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Thread: Cobia Migration

  1. #11
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    I absolutely agree with the total shutdown approach with Cobia. If any fish needs a serious reboot, it's Cobia. We used to love fishing for them in the spring, but it is no longer worth the effort. After a couple year recovery period, reduce the limit to one fish per boat per day.
    Pier#r likes this.

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  3. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by Green_Steel View Post
    I absolutely agree with the total shutdown approach with Cobia. If any fish needs a serious reboot, it's Cobia. We used to love fishing for them in the spring, but it is no longer worth the effort. After a couple year recovery period, reduce the limit to one fish per boat per day.
    I absolutely agree. Something has got to be done soon or there will be no fishery left in a not so distant future

  4. #13
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    That's so sad...I always thought that migration was a really neat thing. I recall years ago people saying the rough rule of thumb was they would start looking for them around St. Patricks Day and you'd see the boats up and down the beach with the big towers. I guess it was good back then.

    Here's another thing that, for whatever reason, seems to be gone. My parents built a little cabin at Gulf Shores in 1959 and we'd live there in the summers. Needless to say, I spent much of my time on an old wooden pier called Pixtons Pier (I could walk there. Momma would give .50 and that was .25 cents to get on the pier, .15 for a coke and .10 for some chips for lunch). All of that to say there were times when the water would be black with schools of mullet. I never see that anymore. We had weighted treble hooks (we called them Snatch hooks) and you could throw them a country mile. We'd throw it past the schools and rip it thru there and foul hook them. I was like 10 and I'm sure I didn't exactly have state of the art tackle and, man, they were a challenge.

    I wonder why you don't see that anymore? Netting?

    Also...the other thing I loved was...like I said I was like 10 or so when I started going to the pier by myself...and those old men loved to teach me stuff. I say "old men"...looking back they were probably in their 30s and 40s. One of the neat things is they would tell me stories about the German U Boats coming along our beaches in During WW2. I remember a guy telling me he was walking along the beach at night...total darkness...and a UBoat surfaced just outside the first bar. He said he could hear them talking and they got out and swan and bathed, etc. I loved hearing that stuff when I was 10...then I could go home and make sand forts with my little green army men.

    Sorry for the trip down memory lane but there were worse ways to spend a summer in your childhood.

    Back to my question...I wonder what happened to the mullett schools?

  5. #14
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    I remember Pixton's. One time I took my grandfather's Pflueger star drag reel apart and couldn't get it back together properly. The guy who ran the place fixed it for me in a jiffy - much to my relief. That old reel was on a bamboo rod - sure wish I had it now.
    auvet1986 likes this.
    People are shocked to see sharks in the water around here.

    If you see natural water taste it. If it's salty it has sharks in it. If it's fresh it has alligators in it. If it's brackish it has both.

  6. #15
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    "Sorry for the trip down memory lane but there were worse ways to spend a summer in your childhood."

    Nice trip. Some things do come back, we had those schools of mullet in the past couple of years and the pompano fishing both last year and this year has been great. If we could better restrictions on the net boats I think that trend plus spanish and probably kings would follow suit.

    I understand people making a living and the tradition of commercial fishing but the sheer economics of the recreational vs commercial is so obvious it hurts. What is a spanish mackerel or a pompano worth at the fish market and how much do you think people spend to catch those fish with hook and line? The recreational value of fish in Alabama alone is staggering-truly a golden goose to the economy here. Why short sell that for less than a dollar a pound for spanish mackerel?

    Politics aside, this makes no sense what so ever. Simple math that's not so simple
    Haywire, fordguy and Rich1 like this.
    The key to happiness is to avoid the things that make you unhappy.

    Namaste

  7. #16
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    I remember that old man....at least I guess he was the same one. Again...at that age everybody else was an old man to me.

    Another bit of trivia: The barber down there was a guy named Sid. He used to catch a lot of tarpon off that pier and when you'd go get your hair cut instead of giving you bubble gum he'd give you a tarpon scale. I had a ton of them but lost them in Fredrick in 79.

    Man...I was afraid of that guy. When I was five or six I heard my parents say that he was an atheist. I was too little to understand the term but thought it meant cannibal. I was afraid he was going to fry me up every time I had to get my hair cut. My childhood was a lot happier once I figured out the difference between a cannibal and an atheist.
    Haywire and oldfisherman like this.

  8. #17
    We are there! Let's go fishing!!
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    he was an atheist. I was too little to understand the term but thought it meant cannibal. I was afraid he was going to fry me up every time I had to get my hair cut. My childhood was a lot happier once I figured out the difference between a cannibal and an atheist.
    LOL Sid Bakkal was a hoot!
    The BEST king mackerel fisherman I EVER saw. He had a tale for every occasion.
    He claimed to have caught a 70# king mackerel off the old Sun-N-Fun pier in the late 1960s.
    And I believe him!
    He had two Alcedo reels with manual bails on 9 foot rods. One with 20# line to 'free cork' LYs for kings, and the other with 30# line for tarpon. He was amazing to watch. And he correctly predicted the collapse of king mackerel stocks in the middle to late 1970s before anyone else realized what was going on.

    Joe Leonard and I rented an old trailer behind Sid's house down the street from the post office during the summer of 1975.
    He told us because he was paying for the water to just get wet in the shower, turn the water off to lather up, and then turn it back on to rinse off. I am not kidding! lol

    Sorry, I digress.
    I remember in the early to mid 1970s during May we could count on "ling" of all sizes being under huge manta rays or turtles (like Haywire described).
    They, like the football field-sized mullet schools are just memories now :-(
    auvet1986 and tigershark like this.

  9. #18
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    Don’t forget about Mr. Tidwell, Mr. Woolley and Marvin Landers-Sid was my favorite though He was the best ling fisherman for sure.
    Pier#r and sandflea like this.

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  11. #19
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    I was on Pixton,s pier one night in the mid 1950,s with my dad and there were so many speckled trout around the pier we caught one on every cast and quickly filled up our ice chest. It was one of those times when something was in the water that caused a streak of luminescence every time a fish moved. We stayed and just watched for a while after we quit fishing.

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  13. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by oldfisherman View Post
    I was on Pixton,s pier one night in the mid 1950,s with my dad and there were so many speckled trout around the pier we caught one on every cast and quickly filled up our ice chest. It was one of those times when something was in the water that caused a streak of luminescence every time a fish moved. We stayed and just watched for a while after we quit fishing.
    Great story! Keep them coming everyone. I was throwing a cast net inside the jetty at Destin one predawn morning. It was very dark, as the net sank it would trap small box jellies that would light up as the net touched them. It was like an underwater fireworks show. I'm partial to things that glow like that.
    Rich1 likes this.
    The key to happiness is to avoid the things that make you unhappy.

    Namaste

 

 
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