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

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Apr. 7, 2009 – Great Start to a Great Month

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

April is such a great month on our calendar as temperatures rise, rains come, trees leaf, flowers bloom, cobia migrate, mullet flood flats, breeder trout invade sandy potholes, redfish roam the shallows, snook return to their summer haunts and tarpon begin to roll. Indeed, it is a great time to be a fishing fanatic along the central east coast of Florida.

Our first early April fishing report is provided by Capt. Roland as he took the three Ryans boys on a short sunny Saturday adventure. Michael, Daniel, and Joey joined Roland along the Indian River side of Melbourne Beach to hunt redfish, snook and trout. Using live finger mullet the threesome had a blast hooking and landing fish. Pictured below are Daniel and his trout, camera-shy Joey with his redfish (held by his brother) and Michael holding a jack crevalle.

Colton and Karen Graham, a mother and son duo from Washington, spent two days using the long rod while casting flies to a variety of species. Capt. Peter, our fly-fishing aficionado, guided the Grahams in Titusville on one day and the Grant/Sebastian area the next. Pictured are Karen holding our first tarpon of the spring and Colton with an alligator gar.

Charles Coleman and his friend Anna, both from the United Kingdom, had a blast on the Indian River near Titusville with Capt. Rocky last week. The official record of the charter finds Anna with the first fish of the day (it was her first fish ever) and Charles with the most, biggest and last fish. Best fish among the half dozen caught were a fine 37 inch, 18 lb. redfish and the huge gator trout in the picture which weighed about nine pounds.

Another charter of mine last week was Tim and Lawrence Horn on the Banana River for a half-day trip. The day started with a springtime-like calm but ended with strong winter winds. The change in conditions confused fish and fisherman alike. However we did have a number of hits along with two big trout and one large redfish caught.

Our final report concerns a day and night adventure of Capt. Roland and the Rinkus men, Mike, Michael and . The day portion of the adventure took place on the Indian River south of Melbourne while the night portion found them deep in the bush hunting wild boar. Redfish and trout were caught while fishing (pictures below) and deer, turkey, gator, and hog stalked while hunting. Since only hogs are in season, the other wild game appeared merely to taunt the outdoorsmen.

Mar. 31, 2009 – More March Madness

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

The following reports were written by Capt. Peter Deeks, Jr. Peter guided these charters during the last days of March.

One of our frequent flyer clients, Howell Riggs from Huntsville, Alabama, kicks off our fishing reports. Howell wanted to get Michael, his good friend and fishing partner, on some of the Space Coast’s giant trout, redfish, and snook. We fished for two days. On the first day, we targeted trout and redfish on the Banana River for an afternoon half-day trip. Howell and Michael, landed a handful of redfish and trout including this 25 plus pound redfish.

On the second day, our goal was to target giant trout and snook before a nasty cold front was due to roll through our region. We fished a stretch of the Indian River in the Ft. Pierce area with big live baits. We landed six or so trout including this 32 inch trophy in the picture below. The front arrived around noon and shut the fish down before we were able to get on the snook.

Our next report features a nice family from Orlando. Ashraf, Ali, and Aisha wanted to spend a relaxing morning out on the Indian River, and do a little redfish and trout fishing. We started the day off targeting large trout around docks, and fished schools of redfish for the rest of the morning. Our final tally was nine redfish and three trout – with all the trout being between 24 and 27 inches. Aisha was the hero of the day putting the boys to shame by catching the most and biggest fish.

Our final report starred a pair of father and son duos. These fellows had been canceled by another guide at the last minute fearing the windy weather forecast. We fished from my 22 foot Pathfinder which provided a smooth and dry ride on the bumpy Banana River. The two sons out-fished their dads on the day by catching redfish and trout.

Mar. 21, 2009 – Mad-Hatter’s March Madness

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Along the central east coast of Florida March Madness has as much to do with challenging fishing conditions as college basketball. Winter chose to linger longer than normal this year creating calendaring chaos. The winds of this March have been maddening!

The subjects of this particular fishing report were some of the all star clients of the Mad Hatter, Capt. Rocky Van Hoose, over the past several weeks. (We will update the reports of Capt. Peter and Capt. Roland in our next report.)

The Readers of Burlington, Vermont chartered me for two days of fishing during their recent pilgrimage to the Sunshine State. During the first trip, Todd and Cheryl Reader, along with Todd’s brother Chris, visited a twenty mile stretch of the Banana River near Cocoa Beach. After frustratingly chasing a large school of monster reds long flat for a portion of the morning, we headed for one of my favorites shorelines. These friendly redfish and gator trout entertained us with a number hooked, landed, photographed and released. The following pictures are of Chris and Cheryl holding several of the large trout caught on the day.

The second charter with the Readers was in the Indian River near Titusville. This time we added Nick, Todd’s son to the crew. The weather was much different on this trip with stiff southerly winds. After being blown out of the first two locations, we made adjustments and found redfish and trout in a protected cove. However, it was the final locations where the fireworks occurred on this windy day. More trout and another redfish were caught along with several huge redfish which teased us.

Several days later, fishing the same venues as the Readers, Dale Looney from Auburn, Alabama found the fish even more aggressive. On the Banana River charter Dale caught seven redfish with five over slot and four large trout. The fish were outside of a rock wall in the calmer morning hours before shifting to a trough inside the rocks as the winds freshened in the afternoon.

The Titusville charter for Dale on the next day yielded similar action. We found large gator trout everywhere catching fifteen along with several redfish for a total of 17 fish. One fish we did not count in the total was a big blowfish which Dale somehow lassoed and hooked in the tail. We found the bulk of our fish holding in the sandy potholes and shallow troughs in the late morning and early afternoon hours.

