BULLET MACKERELS are here again........
When I get home next time all this wind and cold will be a distant memory! I am OPEN and AVAILABLE for Charter on:
April 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7
It appears I know where some Red Drum and Bluefish are holed up.... I'd expect that on a pretty day I could find some decent Black Sea Bass and possibly even a nice Flounder in 60+ feet of water... Inside, it's about time for the Puffers, Sea Mullet, and Gray Trout to show up. And......
I'm not sure if anyone on Planet Earth has ever attempted, stumbled into, or purposely targetted
Bullet Mackerel on Fly! But, I honestly believe it would be very very possible to catch a Bullet Mackerel on Fly Tackle. Last Saturday there was acres of them on the East Side. Bullet Mackerel are nearly identical to Little Tunny (False Albacore, Fat Albert) only much smaller. These fish are very difficult to target with the traditional metal lures on spinning tackle. These fish attack in waves, racing across the surface of the water in formations 25 to 40 fish wide and can stay in an area for a pretty long time. They are usually accompanied by a flock of Terns hovering over the action. They seem to be pretty approachable by boat but, then again, I've seen them spooked by the splash of a stingsilver hitting the water! The biggest problem with Bullet Mackerel are that they feed on really tiny stuff and unlike Spanish Mackerel, Albacore, or Bonito, they make very very few exceptions. What I mean is, the stingsilver or spoon you throw is to big for One of them, it's too big for ALL of them.... Very rare that one strikes a "castable metal lure". Sabiki strings have worked okay for me at drawing strikes, but they also have a drawback. When you actually do hook one, their weak jaw structure combined with their incredibly powerful propulsion unit usually results in a pulled hook and the smaller the hook, the easier it pulls out... After chasing them extensively the past 3 years, I'm convinced a Fly Rod is the way to go! I guess what it all boils down to is "who cares?" It's a small, oily Mackerel and it is very much an unknown species.... Mostly misidentified as a "baby Albacore".... Anyway, if I go by myself next week and if the weather is pretty enough, I will take my 5wt Fly Rod and give it a try. I'm all for a challenge and I like weird and feisty fish! We'll see what happens. I would rather take clients out for a limit of Red Drum and a bucket full of Bluefish! It's March and fresh fish are hard to come by!