Native Sons Fishing Guides, Central Florida & Indian River Lagoon Fishing Charters

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June 28, 2009 – Summertime Fishing at its Finest

Sunday, June 28th, 2009

One of the great things about the summer inshore fishing along the Space Coast is the wide variety of species roaming in our shallow-water lagoon system. So much variety, in fact, sometimes it is hard to narrow down our targets during the half-day and full day charters. We had a number of trips this past week where we set out to target one species and wound up catching several others instead. Our first report reflects such an experience.

Fishing with very old and dear friends from Sarasota, Levoie and Melva Hipps, I had some memory-making fishing along with my memory-recalling past. As part of pre-fishing for an upcoming IFA Redfish Tour event in Punta Gorda, I was mostly interested in finding redfish and the Hipps came along hoping to bring a few fillets home for dinner. The excitement of our adventure was an extremely rare 30 minute battle with a 50 lb. cobia hooked on a shallow grass flat outside Bull Bay in Charlotte Harbor and a monster 20 lb. snook boated in the backwaters of Stump Pass in Englewood. I doubt we’ll ever forget either fish. Pictured below are the Hipps with Melva’s trophy snook.

Dave Bailey from Palm Bay, along with sons James and Kyle and father-in-law Buck from New Jersey, spent a great Saturday morning in the Grant area of the Indian River, just north of Sebastian Inlet with Capt. Roland . The morning started with stalking the giant snook which had been frequenting the spoil islands. Instead of snook, the Baileys came home with six fat trout from the islands in the 20 – 27 inch range and several bluefish to boot. After warming up on the sea trout, the Baileys spent the rest of the half-day charter searching for the suddenly elusive line-siders. Pictured below are the results of their search: a 20 lb monster on 10 lb. mono line and a 30 incher which did a great aerial tarpon imitation with four spectacular jumps. “Wait till I show this one off back in Jersey,” Buck commented.

Another recent charter with Capt. Roland was Bob Jones and his son-in-law Jeff Loveday of Palm Bay. Taking advantage of the calm waters outside of the inlet, the trio spent the morning looking for tarpon along the beaches. They did manage to jump several, along with big spinner sharks, but lost them all. Bonita harassing the bait pods provided top-water plugging entertainment before a four ft. spinner shark crashed the party. Pictured below is Capt. Roland holding Bob’s shark. (Bob had heard too many bad shark stories and did not want to get any closer to the beast than necessary).

Last Saturday, Capt. Peter guided a family reunion party in the Melbourne Beach stretch of the Indian River. The family, driving down from Daytona beach, was treated to an unbelievable adventure. Chuck Ashley, a great son and brother, is the one who organized the trip to go offshore in the Atlantic. The offshore wind forced the crew into the calmer inshore waters. The day started out targeting tarpon and resulted in two outstanding catches: a 60 inch and 48 inch fish. The rest of the day was equally as exciting as redfish, snook, and trout were caught on the clear-water flats. What a great way to spent part of a family reunion!

The next report involves a familiar faces to Native Sons Fishing Charters: the father and son duo of Chuck and Mason from Orlando. This trip targeted “big fish” only in the Indian River near Melbourne and guide Capt. Peter Deeks hit the bulls-eye with huge snook and tarpon.

It was my pleasure to guide Dave and Maritza from Pennsylvania for a fishing charter in the Grant area recently. This great couple caught an inshore grand slam of redfish, snook, trout, and jack Cravelles. The half-day trip ended perfectly by enjoying a delicious seafood lunch at Captain Hiram’s in Sebastian. The pictures below were taken by Maritza.

Our final report for this week returns to the specie that started this thread: cobia. Capt. Peter, along with good friends Jason and Kenny of Orlando, went offshore to do some scouting when they stumbled across a pod of cobia. Along with catching the cobia, the trio had a blast bow-fishing a couple of kingfish. What a bunch of kooks!

June 14, 2009 – Snook, Slams in the Summertime

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Snook and Slams – It Must Be Summertime

Spring slammed into summer this week along the Space and Treasure Coasts of east central Florida, and the fishing action has continued at a frenzied pace. We have had grand slams and giant snook coming out of the Indian River Lagoon this past week from Melbourne Beach to Vero Beach and Ft. Pierce. The action has been simply amazing.

