Pompano, Perdido and Planes
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- This topic has 16 replies, 14 voices, and was last updated Oct 7, 2009 at 9:44 pm by
regan c. kenyon jr..
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Oct 5, 2009 at 1:34 am #4482
Neal Osborn
MemberThis weekend I had the opportunity to be truly Itinerant. I was scheduled on short notice to give a lecture in Perdido Key, Alabama (near Pensacola, Florida) for a Saturday meeting. As luck would have it, that is also near one of the best Pompano stretches in America and I have been wanting a shot at these elusive fish for some time now. Basically, Pompano are “baby Permit” and they are extremely difficult to see in the water which makes site casting challenging at best. The world record Pompano is only about 7 pounds, so generally anything in the 2-3 pound range is a respectable catch. I managed to hook up with Captain Basil Yelverton “Baz” for a half day fishing following the lecture. The wind was from the north and the beaches were calm and clear.
Game on . . .

It took about 45 minutes for me to get accustomed to spotting the Pompano, but eventually you get honed in on their movement and patterns. We had multiple opportunities and I made honest shots at both groupies and singles and had lots of honest rejections with one successful take, oh how sweat it was. I am still amazed at how nervous these fish are. Any movement or noise and they are gone in a flash. What’s even more crazy is how picky they are with the flies. It is gut wrenching to make perfect casts and repeatedly watch these guys come straight to the fly and then bug off only inches away. However, it is a great victory to finally have it come together and land one. Unfortunately, this was a quickie one-day trip; but hopefully there will be more in the future.
Pompano, 2.5 pounds. Fly = yellow/yellow clouser. Rod = Sage Smallmouth, 290 grain line, 10 lb tippet.



Also, I would like to mention that the Sage Smallmouth rod turned out to be a wonderful setup for this type of fishing. I fully posit that it was magic for me. You can easily throw 60 feet of line with a simple double hall and reach fish easily. It loads deep in the butt and in my opinion is a great saltwater rod. At only 7’11” it cuts through the wind with ease. It is a veritable work-horse for streamer fishing on rivers, bass fishing on ponds, smallmouth fishing on rivers with poppers/sliders, and now saltwater fishing. For the money, it is a great buy!



Later in the day the winds and sun angle made it difficult to continue sight casting. So we went out and hammered the bluefish (and some sharks – but they wouldn’t eat; darn). I recently tied up a box of Todd’s Wiggle Minnow patterns, including the white shad shema. This fly is probably one of my top 5 patterns this year and I wanted to see how it performed in the saltwater. As expected, it was a killer pattern! That fly is just dead-on perfect and it’s action is sick. The bluefish literally fought each other to get a bite. However, we did have to use a flexible wire tippet to prevent tippet abrasion (bluefish have teeth!).



And then it was done! Not bad for an itinerant half day of fishing!

p.s., Bob 😉
Oct 5, 2009 at 6:53 am #39400Mike Cline
MemberVery Cool Neal!
Oct 5, 2009 at 11:18 am #39401keith b
Memberare there pictures? I cant see any pictures!
Oct 5, 2009 at 11:57 am #39402Neal Osborn
MemberKeith, the pictures are linked via SmugMug. Sometimes they are blocked via firewall filters (e.g. I am unable to view pictures on the IA board when at work).
Oct 5, 2009 at 12:28 pm #39403Josh England
MemberNice! I fished that area this past summer and love it.
Oct 5, 2009 at 12:32 pm #39404Adam McDowell
Membergreat pictures, gotta love that rapala fly in the last picture. it is becoming one of my favorites
Oct 5, 2009 at 12:51 pm #39405Neal Osborn
MemberAdam, I agree the TWM fly is about perfect. Todd Boyer hit a home run on that pattern. I was pleased to find that it is effective in the surf. Unfortunately, the bluefish chewed it up quickly so in the future I am planning on coating it with epoxy.
Oct 5, 2009 at 3:53 pm #39406cole m.
MemberI caught a near 4lb pomp last summer in Cape San Blas and it nearly ripped my damn 6wt out of my hand. It was such a fun fish, I can’t wait until I can get my hands on one of his big brothers!
Oct 5, 2009 at 6:45 pm #39407Mike Anderson
MemberThose short fly rods are really gaining a lot of popularity. I bought one of the Redington Predator rods in a 10wt for Striper, dock light, and mangrove, fishing…
Oct 5, 2009 at 7:02 pm #39408Neal Osborn
MemberMike, Baz (the guide) was so impressed with the smallmouth rod that he decided to order one on the guide program.
Oct 5, 2009 at 7:38 pm #39409olle bulder
MemberNeal, great report. It must be fantastic to catch fish on such a short fishing trip.
Olle
Oct 5, 2009 at 8:11 pm #39410
Bob RigginsMemberLooks like you had a great time.
Oct 5, 2009 at 10:59 pm #39411Douglas Barnes
MemberGreat report and shots Neal! Thanks for posting.
Oct 6, 2009 at 12:33 pm #39412
Joel ThompsonMemberGood stuff as always Neal! Glad to see you are getting some good use out of the Tibor and finding time to play around your work schedule!
Joel
Oct 6, 2009 at 8:29 pm #39413john michael white
MemberNice Neal!
Oct 6, 2009 at 10:27 pm #39414Corey Kruitbosch
MemberLooks like a damn fun time!
I have been interested in checking out the Sage bass rod. Scott has/?had? a similar rod out … I did cast it a bit, but really think i’d need some time to get used to it
Oct 7, 2009 at 9:44 pm #39415regan c. kenyon jr.
Memberscott has warmwater specials now. There are quite a few of these shorter rods around… the loomis shorestalkers, ross flystiks, tfo minimag and baby minimag, redington predators. I’m sure I’m leaving some out. I’m very curious to try out these shooting head launchers.
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