a bead on a big mangrove, when out of the corner of my eye I saw I small jewfish which I thought was a grouper for a second. Then I looked to the left and saw a decent grouper so I changed course. Then from under a ledge a big grouper came out. I used part of the ledge to block his view while I got closer and then nailed him, dead center. I saw the shaft shoot fully out his other side so it didn’t look like he would tear out but then he took off into a cave so far that almost all my shooting line went into the hole. I surfaced and immediately called to Andy to put on a scuba tank and help me get him. Andy had shot a nice yellow jack and was dealing with that. The Darkness had shot another yellow jack but was feeding it to one of the few sharks that live in the area. Andy grabbed the tank and got the fish.  The cave it had gone in had an exit and the fish was just down there on the other side of the rock, so basically the tank wasn’t necessary . I had got worked up by the sharks and the size of the fish.  I felt stupid but screw it the fish is on the boat and not shark food so it was a win anyway. The fish was 30#, 27# gutted.

We drifted around there for a bit and others dove but the sharks got more fired up so we moved. The next area was shallower craggy bottom. I drove for awhile while everyone else shot fish and Cat shot photos. I got so hot I had to jump in after awhile. I shot a nice trigger. Then Eddy shot a nice back with a Hawaiian sling but it took off with his shaft. Luckily, Ghost found it in a rock some distance away. We shot a couple red grouper and some other stuff, and the water kept getting dirtier so we moved.

groupers-jetty-159 Then on the way in we hit kingfish shoals. I personally think kingfish shoals sucks mostly but I was actually excited today because cat had never dove there so I thought it would be cool to go there. It can be good for little hogfish and it’s close so I guess if you just want to go get dinner it’s good for that. When we got there, there was like 3 other boats spear fishing in that same little area. The area already is pretty weak but now with boat loads of kids with spear guns swimming around forget it. Cat was burning up in her wetsuit and then she jumped in and the water was 89 degrees. She got sick of it and quit.  Andy and Darkness swam around for like an hour to shoot two barely legal hogfish. It was insane, then we headed in.

The next day Eddy, Andy and I went out, and we headed to the gulf. We stopped at the jetty in the northwest channel and dove in. Vis was good for that area and it was top to bottom. The life on the jetty was amazing. Mangroves everywhere, and bait was so thick in some places you could not see. Huge eagle rays cruised by, along with schools of tarpon, schools of blue runners, the occasional shark, sting rays, dozens of barracuda and jewfish. Eddy and Andy crushed the mangroves. Pretty much all there was there to shoot was mangroves. Occasionally you would see a sheepshead or a little mutton, but mangroves everywhere. All that life and no camera.

Then we went west and the vis sucked.  12 feet of vis tops in most places maybe 15 and a ripping westbound current. We picked up a fish here and there but it was mostly slim pickings. Then towards the end of the day, Andy and Eddy shot 3 hogfish that were 5 to 6 pounds each. That’s pretty big for hogfish in the Keys and then we headed in.

The next day Cat and I went to the jetty with her camera for an hour or so, I drove while she dove. The vis was still good but none of the real big stuff was there, no eagle rays, no huge turtles, there was some bait but not like the day before. I have to make myself bring the camera every time.

Big Black – 50-80 feet of visibility

Went out spear fishing yesterday with Catherine, Pat , Albie and Gabi. The weather forecast is showing that winds are going to pick up and blow for at least a week, so we figured we better get out there while the weather was good. Visibility ranged from 50-80 feet, there was even good vis in hawks channel, which almost made me want to stay inshore and scour the patch reefs, but since we all have fish still in the freezer from last week we headed out to the drop off in hopes for something big and photogenic.

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It was pretty much perfect conditions, except for the current being opposite the wind, both were light but the boat still wanted to creep away on drifts. We shot some barracudas and jacks in the shallows and headed out deeper. On one drift while I was realigning the boat Albie started yelling there was a big Black under him. I told him to wait right there, and I will be over to shoot it for him. He didn’t wait though and got a head shot on it, it still managed to rock up hard. It took at least half hour or more to get him out.

After that we drifted in the deeper water from 80-200 feet chumming, and got nada. I saw some small kingfish and Albie saw some small dolphins but that was it. Also saw this squid.

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Oh yeah we also picked up a danforth anchor on the reef.

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January 9th 30-65 feet of visibility

Went lobstering on Thursday night and spearfishing on Friday. On Thursday it was flat calm and beautiful but my boat was being serviced so I worked all morning.  In the afternoon I got my boat back and we were able to go out around 3pm. It was flat calm and perfect out, but since we got such a late start we just did some inshore lobstering. We caught 7 lobsters and Albie caught 2 spider crabs.

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Since it was such nice weather we decided to go out spearfishing the next day, so I gassed up the boat etc. Noaa had originally called for 10 knot winds, by the evening they changed their forecast to 10-15, in the morning they said near 15 knots and the weather buoy was saying 20 knots from the northeast. So we went out anyway. Albie, Gabby, Brian from Marathon all went with me.

So I scrapped plans to run far west and just headed out to see if it was doable or not. It was rough but spearable. At first the blue water was only on the bar but as the day went by it moved onto the reef. Visibility ranged from 30 to 70 feet. There was a ripping current in the deep water going to the east, that with the northeast wind created not the most comfortable seas. We did some deeper drifts without seeing much and then came in to the reef.

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We shot a variety of fish, triggerfish, yellow jack, dog snapper, black grouper , hog fish and margate. I shot possibly my best yellow jack, I should have weighed it but I think it was probably over 20#. The biggest I have shot was 20# with the guts still in it. The jack actually broke my shooting line and was swimming around in circles with a whole school of similar sized yellow jacks following him, with my shaft still in him. Luckily Brian was able to get a shot on him and I was able to recover my shaft.

I guess I should change my shooting line more frequently. Not sure if I should try lighter line because the wear and tear seems to come from the line being very snug in the hole where it connects to the shaft.

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