We start our individual charter reports with young Wesley Miller of Satellite Beach. Wes and Marcel Pope fished the Grant area yesterday with me as part of the FLFA Junior Angler Inshore Tournament. Wes walked away with the trophy for largest snook, largest fish, and largest smile. His 25 lb snook, measuring 39 ½ inches, will long be remembered by all involved. He also caught a mess of trout measuring up to 25 ¾ inches and a pair of big jack crevalle to complete a remarkable slam. It was an amazing day for Wesley, Marcel, and me.

Also participating in the Junior Angler Tournament was Jack Baney, his friend, and his dad. Fishing with Capt. Roland in the same areas as Team Wesley, young Jack nailed a pair of fine snookeroos measuring 25 and 28 inches. His comment, “Yeah, another fish for the wall of fame at the Baneys’ house” says it all. What a way to spend a morning!!!!!!

On Friday it was a pair of my old friend from Orlando, Florida: Scott Bell and Jesse. The last time we fished the Titusville area and had a grand time with the redfish. This year we traveled south to Grant and tangled with trout, jacks, and snook. The trophy trout that was caught measured nearly 28 inches and was taken in around a spoil island in the Grant/Sebastian area.

On Thursday both Capt. Rocky and Capt. Roland had charters. Roland fished the Melbourne Beach area of the IRL with Doug Herrell, son Mac, brother-in-law Schuyler, and his sons Schuyler and Case. The crew of Melbourne residents targeted snook with great results and also had some trout that crashed the party. Case and Mac had the hot rods of the morning landing snook, trout, jacks, and one small grouper – another early June inshore grand slam.

Capt. Rocky had the pleasure of the company of Todd Mahaffey Sr. from Atlanta and the two knuckleheads, Todd Jr. and his cousin A.J. from Chimney Rocky, NC. (This was the second trip of the week for the trio after getting caught in a rare summer doldrums-type day on Tuesday.) We ventured into the pristine reaches of the Indian River between Vero Beach and Ft. Pierce. The slam for the day consisted of monster trout, bluefish, and ladyfish. Besides the fish, other highlights included “wade-fishing” the islands, racing the boat, eating ice cold watermelons on a pirate island, and an ultra-fun tire swing found hanging over the river. The day ended by enjoying the fresh trout fillets perfectly prepared by the chefs of Grills Restaurant in Port Canaveral. What a fun and full day! By the way, the Mahaffey’s had a great stay at the Resort on Cocoa Beach while vacationing in central Florida (http://www.theresortoncocoabeach.com/)

On Monday, Dave Reinbold and his good friend Marlita from Pennsylvania were my guests for a half-day charter. Blue summer skies and calm water greeted us early turning to a gentle east breeze by late morning. Dave and Marlite had their inshore slam within the first hour by catching a redfish, snook, and trout. The trout was the biggest of the three weighing nearly 12 lbs, large jack crevalle up to 17 pounds, and several more trout completed another fantastic day of fishing.

Last Friday found Steve Young and his two sons Austin and Chase aboard the Flat Broke with Capt. Rocky for a half-day charter. Our purpose for the charter was to nail big snook for the boys. Pictured below are Austin with a 20 lb snook and Chase with a 15 pounder. We also caught redfish, trout, and jack crevalle to complete another early summer grand slam. All fish were released alive.

Our final two reports came from the logs of Capt. Roland from last week. Kevin from Satellite Beach, a good friend of Native Sons, fished with Roland in the Grant area and caught two monster snook including the one pictured below. The next day Jessica Jones, Roland’s daughter, fishing in the FLFA Taylor Creek Tournament, caught all kinds of fish including a personal record 24 pounder.

In conclusion, this has been an unbelievable start to summer for us. The fishing over the past six weeks has been as good as any I can recall in over forty years. If you have not had a chance to get out and enjoy this run, you are missing something very special.

Way to go Wesley!

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

Wesley Miller, an eight year old Satellite Beach native, won the Florida Flatsfishing Association’s Junior Angler Inshore Tournament this afternoon. Fishing with Marcel Pope and Capt. Rocky in the Sebastian segment of the Indian River, young Wesley boated a giant 25 lb snook after a classic, electrifying shallow-water snook-fight. He also caught seven gator-trout and two giant jack crevalles on the day. Wesley won biggest snook, biggest overall fish, and biggest smile divisions. Way to go Wesley!

