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Event Name: INDIAN RIVER LAGOON
Event Date: 8/20/2009
Event City: Fort Pierce
Event State: FL
Event Type: Fishin' Outing
Attendance: 3
Event Description: INDIAN RIVER FISHIN’ WITH CAPT. CHARLIE

Much to my approval and pleasure, my son moved from South Miami, upstate to the Sebastian and Vero Beach area of East Coast Florida. Not that there is anything wrong with the Miami area, NOT if you LIKE congestion, crime, traffic, high taxes and a host of other adjectives that reflect the way of life in South Florida.

The Sebastian, Vero Beach and Fort Pierce areas are a saltwater angler’s paradise! Miles and miles of the Indian River are accessible from virtually dozens of public boat ramps, affording the small boat angler almost limitless opportunities to enjoy this aquatic paradise. Fish species such as Snook, Redfish, Sea Trout, Grouper, Snapper, Jack, Lady Fish, Tarpon, and Flounder, just to name a few, provide plenty of action throughout every season of the year.

My dad and I fished this area on a regular basis, when I was growing up in Florida during the 50’s and 60’s and enjoyed much success on many of the aforementioned species. When my dad passed away several years back, he was cremated and his ashes spread on an incoming tide at the Sebastian Inlet. I still feel his presence whenever I fish there now and someday I will join him there again.

I have fished this area with a couple of different guides since my son has moved there, but have not found a guide who fits my needs and expectations… Until now that is! My son was lining-up a “fishin’ outing” for us, during my recent visit there, and inquired about a guide from his buddies at work. The name Capt. Charlie Conner’s “Fish Tales” charter service came up several times and we decided to give Capt. Charlie a try. GOOD DECISION!!

Captain Charlie Conner has over twenty-five years experience fishing the Indian River Lagoon from Stuart, Fort Pierce & Port St Lucie to Titusville, Florida. He is a licensed and insured Coast Guard Master Captain specializing in light tackle fishing along the flats and islands of the Indian River. He welcomes the experienced as well as the novice angler and will take the time to improve your fishing skills and show you tips on fishing these waters. He also has a GREAT sense of humor and a deep seated love and respect for the environment and all of God’s creatures living there.

Let me interject a bit of philosophy here. It has often been said and written that “It is NOT the fish that an angler truly pursues, but the total experience of fishing” and I happen to totally agree with this statement. If you HAVE to catch fish, every time you go fishing and if you cannot enjoy and be awed by the surroundings, the birds, the sunrises, the wildlife and the total package of God’s creation, then perhaps you should look for another way to spend your leisure time. I have spent most of my life in the outdoors, fishing and hunting, and I am still fascinated, awed and excited by what I see, hear and experience. When I hook a big fish, I am still that excited little boy who plied the waters of his youth so many, many years ago, and if that feeling ever ceases, then put me in a box, for I am surely dead.


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SORRY… Didn’t mean to get off on a philosophical tangent there, but I felt the same kinship, respect for nature and excitement from my host of the day… Capt. Charlie Conner. His sense of humor, his friendly and helpful attitude and his love of the sport were all too apparent and I will surely fish with this gentleman many times in the future.

My son and I met Capt. Charlie bright and early at the Seaway Drive Public Boat Ramp in Fort Pierce on a calm and clear Tuesday morning. The weather had been windy and unstable for about two weeks, and two hurricane systems had dumped nearly 24 inches of rain on the area over the past few weeks. There was no telling how these events and the huge influx of fresh water into the lagoon system would effect today’s fishing, but Capt. Charlie reassured us that the fishing had been picking up the past few days and that we were in for a good day.

We idled from the boat ramp area, turned south and Capt. Charlie put the throttle down on the 115 horses pushing his 18’ Key West made Flats Boat “Stealth”. After a short run, we idle down and crept into a likely looking flats area. The water was alive with school after school of finger mullet and shiners. Huge schools of Jack, Redfish and Snook were pounding on this tasty morsels and it was almost an effort to stop watching the show, as hundreds if not thousands of baitfish scurried for their lives, and start fishing. Capt. Charlie tied a Mirror Lure “Top Dog” to a 61/2 foot Medium Action spinning outfit, mated with a smooth operating Okuma reel and spooled with “Suffix” braid line and handed it to me with instructions to “have at it”! I was “walkin’ the dog” when a sizeable Jack Carville nailed my “dog” and as the line pealed from the reel and the dray sang my favorite tune, I turned to Capt. Charlie and said “Hey Cap… I think I have a bite”. This remark cracked him up and I knew we were in for one HECK of a day. After a brief but hectic battle, we brought the Jack to net, snapped a few pics and got back to business. Schools of mullet and shiners were everywhere and predator fish were slamming into them from all directions. Capt. Charlie kept on the trolling motor, trying to stay with the fleeing schools of “victims” while Ty and I hammered away with topwater lures.

After a couple of hours of straining our casting and fish battling muscles, Capt. Charlie decided it was time to search for a quarry all true saltwater angles aspire to… The mighty Snook!

We idled off of the flat and made the short run back across the Inland Waterway Channel to the west shore of the river. Long private boat docks dotted the west shore for miles and reached from the shoreline out into the lagoon by 50 to 100 yards. The water was shallow, but the incoming tide made the docks ideal ambush points for Snook, Redfish and other lagoon predators. On our first stop it didn’t take long for a nice sized Snook to attack my unlucky live Pinfish bait and after a nice fight, we boated a beautiful “Lineside” Snook. We concentrated on the outermost ends of the docks and back along the sides of the docks on those that offered deeper water. Almost every dock held a Snook or two, of varying sizes, some we boated… Some we didn’t, but they were all FUN!

PART ONE OF TWO PARTS... TO BE CONTINUED!!
Plano® branding: WELL REPRESENTED as usual! Every "Guide" or "Pro" that I have ever fished with... Had a good supply of Plano products on board!

 










 

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