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florida keys fishing with No Bones About It

General Fishing Trends and Sportfish native to our area

Backcountry fishing Calendar
General monthly fishing trends

  Bonefish Tarpon Permit Snook Redfish Trout
January Fair Poor Poor Good Good Excellent
February Fair Fair Poor Fair Good Excellent
March Good Excellent Good Good Good Excellent
April Excellent Excellent Good Good Good Excellent
May Excellent Excellent Excellent Excellent Good Excellent
June Excellent Excellent Excellent Fair Excellent Good
July Good Good Excellent Good Excellent Good
August Good Fair Excellent Good Excellent Good
September Fair Fair Excellent Good Excellent Good
October Excellent Good Excellent Good Excellent Good
November Good Fair Poor Fair Good Good
December Good Fair Fair Fair Good Excellent

 

Backcountry Sportfish
of the Florida Keys

BonefishBonefish ( pictures ) primarily an inshore fish inhabiting the shallows of our Florida Keys; often in less than 1 foot deep of water over lush grass flats and occasionally over white sand. Traveling in loose schools they root out shrimp, shellfish,crabs and fish from the bottom.

 

TarponTarpon: Everything about this fish is major league. Often referred to as the Silver Kings, Tarpon have been traveling the tropical waters for over 125 million years.
Techniques for catching tarpon vary widely, but locating the fish in calm waters can be easy, these fish surface from time to time, taking a gulp of air. Recent research indicates that this supplemental oxygen is essential to their survival.

PermitPermit: Found mainly offshore around wrecks and debris or inshore on grass flats, sand flats and in channels; most abundant in south Florida. Feeds mainly on bottom-dwelling crabs, shrimp, small clams and small fish. Permit are by far the most frustrating fish you'll encounter on the flats. They have superb eyesight and a well developed sense of smell. Due to their body shape, they seem to be much more comfortable in deeper water. Although it is fairly common to see permit with their tail and dorsal fin sticking out of the water, they usually won't remain there for long periods of time.

SnookSnook: are found from central Florida , south. Usually inshore in coastal and brackish waters along mangrove shorelines seawalls, and bridges and can also be found on reefs and pilings near shore Average catches weight around 5 t0 8 lbs. Spawns primarily in summer. Can not tolerate water temperatures below 60 degrees but can however tolerate wholly fresh or saltwater. Schools along shore and in passes during spawning season feeding on fish and large crustaceans.

 

RedfishRedfish: (Red Drum) Juveniles are an inshore fish, migrating out of the estuaries at about 30 inches (4 years) and joining the spawning population offshore. Spawning occurs from August to November in near shore waters. Feeds on crustaceans, fish and mollusks and can live to 20 years or more.