Thread: School of ???
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06-16-2017, 12:03 AM #1
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School of ???
It's 11pm, and the is a school of something close to the bathrooms. Just kinda swimming lazily in circles. They are dark on top, and silver on the sides. Look to be about a foot long.
weve tossed bubble rigs and gotchas through them, and they ignore it.
Any ifrads of what hat it could be??
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06-16-2017, 12:09 AM #2
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from what I know but I'm no expert is that it's a school of mullet. they seem to swim in circles sometimes and are about a foot long
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06-16-2017, 05:03 AM #3
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Mullet. They won't bite a hook. They can be legally snagged. It's the only way of catching them, other than cast-netting, which you can't do from the pier. They sell snatch hooks in the bait/tackle shop at the pier. You have to be especially careful because those weighted treble hooks could do a lot of damage if they hooked a person. Otherwise, mullet put a good pull on your string, they're easy to clean and they are great eating.
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06-16-2017, 05:26 AM #4
Love snatching mullet when nothing else is happening
Bill..............
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06-16-2017, 08:49 AM #5
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Yep, sounds like mullet.
Fresh mullet introduced to corn meal & hot grease is very nice.
But this is one fish that definitely has to be eaten fresh and within a few days of being caught.
The roe is a delicacy, cured & dried, its very popular along in Italy, Spain & in most of Asia.Carl
Life is too short to drink bad beer.
Disclaimer: This post and/or report is not a substantiation of or reflection on the true accuracy of the present stock assessment methods. It is only an anecdotal report on or comment concerning local observations. Your results may vary.
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06-16-2017, 09:03 AM #6
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I have read that mullet can be chummed up with oatmeal and caught using a #22(ish) hook and a bit of oatmeal (or plastic bait) on a fly rod.
Never tried it, though.
Anybody ever hear of that or know more about it? I assume you have to soak the oatmeal enough to swell it, but not so much it sinks.
Edit: Don't worry, I ain't bringing a fly rod to the pier.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.
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06-16-2017, 10:35 AM #7
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It's a tight rope that you'd have to walk, getting individual oat flakes moist enough that they're not brittle, and yet not so wet that they fall apart when you put a hook through them. The hook would have to be tiny, yet stout enough to withstand the pull of the mullet. I get the part about needing a fly rod, because you couldn't cast anything so light and the wind couldn't be blowing because your oat flakes would never make it to the water.
Maybe one day I'll experiment with the idea.
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06-16-2017, 11:08 AM #8
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The article I read said that the difficulty with the oatmeal was why they used a tiny bit of white plastic grub floated in among the oatmeal. I imagine you have to get the mullet trained to the oatmeal - like maybe over a period of time off the same dock.
The article said that once you get them going it's pretty hot catching until they get hook wise.
They school up in the late summer and fall before going offshore to spawn. That's probably the time to try.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.
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06-16-2017, 11:26 AM #9
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People also use small bits of worms on tiny hooks.
Lot easier to just throw a cast net.Carl
Life is too short to drink bad beer.
Disclaimer: This post and/or report is not a substantiation of or reflection on the true accuracy of the present stock assessment methods. It is only an anecdotal report on or comment concerning local observations. Your results may vary.
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06-16-2017, 11:46 AM #10
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Well, after several hours making phone calls, I was able to track down a certain manufacturer’s service center in California. Thankfully, they agreed to send out my needed parts. These were left over...
You would think I would know this!