Archive for October 3rd, 2009

Florida Everglades fishing in October

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

Pat & Cathy Braun

On October 2, 2009  I took out Pat and Cathy Braun from Chadd-Fort, Pennsylvania.

We fished a half  day trip in the Everglades, it was an exiting morning and beautiful day. The Brauns boated around 15 bass from 1lb pound to 4lbs, you can tell by the picture and the smiles it was a lot of fun.

I had a great time with them and look forward to having them on board again when they return in the spring.

Till next time tight lines and good fishing….
From Staff Writer Capt Tony Masiello (tonym@bassonline.com)
BassOnline.com / 888-829-BASS

BassOnline.com is Florida largest freshwater Guide Service, specializing in Florida bass fishing in the Florida lakes, canals and rivers.
To learn more about Florida bass fishing, visit Bass Fishing Blog. Also visit or sister website Florida Bass Fishing, Lake Okeechobee Fishing, Bass Fishing Florida, Florida Peacock Bass
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Lake Jackson bounces back; fishing is on an upswing

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

By Gerald Ensley • Democrat Senior Writer • October 2, 2009

Joe Jacobsen has been fishing Lake Jackson since 1956. On a recent Friday morning, the retired Tallahassee electrician went out with hopes of catching some bream but wound up catching a bunch of speckled perch instead.

“This is going to make some of my friends (who like to eat perch) real happy,” said Jacobsen, idling his boat on the way back to Sunset Landing. “Mostly, I’m just learning to fish this lake all over again.”

Everybody is.

Ten years ago — September 1999 — Tallahassee’s most famous lake disappeared down a sinkhole, Porter Sink. Fish congregated in a few surviving pockets of water. Grass grew 100 yards out from boat ramps. Lakeside docks were left stranded in fields of dirt and bushes.

It was nothing new. Lake Jackson, a rain-fed lake the Indians called Okeeheepkee, or “disappearing waters,” has dried up a dozen times in recorded history. But this “dry-down,” as scientists call it, was persistent.

The lake stayed dry for six years as Tallahassee suffered through a spate of years with lower-than-normal rainfall. The lake began refilling in 2005-2006 — only to drain again in 2007 through Porter Sink.

Now, a decade later, Lake Jackson has rebounded. The sinkhole has pretty much closed up. Two years of almost normal rainfall have refilled the 4,000-acre/6.5 square miles lake.

Lake Jackson is considered “full” when its surface is 84 to 87 feet above sea level. As of Thursday, the Northwest Florida Water Management District reported the lake level as 82.82 feet above sea level.

Even a few feet shy of perfect, the lake appears healthy. Boats can be launched again from all of the half-dozen public boat ramps. Water laps at the docks of most lakeside homes. Fishing has “exploded,” according to fishing guides such as Bob Mills, even if most of the young bass for which the lake is famous haven’t grown to the 18-inch keeper level.

“The lake is in phenomenal shape,” said Mills, steering his boat over a lake he has fished since 1972. “I haven’t seen this sheer number of bass in Lake Jackson ever. The problem is you have to catch 10 to get one you can keep.”

Of course, Lake Jackson looks different than its heyday. When the lake went dry, grasses, plants and trees sprouted in abundance. Once a sandy bottomed, open expanse of water, Lake Jackson is now a sort of mini-Everglades.

Boats must follow single-lane-wide paths carved through carpets of hydrilla, lily pads, dog fennel, pickerel weed, bladderwort and maidencane. Pine, cypress and oak trees have marched from the shoreline to hundreds of feet into the lake. Water skiing is confined to Church Cove, a deep swath of the lake near Miller’s Landing that is free of vegetation.

The flora growth has been beneficial: It’s given fish a place to spawn and baby fish a place to grow while hiding from predators. It’s attracted colonies of birds, ducks and wildlife. It has trapped and cleansed pollutants draining into the lake.

“The lake is a sportsman’s paradise,” said Michael Hill, a Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission biologist, as he piloted an airboat around the lake. “You just can’t water ski and jet ski everywhere yet.”

Hill said the old look and recreational opportunities will return. When the lake level rises another 2 or 3 feet, sunlight won’t reach the roots of plants and they will die and clear out the surface.