Jack and Eileen Kling, with friend Ed from Delaware compressed another March crew for me. These three had fished with us last year and enjoyed another banner day this time around. Fishing the Banana River near Merritt Island, we once again caught redfish and trout. Pictured below is Ed holding one of his trophy trout.

Finally, fishing one of the windiest days of the year, the hale and hearty crew of Rick and Sammy, originally from Munsey Indiana. Despite the snarling seas we caught five redfish (four over slot-sized) and two big trout from the Banana River. By the way, we experienced 30 + mph winds and four foot waves on our final race toward the boat ramp. After docking, we watched five more boats (two large pontoon boats, two bay boats and one 24 foot speed boat) return to safe harbor with everyone aboard drenching wet. Meanwhile, we made the same voyage with hardly a drop hitting us.

Native Sons Pro Staff News

Monday, March 30th, 2009

The guides from Native Sons Fishing have been invited to join the pro staffs of Yamaha Outboards, Power-Pole Positioning Systems and Keep-Alive Aeration Systems for 2009. Actually, to be completely honest, we sought out these three manufacturers to become involved in promotional activities due to their superior products and services. All three of our boats are powered by Yamahas and carry the Keep-Alive systems. And two of our three boats are equipped with Power-Poles.

Feb. 27, 2009 – February Fishing Fables

Monday, March 30th, 2009

The fishing for February fluxed from flabbergasting to frustrating depending upon the weather. When the cold fronts pushed through, the fishing was tougher than a two dollar steak at IHOP and when the warm, sunny days returned, the fishing was fantastic.

The following five fishing reports feature some of the many February clients of Capt. Brad Roland Jones. We’ll update trips guided by Capt. Peter and me in the next installment to our fishing chronicles.

Roland’s first report involves Vince and Aubrey Bloomberg from their annual migration from Michigan. Escaping the 8 degree weather from the frozen north to sunny Florida, the father and daughter duo enjoyed the fishing with Roland for the second straight year. Early morning air temps were in the upper 50s but warmed as the sun moved overhead and the fishing temps followed the same pattern. Multiple fish were caught including redfish, trout, sheepshead, and snapper from the Indian River lagoon in the Grant/Sebastian area.

Steve and Ben Wilson chartered Capt. Roland for a Ft. Pierce fishing adventure. The day was cool and windy but the father and son duo caught 10 gator trout from 23- 27 inches. This was a time for the two because they will be separated for the next year as Steve (pictured below) travels to the Far East for work.

Shifting to the Indian River lagoon near Titusville on a drop-dead beautiful day, Capt. Roland had the pleasure of guiding another father and son duo, Bob from California and Mike from Texas. Visiting several hot locations recently frequented by Peter and me, Roland’s crew caught several redfish and trout which eventually were a part of family wedding a day later in Orlando.

Eugene Kaleniak, a student at Florida Air Academy in Melbourne, spent a great day of fishing on the Indian River with Capt. Roland. (Professor Roland recently taught a semester-long course at the Academy on marine life on the river.) Eugene caught redfish, trout, sheephead, snapper and black drum during his final ‘classroom’ session for the course. By the way, Eugene passed the Roland’s class with flying colors.

Roland’s final report features his daughter Jessica. The two participated in the February Florida Flats Fishing Association Tournament held in Sebastian. Jessica won the woman’s trout category with a 7lb. 12 oz monster while Roland finished second for trout in the overall division.

Fresh Photos Posted

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

Despite continuing computer challenges, we have finally been able to post a few fresh photos from some of our recent guide trips. View the pictures by going to the Photo Gallery, pages 58-60

Picture above is Chris Reader and one of many fish he caught with his brother and sister-in-law.

Cobia are Here!

Friday, March 13th, 2009

The cobia have just begun their migratory push through our area. We can accomodate up to three separate cobia charters per day. If you are interested, give us a shout.

Native Sons Tournament Success

Friday, March 13th, 2009

Capt. Roland and his daughter Jessica kicked-off the 2009 torunament season for Native Sons in grand fashion two weekends ago. Fishing the first Florida Flats Association event out of Sebastian the Jones duo captured a fist place in the Lady Angler Division along with a second and fifth in the trout category.

The next tournaments will be on the weekend of March 20-21 out of Titusville (Extreme Redfish – Capt. Peter and Capt. Rocky) and Vero Beach – Capt. Roland and Jessica). By the way, we will gladly reconfigure our teams to allow charter clients to participate with us. If you are interested, please give us a shout.

Spring Cobia Update

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

The cobia have begun pushing through our area on their annual migration north. The first wave arrived early last week before being driven south again by our most recent cold fronts (these fish migrate in waves). We expect the main part of the migration to pay us a visit in the next week or two … stay tuned for more information.

Tournament Opportunities

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

Native Sons guides are heavily involved in a number of national, regional and local fishing tournaments. Peter and I will be participating in the IFA Redfish Tours (both east and west coast divisions), the Xtreme Redfish Circuit, and the Florida Flats Fishing Association tour. Roland will be fishing the FLFA tour with his daughter this year. Tournament season kicks off this coming Saturday with an IFA event in Jacksonville.

Incidentally, Peter and I would be open to taking charter clients with us during some of these tournaments. It would be a great way to double the excitement of a charter with the thrill of participating in a tournament. Follow our tournament adventures on the Native Sons Fishing Team website – www.nativesonsprofishingteam.com

Native Sons Pro Fishing Team Website