Thursday, September 17, 2015

Flat Bridge Slam! Night Fishing 9/17

Scooped up my friend Zack on the way to New Smyrna where we castnet the finger mullet for bait on boating docks. Some nice schools of mullet were hanging around and we were able to get about 2 dozen in about 30 minutes or less. Nothing like free bait!

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.

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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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