Despite what has seemed like a “wet” year, Tallahassee remains more than 10 inches below normal for rainfall thus far in 2009. Hill said the lake needs rainfalls of four to six inches at a time to out-pace evaporation and refill completely. Such rain may be coming: Forecasters predict a wet winter for the southeast U.S., thanks to the current El Nino effect in the Pacific Ocean.

“I would hate to get my wish of 20 inches of rain (at one time) because all the people around the lake would be flooded,” Hill said. “But regular rainfall will help.”

Government aided the lake’s restoration: From 1999 to 2002, the county and state spent more than $8 million to remove 2 million cubic yards of muck. The state has fought the growth of damaging water hyacinths “with a vengeance,” Hill said. Leon County has been eradicating giant apple snails, an invasive species that can denude a lake of all plant growth.

“And there’s a lot of just leaving (the lake) alone and not messing with its natural cycles,” Hill said. “The lake was exceptionally dry for an exceptionally long time. It’s going to take a while for it to cycle through.”

The decade long travail has had economic consequences. From the 1960s to 1990s, Lake Jackson attracted fishermen from all over the nation. A 1995 study pegged their impact on the local economy at $10 million a year. No study has been done since the lake went dry, but aside from modest spending by local users, FSU business professor Mark Bonn said, “I imagine the economic value of the lake is gone for now.”

“You’ve got to get the word out, got to get people coming back,” Bonn said. “It’s going to be five years before we can do a good study again.”

Some still believe man should prevent future dry-downs. Local hydrologist Tom Kwader has long advocated building a berm around Porter Sink that would prevent water from draining in dry times but could drain excess water in flood times. Kwader’s chief concern is water quality, as pollutants in the lake go down the sinkhole into the Floridan aquifer that provides our drinking water. The sinkhole was draining 5,000 gallons of water a minute when it opened in 1999; Kwader estimates only 500 gallons a minute are being drained now.

“(Pollutants) move as a slug when you pour them down there and if it goes to city wells, you’ve got some high concentrates,” Kwader said. “I still favor a berm to protect the aquifer. And a lot of people are coming around to the idea.”

Few of them are scientists, who insist interfering with the lake’s natural dry and refill cycle would create a muck-filled, dead lake. They note such encroachments are prevented by law: Lake Jackson is a state aquatic preserve, which stipulates its preservation in a natural state. They suggest people are impatient: In the 1930s and 1950s, the lake went dry for years and yet rebounded to full use.

“When water doesn’t reach people’s docks, when their property values decline, when they can’t water ski and jet ski, there is a lot of frustration,” said Sean McGlynn, a local water quality specialist. “But that’s different than (doing what’s best for) the lake’s health.”

Jacobsen agreed. He does not believe in tampering with the lake, even if the dry-down curtailed his fishing for many years.

“You don’t mess with Mother Nature,” Jacobsen said. “Mother Nature made it a good lake. And Mother Nature will keep it a good lake.”

Till next time tight lines and good fishing….
Posted From Bass Online Staff Writer
BassOnline.com / 888-829-BASS

BassOnline.com is Florida largest freshwater guide service and outfitter, specializing in Florida bass fishing in the Florida lakes, canals and rivers. Considered by many as the freshwater bass fishing experts in Florida!

To learn more about Bass fishing Florida, visit Bass Fishing Blog, Florida Bass Fishing, Lake Okeechobee Fishing, Florida Peacock Bass

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Perfect time for Bass Fishing in Florida is everyday!

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

The Perfect Place for Bass Fishing in Florida

Posted by: BASSonline

Fishing in Florida is easy, exciting and fun because there are so many productive places to fish in the state, its not stretching the truth to say if you see some water and it’s more than a few inches deep, there’s probably fish to be caught in it. Pair this with the fantastic weather Florida has and you’ve got heaven on earth for many Anglers. You can virtually go bass fishing everyday. You can fish everyday of the year, that adds to the attraction as a fishing mecca or as it’s know to the rest of the world, ”the fishing capital of the world.”