Native Sons Adds Admin Assistant

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Miss Kara Van Hoose has joined the Native Sons Fishing team as an administrative assistant. Kara, a sophomore honors student at the University of Florida and majoring in telecommunications, is the youngest daughter of Capt. Rocky and, as such, no stranger to the fishing charter and professional tournament businesses. She will handle a variety of functions for NSFC including, but not limited to, much of the marketing and post-marketing. It is likely she will be the first voice greeting callers and potential clients to Native Sons Fishing. We are thrilled to welcome her ‘aboard’ and look forward to working with her.

June 5, 2009 – May was Monster Month

Friday, June 5th, 2009

This past May was one of the finest in memory for monster fish in the inshore shallow saltwater flats of the Indian River Lagoon system from New Smyrna Beach to Ft. Pierce. As such, we thought it would be a blast to put together a pictorial presentation for future posterity. Pictured below are our nominations for the top ten monsters of May. Enjoy their dreams.

Okay, so I know there are actually fifteen nominations in our top ten but Simon Cowell gave us permission to use a judge’s exemption or two because we just could not decide between the worthy candidates. By the way, June has gotten under way with an equally impressive showing.

May 31, 2009- Late May Mayhem

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

The inshore fishing continues on a torrid pace along the Space and Treasure Coasts of central Florida as a late spring explosion of finger mullet have ignited a feeding frenzy in our salt-water rivers and back-water estuaries. This has resulted in a series of great guide trips for the guides of Native Sons Fishing Charters as giant snook, tarpon, bull sharks, and jack Crevalle have joined our more familiar predatory species of redfish and gator trout. Read on for details of happy anglers, fantastic fishing, and great times on the water.

Our first report features the Rimkus family and their friends from Colorado Springs, Colorado. This crew fished with Capt. Roland and Capt. Peter for three great days in three great venues. The following are accounts of those trips as recorded by Peter.

Day 1 – We fished the islands and flats in the Grant area of the Indian River for trout and snook. We caught 9 trout from 20 – 28inches with the 3 biggest being 26, 27, and 28 inches. Three of the four anglers I had on my boat caught their first seatrout, with two of them being big gators. Pictured below are Alex, Michael, Alex and Michael, and Bird Hunting Guide, respectively, holding their trophies from day one.

Day 2 – We fished the mangrove islands and crystal clear flats of the Indian River lagoon in the Vero Beach/Ft. Pierce area. The fishing was fun which included us managing 4 trout from 18 – 28 inches and a beautiful gag grouper. Pictured here are Alex with a healthy “gator” trout and Mariah with her gag grouper gang.

Day 3 –Our mission was to target hard fighting fish only on our final day. We started the morning off in the Melbourne Beach area fishing the mangrove lined creeks for tarpon. Then finished the trip off chasing giant schools of feeding jack Crevalle and waking fish. We landed a 50 inch tarpon, jack Crevalle, and gafftopsails. It was a very eventful and fun day of fishing even with the lower number of fish landed, as we hooked 5 tarpon up to 50lbs and countless jacks up to 35lbs. Pictured below is lady angler Mariah and myself holding her first tarpon.

Ralph Cummings, a professor at John Hopkins University, was in town visiting his in-laws and decided to get out of the house for a half day with Capt. Roland. It turned out to be a great decision as Ralph nailed an inshore slam of redfish, snook, and trout in the Melbourne area of the Indian River lagoon using light tackle. Pictured below is the “Prof” with his John Hopkins slam.

Young Micah Snyder from Merritt Island had my undivided attention recently for a few hours of fishing and boating in the Sykes Creek segment of the Banana River near Cocoa Beach, Florida. We had a blast catching fish and trading barbs. Here is Micah and his “four-foot” trout.

John Terrell of Orlando and Gary, his long-time fishing buddy from Rockledge, Florida, spent a lazy day with me yesterday fishing the Indian River in Titusville. The reason “lazy” is used to describe the day is because that is how I would characterize our normally hyper-aggressive redfish and trout. Whether it was the unusually high and tannic water from of our recent monsoons or the unseasonably low barometric pressure, the fish just seemed uncharacteristically lethargic on the half-day charter. We did catch a couple of redfish despite the day’s struggle. (Photo below was taken by Gary Yocum – Redfish being released below was also taken by Gary Yocum)

Dan and his wife Mary from “up-state” New York were chartered by Capt. Roland on Memorial Day. Despite the madness of the boat traffic of a major holiday weekend, the couple had a grand time fishing in the Grant segment of the Indian River. Among the many fish that were battled during the charter, two conquests are pictured below: the 24 pound snook and the five pound gator trout.

