PINS Kayak Mayhem Report
June 21st-24th, 2010
Padre Island Natl Seashore, TX
Report by 'Oz'

-Report Summary-
Bull Shark/Kings/Cobia


PINS Mega Epic Sharking Report
May 27th-30th, 2010
Padre Island Natl Seashore, TX
Report by 'Oz'

-Report Summary-
Lemon/Tiger/Hammers


Mega AJ Offshore Report
April 25th-26th, 2010
North Padre Island, TX
Report by 'Oz'

-Report Summary-
Amberjack


PINS 4/20 Solo Tiger Report
April 20th, 2010
Padre Island Natl Seashore, TX
Report by 'Oz'

-Report Summary-
Blacktip/Tigershark


Venice Inshore/Offshore Report
March 13th-14th, 2010
Venice, LA
Report by 'HWK'

-Report Summary-
Redfish/AJ/Mako



PINS Surf Report
Padre Island National Seashore, TX
 
November 16th-18th, 2007

Report by Oz

   'Turkeytacular' was a planned trip organized by Mr. Champ and the other Usual Suspects the traditionally takes place in the late fall. Weather was questionable and some peoples commitments were dropping like flies. I decided to rock down Thursday night right after the front blew in. Water for the most part was still up to the dunes and receding slowly. It took 2 hours to get to the 20mm and overall was very slow creating your own road. I stopped in the mid-twenties for a couple more hours waiting for the wind to switch and the tide to change to allow just enough beach to drive the remainder way down to Mansfield. Hitting the beach at just after 8pm Thursday, I arrive down at the jetties at 4am on Friday. With not another soul for miles, I drive up and claim the high camp. With my main intention of getting down early in the morning to gig, the water clarity did not allow it so I decided to crash.

   Sandifer, Rocky, and Cork woke me up Friday morning and I was having no problem taking my time getting up and organized. The water was quite dirty and current still out of the north hitting the Jetty. Capt. Billy and I walk around looking for and finding a various array of fossils along with some cool shells that recently washed up.

   Not long and everyone takes off and I am undecided where to fish. I throw a rod out hoping for bait and end up getting a small Red. Winds have already switched out of the Southeast and blowing strong. Around 3pm VTOL arrives and stakes claim on his parking spot. The pelicans begin diving at the end in the dirty water and around this time I pack up and head out to the jetties.

  I immediately begin tossing Spoonr's and get hooked up good fish the look amazingly like Tarpon. Then after jumping a couple and having them straighten the hooks I find that they are indeed Tarpon... and they are EVERYWHERE. The Tarpon were hanging off the jetty picking off Menhaden, Shad, Mullet, and any other baitfish being sucked out with the tide. I change from Spoonr's the 6" Storm Shad and begin jumping Tarpon one right after another. The next 2 hours was non-stop Tarpon action. Out of about 15 Tarpon jumped in those couple hours, I got about 7-8 up to the rocks. With the easterly swells destroying the end of the jetty, fetching the fish was not a safe option thus through the process of pulling them up or walking them down the jetty would result in further hook straightening or simply throwing the hook. While I never got one up on the rocks itself for a pic, the days events were simply overwhelming for mid-November.

  After jumping about 10 Tarpon in a row, the Jackfish made their way in and hooked up to 4 over the next hour which prevented me from catching the Tarpon.

  For the first time in a long time, another inshore species had made priority over Sharks and the sharkbait - aka Jack Crevalle. I was glad I was getting the Jacks but would have much rather continue jumping the Silver Kings. When darkness came I made my way off the rocks. An incredible day with fun tarpon from 3'- just under 5'. I get back to camp hauling two 25lb+ Jacks and slowly more people started showing up. I sat and relaxed for a while as people were showing up and enjoying the company. Late that night I decided to give gigging a try again with mediocre water conditions. Todd and Richard went for a couple hours as well and I stayed out for about 3-4 hours. Lots of beds but not many present flatfish. I nailed 3 along with a load of Blue Crabs, a few Stingrays, and some other mystery creatures. The last Flounder was picked up in the last 20 minutes and was quite a doormat.

  I got back and another late night up til about 4:30am. I crashed and woke up in the mid-morning to find Richard 'FullonHarvest' nail a solid Jack along with landing his first Tarpon. A very happy angler. Curmit, VTOL and I head out to find the mass of Tarpon is still there. We get out and I begin nailing several Reds, majority oversized, and feeding heavily not allowing a chance for many Tarpon hookups. I had 3 Reds in a row that had relatively fresh scars from sharks.

   Even the slot Reds were all released for we did not have an icechest nor really a desire to keep anything out there then. Then just when I jump a couple Tarpon I get into the Reds again.   

   The Reds would soon move out or stop feeding which provided us time to hang into the Tarpon and more Jacks. For this day I would jump 8 more Tarpon, with having two up to the rocks and again spitting the hooks before being able to maneuver down to land them.

   I would leave the rest of the guys to the fun for I decided to go get some shark gear for the last hour of daylight. I come back and Curmit is already hooked up and lands a nice 5 1/2' Blacktip. Not much longer Shindle foul hooks a Tarpon and is able to jump down sacrificing all to land the beauty.

   Out of the 3 baits I deployed, one got picked up and after several seconds is dropped. We duke it out for another hour or so and head back to camp to feast on Champs badass fried Turkey! Many of us stayed up to party and many of us crashed early. There was lightning and rain off in the distance all night.

  I wake up mid-morning to find Curmit, Dwade, and Henry out fishing the morning bite. They caught a couple Reds and Curmit hooked into a decent sharks. I again made our way out on the Jetties bringing both Tarpon and Shark gear. I immediately hook into a couple Reds but the water is a bit dirtier and while you can see the Tarpon are still there, they are not as aggressive as the previous days. I did get to jump one solid Tarpon around 5' with the first couple hours.

  I soon get organized and ready to get baits out when Curmit is hooked up again on a shark.   

   He fights the fish for a while and gets her. A fat female Blacktip, a quick pic and she is guided of the slick granite platform for the release.

  Right after releasing that Blacktip, Curmit waste no time getting another bait out. Once again right when I am ready to begin deploying baits he gets hooked up.

After another great fight on a spinning outfit, Curmit gets in another beautiful Blacktip.

   And once again, as soon as the fish is released Curmit gets another bait out and bingo... back to back to back he is hooked up again on another fish.

This fish with an attitude provides a heroic fight for itself but is quickly subdued next to the deploying rock. Another great catch and safe release from the rocks.

   By the time I get baits out it was too little too late, the tide had changed and the fish had moved. With only one run the shark drops the bait. We continue to keep an eye on the baits and see Tarpon feeding on the surf-side. Curtis castnets some Mullet and we balloon and free-line some out. After a while I get a taker but too much slack in the line before I could catch up to him and the Tarpon ended up throwing the hook as it breached. Meanwhile, Curmit gets hooked up down the rocks a bit but it doesn't appear to be a Tarpon... it ends up being a Finetooth.

   Overall it was another incredible trip in crappy ass conditions. The fish were there and for the first time ever did I not only hook a Tarpon in November, but I jumped around 25 up to 5-1/2' in 3 days. Congrats to Richard and Shindle who were fortunate to actually get their hands on one for it provided a smile for everyone. With this major Thanksgiving cold front, the Tarpon will be gone til probably next May. With the water temps dropping dramatically within the coming week, expect the Sandbar Sharks to invade and if the water is clear enough, Pompano to be in force. The trigger mechanism for the winter species is now here and lets hope the weather cooperates enough for us to hammer these species.

Lots of fun with some good friends... Until the next great beach adventure
- Oz and Usual Suspects

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