WOW! I can't believe he's paying $120 for a dozen mullet. We throw a net & catch a couple dozen in about 20 minutes. I'll be having breakfast & hear a ruckus when something big like a tarpon chases mullet in our canal. These little shits will jump 2 or 3 feet in the air to escape a predator. Can't say I blame them. I would never fish in that kind of fog. Too dangerous for me watching out for someone who can't navigate their boat properly.
He was fishing in Dubois Park & the Jupiter inlet which is north of me. There's nothing like fishing with live bait but I noticed he had a rubber shrimp on one of his poles which is a very common lure when anchored up.
The dolphin he caught was bigger than the "schoolies" I caught last year. Once you catch a schoolie (which are more like 5 to 6 pounds), we always keep it in the water & it attracts other schoolies. Usually you look for a weed line or floating debris but it didn't look like those were the fishing conditions because it got so windy.
If you stay fishing off the reefs the sharks don't bother you too much. I remember when the barracudas were a major pain in the ass. You would fight a fish for 20 minutes & a cuda would rip off half of your catch & those suckers have nasty teeth.
Thanks for sharing the video Freddy!
WOW! I can't believe he's paying $120 for a dozen mullet. We throw a net & catch a couple dozen in about 20 minutes. I'll be having breakfast & hear a ruckus when something big like a tarpon chases mullet in our canal. These little shits will jump 2 or 3 feet in the air to escape a predator. Can't say I blame them. I would never fish in that kind of fog. Too dangerous for me watching out for someone who can't navigate their boat properly.
He was fishing in Dubois Park & the Jupiter inlet which is north of me. There's nothing like fishing with live bait but I noticed he had a rubber shrimp on one of his poles which is a very common lure when anchored up.
The dolphin he caught was bigger than the "schoolies" I caught last year. Once you catch a schoolie (which are more like 5 to 6 pounds), we always keep it in the water & it attracts other schoolies. Usually you look for a weed line or floating debris but it didn't look like those were the fishing conditions because it got so windy.
If you stay fishing off the reefs the sharks don't bother you too much. I remember when the barracudas were a major pain in the ass. You would fight a fish for 20 minutes & a cuda would rip off half of your catch & those suckers have nasty teeth.
Thanks for sharing the video Freddy!
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