Monthly Archives: October 2009



Captain Nick’s Advise, Seek And You Shall Find!

slick-charters-freshwater-glamour-shotThis Ocklawaha Fishing Report From Ocklawaha Fishing Guide Captain Nick

“SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND”

Although the Bass bite has slowed over the past couple of weeks, we were able to find a few nice ones on our last trip, Sunday(10/25).

Marlin Shelton, a former player for Ole Miss, and myself headed down river on the Ocklawaha River to a spot I hadn’t fished in some time. Kinda like one of those shot in the dark deals, but we got lucky and found several Largemouths in the two to five pound range.

On the way back, we tried a spot that two hours earlier had no fish. By now the sun had set, it was about 6 p.m., and believe it or not it produced a couple more descent Bass. You just never know!

Expect the Bass fishing to improve as soon as the weather changes,(whenever that might be)…

 Thanks to David and Liz of Fat Daddy”s Bait and Tackle for the “wild shinners”!.

Marlin Shelton With A Fine Ocklawaha Bass

Marlin Shelton With A Fine Ocklawaha Bass

See all of Captain Nicks Photos

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The Tackle Boxes Fishing Report

10-20-09

The strongest cold front of the fall season probably brought big changes to the fresh and salt water fishing landscape in North Florida . We say “probably” since the wind that accompanied the chill was sufficiently strong to keep most would-be anglers at home—greatly reducing the weekend reports that could have confirmed our speculation.

We do have one “before” and “after” catch comparison from a small area lake. But, since each was fairly impressive, we can’t yet say that the cold really changed things—at least for speckled perch fans.

Friday, just ahead of the front, George Dekle and Larry Nutt fished for specks on Little Orange Lake, near Hawthorne . Drifting crappie jigs in deeper water, the men caught five specks while rain showers threatened. They stopped by the store to weigh the biggest two—slabs that pulled the needle on our State-certified scale to the 2-pound and 1-pound, 12-ounce marks.

Dekle and Nutt returned Monday, after the worst of the cold front had passed. The weather on their return trip was very different—bright, dry, and windy. The anglers drifted minnows and jig/minnow combinations through the white caps in deep water to take 14 nice specks. Again, the best of the fish were thick slabs weighing from a pound-and-a-half to two-pounds. A seven-plus-pound catfish topped off the fish catching for the Gainesville fishermen.

On Lochloosa and Cross Creek, both specks and bass remain active. While standing on the small island in front of Twin Lakes Fish Camp Monday evening, Mark Goldberg hauled in eight bass in the two-pound class. The Cross Creek resident made his fine catch while casting Storm WildEye Shiners in a sparkly green finish.

With overnight weekend temperatures down to about 40-degrees, the gulf shallows must have chilled measurably. Usually, such a sudden drop will push speckled trout into Big Bend tidal creeks. A small drop in water temp can, too, fire up the mackerel bite out a bit deeper. So far, though, we’ve not been able to locate a trout fisher that has given the creeks a try since the chilly spell…or a mackerel seeker that’s braved the chop to check out Seahorse Reef or Spotty Bottom. Mild, stable conditions are forecast for the rest of this week, so the angling answers are likely to come soon. Stay tuned…

That’s this week’s report.

Good fishin’ from The Tackle Box.

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