Fly Fishing Champ

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Competing against many of the local guides from Mosquito Lagoon, Capt. Peter Deeks, Jr. of the Native Sons Pro Fishing Team took top honors in the fly fishing trout division of the prestigous FishStock Redfish and Trout Challenge this past weekend. Beyond the challenge of a highly competitive field was the challenge presented by some of the worst spring-time weather in recent memory. The team also turned in one of the heaviest trout on the first day at 7.22 lbs and one of the best redfish stringers on the second day at 11.27 lbs. Tough field, terrible weather and terrific results … way to go Peter and Rocky!

What a Boat!

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Flat Broke aint flat broke no mo … Our Key West Stealth flats style boat, dubbed the Flat Broke, has gone through extensive repowering and refitting. Once noted for being the minimalist ideal for shallow-flats fishing, the Flat Broke is now outfitted with the very best in technology and equipment. The two month refitting process features a super quick 2008 115 hsp Yamaha outboard, wireless Motor Guide trolling motor, remote PowerPole anchoring system, over-sized Bennett trim tabs, four-battery powering system, a three tank/two pump aerator system with a Keep Alive aeration kit added, walk around cushioned SeaDek by Castaway Customs and a sharp, custom designed Native Sons boat wrap. The Flat Broke is still one of the shallowest and smoothest rides on the water AND she still catches boat loads of fish. What a Boat!

Native Sons TV Commercial)

Creek Fishing Exclusive

Monday, May 18th, 2009

It is unusual that we’d devote an entire weekly fishing report to a single charter trip but we had one of those very rare days among our charters this past week where one paragraph and two pictures simply would not suffice. Go to our ‘Reports’ section of the website and read the account entitle ‘Creek Fishing Exclusive’. By the way, there is our usual weekly report posted immediately following.

May 18, 2009 – Creek Fishing Exclusive

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Occasionally we have one of those golden days of guiding which will eventually pass into charter captain lore. This past week Capt. Peter had such a day, and I thought the description and pictures from the trip merit an exclusive report. The following was written and directed by Capt. Peter. Read, imagine and enjoy.

A highlight of Capt. Peter’s week was a trip with a great fishing couple, Kurt and Lorie. Their mission is to fish in all 50 states and enjoy all of the many species of fish America has to offer. While in Florida, they fished with Capt. Peter for two days. The objectives of the first day were to fish in the ocean along the beaches for kingfish and cobia and then return to the River for trout and redfish. However, due to windy conditions, we decided to stay inshore and take advantage of the great river fishing. Kurt and Lorie got the best of four redfish and two nice trout – including both Lorie and Kurt’s best to date. They fished the clear waters near the islands and on the flats with live mullet in the Banana River.

The second day was one of those very special fishing experiences that will be unforgettable for Kurt and Lorie. Capt. Peter took the duo on a late spring, creek fishing adventure – a very special type of fishing which is unique to our area. The goal for this half-day of fishing was to land a shark, a giant jack Crevalle, and a tarpon. By sight-fishing in the narrow, picturesque mangrove-lined creeks that feed freshwater into to the Indian River Lagoon system, both Kurt and Lorie tamed many different types of gamesters that inhabit this diverse area. The two highlights for Capt. Peter was watching Kurt’s 33 inch snook inhale a live pogie off of the surface only feet from the boat and assisting Lorie muscle in a 50 inch tarpon which inhaled her baitfish before its dozen other tarpon friends could. Lorie’s tarpon battle was especially interesting in that it took place within creeks only as wide as the boat, jumping up into the trees, and dragging the anglers up and over sandbars, stumps, and trees. Lorie deserves credit for the skill she showed in landing her tarpon. The fishin’ couple’s final tally for the day included bull sharks, tarpon, snook, giant jack Crevalle, massive gar, and, of course, the usual “less desirables”.

(Editor’s addendum: I cannot imagine a finer representation of authentic backwater fishing for the State of Florida for Kurt and Lorie’s quest to fish all fifty states in the USA. Perhaps Alaska could top this day but it would be hard. Great job of guiding Captain Peter!)

Native Sons Pro Fishing Team Website