Ran down to the flat bridge and found my favorite hole was open. The current was near slack when we got there, and upon walking to the spot I noticed a flounder just kinda floating on topwater. Curious if it was even still alive, I dropped a finger mullet next to him which spooked it as it dove to the bottom. Oh well. So I rigged our poles to fish the live mullet on the bottom. Hooked two small trout that got a release, biggest was 13" long. Also caught some ladyfish for shark fishing, counted 3 in the cooler when we were done. I felt like I missed a few flounder as I was fishing, but finially brought over a fat 13" flounder! Zack also got a 13" fat flounder! Ended the night catching a barely legal mangrove snapper that got a release. Four different species caught tonight and we used every single one of the live mullet in our bucket. One of our better nights for sure with a lot of action.
The next day I did my first fish print which is called Gyotaku. Gyotaku is a traditional Japanese method of printing fish, a practice which dates back to the mid-1800s. The process sounds simple: cleaning and drying the fish, painting with sumi ink and then pressing rice paper to create a print. Think of it as a thumbprint, pretty much the exact same thing. Sounds easy but it actually involves some skill believe it or not. There are some YouTube videos online, but I recommend the videos created by Rob Choi. He's actually the person that inspired me to do this through his own fishing blog. Here's a fish print from the 13" flounder above.
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