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Thread: All about bonefish

  1. #1
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    Default All about bonefish

    The elusive bonefish, one of the most spooky fish on the planet. Guides will carefully pole their clients in a boat so they have access for a few casts at these picky fish.

    Then, if you don't get your presentation or offering right, they just swim by ignoring it!! Frustrating as hell, guys nevertheless put up with it for a chance at that trophy!

    Post up anything you want to about bonefish, facts, figures, pics, videos, anything at all you feel like throwing up here.

    If whatever you quoted comes from a published or copyrighted source, please add the link. Thanks.

  2. #2
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    Nov 2008
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    I'm planning a trip to Florida in June. I go just about ever year. There is a park in long Key with good wading. I usually get shots at Bonefish. To date I only caught one on a fly and Lined about a dozen or so. What I learned is that you must lead the fish aleast 12 feet. and keep your profile low. When they spook the turn the flat into trails of sand smoke. Also drag your feet there are lots of stingrays laying in the sand.

  3. #3
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    vpass--do I envy you! Enjoy!

    I'd gone down to Marathon, mid-March, a few years ago for tarpon. I met up with my guide the morning after settling in. He was treating me to a hearty breakfast: "Cause we're gunna be out on the flats all day long," he said. "An' we got us a bit of a problem. Tarpon ain't arrived yet." There was going to be one boat out that day doing nothing but looking. We kept in touch with it the whole day. Tarpon never happened.

    We went barracuda hunting instead. My fly rodding skills were geared to small rivers and streams, still-water lakes and ponds. Forty, fifty foot casts were more than adequate for those sweet-water needs. Now, here was this guide nonchalantly, telling me "shoot out eighty, ninety feet-a line and start rippin' like hell." Right. It was embarrassing. Eventually, I got some decent casts off; hand over hand, as fast as I could, I ripped one of his eely flies across the surface. Like an angry torpedo, four, five foot barracudas surged after the fly. Chomp! Fight doesn't last but a few seconds; the thrill lasted all morning long. (Have to admit, though, fly rodding was too taxing. I switched to a spinning rod after a few catches).

    The afternoon was for bonefish. vpass got it right: bones are very spooky. You're casts have to be so delicate. As they grub along the bottom, you've got to almost anticipate the direction they're going. So, you can't cast too far out ahead of them, either. All that was tricky enough. But I had an even bigger problem at first. I couldn't even see them. "That's your problem. You're lookin' for THEM. It's their shadows you wanna look for." It took a bit of getting used to. Amber polarized lenses where an absolute necessity. You look for shadows moving along the sandy bottoms: they have bodies like glass.

    Bones are one of those pound for pound fish. What they lack in size, they more than make up for in fight. Especially on a fly rod. Damn, vpass, enjoy, enjoy!

    Tarpon may be the Ali's of of the Florida Keys. But bones are definitely the Sugar Rays.

    (Robinson, that is--I know, I know, I'm really showing my age on this one. But what the hell.)

  4. #4
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    Nov 2008
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    Quote Originally Posted by paumanok View Post
    The afternoon was for bonefish. vpass got it right: bones are very spooky. You're casts have to be so delicate. As they grub along the bottom, you've got to almost anticipate the direction they're going. So, you can't cast too far out ahead of them, either. All that was tricky enough. But I had an even bigger problem at first. I couldn't even see them. "That's your problem. You're lookin' for THEM. It's their shadows you wanna look for." It took a bit of getting used to. Amber polarized lenses where an absolute necessity. You look for shadows moving along the sandy bottoms: they have bodies like glass.
    You got that right. They zig zag about every 10 feet, but if you cast less then 12 feet you will spook them. The best time is from 10:30am to about 2:30pm when the sun is above, so the bone fish could cast a shadow. When there is no sun I fear to be in the water with all them sharks, you will see a few. I think Long Key state park is MM 89. Its 5 dollars a day and wading opportunity are great.

    I never had opportunity to cast at tailing bones. From what I was told you could cast almost on top of them and get away with it, I done know hope to find out this trip.

  5. #5
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    vpass, good luck to you, buddy. Have fun (like anyone's gotta tell ya to do that!)

    Some years ago (before and during the years of Bush I--god, that's a ton of years ago), between February and March, I was good for one or two week- long trips of non-stop fishing on the Keys and Okeechobee. You've set my wheels spinninn' again.

    I just might have to put the sunny state of Florida back on my fishing agenda.

    Thanks for the inspiration.

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