Your chances of catching what you want do vary with the time of the year as in all fishing. But with the temperature and weather barely fluctuating and changes are at a minimum, it is not unlikely to catch a trophy fish even when out of season. The largemouth bass in Florida is the best known and is the most popular game fish in the state of Florida. Found statewide, large-mouth bass have rapid growth rates. Historically known for huge bass, Florida remains the #1 destination to catch a trophy bass.

Central Florida offers not only world famous Lake Okeechobee but also Lake Toho which is the most popular lake of the Kissimmee Chain. But the fame Stick Marsh-Farm 13 fishery as well as the trophy bass lake Walk in water and Lake Istokpoga are all great fisheries. Most are relatively shallow and have thousands of acres on each lake that are covered with various types of aquatic vegetation. The most abundant is the massive hydraulic beds that can be found growing to the surface in up to 12 feet of water in some cases.

For Florida bass fishing, bream fishing, or anything in between, their are locations from the St. Johns River on the northeast coast to the Apalachicola River in the panhandle to the world renowned Florida Everglades west of Fort Lauderdale, Florida gives us quick access to some of the most lucrative Florida bass fishing and bream fishing grounds in the United States. Our professional guides services, offer spacious cabins, hotels, motels and fully stocked bait and tackle shops, as well as fishing from our professional bass boats, to fishing on a family pontoon boat.

All of our big Florida lakes have different faces. From North Florida to South, the lakes are all different in many spectacular ways. Some are wide, while others are narrow others are long and miles wide. Many lakes have deeper depths, while most are fished in six foot or less of water.

The most popular fishing in Florida is livebait, using medium to large wild Shiners for years have been the best producers for trophy bass. However, we have seen a change with many anglers and fisheries over the years. With the increasing popularity of bass fishing and major advancements in fishing lures artificial lure fishing has become just as popular and productive as livebait. Soft plastics lures like, Super Flukes, topwater baits, Rat’s traps, crank baits, soft jerk baits and the trend setting swimbaits have become favorites of  our clients and Pro Staff.

Never underestimate Florida bass fishing, it is well know to create life changing memories for many fishermen and crushed the hearts of ones that have failed to discover it!

Posted From (Staff Writer BASSonline) fishing@bassonline.com
BassOnline.com / 888-829-BASS

BassOnline.com is Florida Fishing largest Freshwater Guide Service, specializing in Florida bass fishing in the Florida lakes, canals and rivers.
To learn more about Florida bass fishing, visit Bass Fishing Blog. Also visit or sister website Florida Bass Fishing, Lake Okeechobee Fishing, Bass Fishing Florida, Florida Peacock Bass

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Lake Okeechobee with Newlyweds from Kansas!

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

10-04 005

On October 2, 2009,  we had the pleasure of taking out the honeymoon couple Ryan & Lauren White from Kansas.

They had been down visiting the Keys and wanted to do some bass Fishing before they left Florida, the only problem they were surrounded by saltwater.

When I started talking to them about bass fishing and all Florida’s fishery options they were surprised to learn how different each were and how many they actually had to choose from.  After much deliberation, they decided on fishing world famous Lake Okeechobee. We confirmed our time and meeting location and I think after the phone conversation I was excited as they were!

When we got out on the water they where very surprised, “as most people are” about how big visually the lake really is. Then I tried to put it perspective by explaining to them that we where only fishing in a very small portion of the lake that extends 730 square miles. It really is breath taking!

The fishing was a little slower then it has been, the weather changed and it was high and bright blue bird skies most of the day. But they managed to catch this (7) seven pound bass pictured above and a couple of nice quality fish to go along with this kicker.

While on the water Ryan was very interested in our exotic Peacock bass, a much discussion he said, “Its a must do.”

We look forward to taken them out again, remember Lake Okeechobee fishing always makes for happy anglers!

Till next time tight lines and good fishing….
From Staff Writer Capt Brett Isackson (bretti@bassonline.com)
BassOnline.com / 888-829-BASS

BASSonline.com is Florida largest freshwater Guide Service, specializing in Florida bass fishing on lakes, canals and rivers.
To learn more about Florida bass fishing, visit Bass Fishing Blogs. Also visit or sister website Florida Bass Fishing, Lake Okeechobee Fishing, Bass Fishing Florida, Florida Peacock Bass

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