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www.fishrelentless.com
www.fishpatriot.com
www.ofishalbusinesscharters.com
www.fishbox.net
www.grandmastercharters.com
www.ticketfishing.com
www.fishobsession.com
www.tightworksportfishing.com
What to bring on a Charter
Taking a charter is often a very exciting experience. Many factors, such as weather conditions and the appetite of the fish, are beyond our control. There are many things, however, that you can do to make the most out of any fishing trip.
The sun is a major factor during a day of fishing. Many people do not realize the dangers of the sun until it is too late. The reflection of sunlight off the water and deck of most boats tends to double the sun's intensity compared to a day on land. Sunscreen is very important as well as some type of hat. Sunglasses are essential and polarized lenses help to reduce glare from the water's surface, enabling better sight-fishing. Lightweight, long-sleeve shirts and pants are becoming popular forms of sun protection.
If you book an offshore charter and you have concerns about seasickness, there are many preventive medicines available such as Dramamine. Most of these medicines do not work unless taken some time before the charter.
If you plan on documenting your trip, don't forget your camera and video equipment. You should inquire about the availability of dry storage on the boat for such water sensitive equipment. Large Ziplock bags make easy waterproofing for the ride. Extra film and batteries are always a plus.
Lightweight rain gear is handy for afternoon showers or when a cool breeze arises. Footwear is also important on a boat. Shoes with good traction are essential and black rubber soles are taboo. Black soles leave scuff marks all over the boat which are very hard to remove. But do not go barefoot! Though it feels great, going barefoot is very dangerous in a situation filled with hooks, gaffs and sharp teeth.
Food and drinks are usually the responsibility of the charter, unless prearranged otherwise. Lots of water is important to prevent dehydration. Check with the captain if you wish to bring beer. Hard liquor is usually not acceptable.
As a charter client you are generally welcome to bring a favorite rod, however, it would be best to discuss it with a your captain beforehand for some expert tackle advice. Our charter fleet is fully loaded with some of the best angling equipment available, and many of our guides are supplied with brand new, state-of-the-art tackle from their corporate sponsors. For a small fee, quality rods and reels can be rented when fishing on our party boat.
Tipping Mates
Aside from sewer workers, charter boat mates are arguably some of the most under-appreciated laborers in the world. Day after day they toil in the sweltering sun, dripping with fish blood and ballyhoo entrails, expending all their energy so that their charter clients can have the fishing adventure of a lifetime. And, at day's end, they often have very little reward to show for it (besides, of course, the satisfaction of seeing their client's elation after boating a hefty wahoo).
Of course, not every mate on the water these days deserves to be tipped well. But when the charter is over and you're left wondering how your mate might rate in the fishing world, just ask yourself these simple questions. Did your mate help you board the boat in the morning, or did he look the other way as you teetered off the dock? Did he have the bait box full with rigged ballyhoo before the lines went in, or did he frantically re-rig when 'cudas chomped every bait in the spread behind the hooks? And when you pulled the hook on a big fish, was your mate friendly and reassuring or did he sneer and snarl?
Just remember, there is a good reason why fishing is not called catching; do not judge your mate's performance on how well the fish were biting. Instead, take into consideration his preparedness, attitude, and helpfulness. And if you come to the conclusion that he was a decent or even outstanding mate, then by all means, make his day with a 15-percent to 20-percent tip.
ABC's of Chartering a Boat
For many people, a fishing charter is a new and mystifying experience. Chartering a professional can be the best and most economical way to enjoy Florida's incredible fishing opportunities. Chartering a boat is simple with a few important steps. First, make your reservations as early as possible to ensure the desired date will be open. Most boats require a small deposit, in case of a "no show", and that will hold your date. Inquire as to what is provided on your charter. Most boats provide the bait, tackle, and licenses. Your food and drinks are usually your responsibility, but may be arranged if needed. Sunscreen, sunglasses (polarized), and a hat are often essential on the water. Second, confirm your trip with the captain and arrange the time and place. Ask your captain how many people he is allowed to carry and do not show up with one more in hopes of slipping him on. Third, if a mate is working for you and has done a good job and been courteous and helpful, a ten to fifteen percent tip is customary. Mates often depend on a tip for their wages. It is fine to tip the captain too, especially if the boat is not his. Listen to what your crew tells you and you can have a safe and enjoyable day out fishing without any of the clean up!
Types of fishing
Bottom Fishing -
The continental shelf tapers slowly on Florida's East Coast and this means lots of area and structure to bottom fish. Though local knowledge is a plus, many wrecks, both accidental and man-made are published on fishing charts thus making them fishable to anyone with a loran or GPS. Year round, bottom fishing can be good for grouper, snapper, cobia, and many other tasty species. It is possible to catch gag, red, warsaw, snowy, kittymitchel, and black groupers. The snappers consist of red, mangrove, mutton, lane, and the occasional yellowtail. Amberjack, african pompano, and cobia will also be hanging on local structures looking for an easy meal. The incredible variety and the mystery of what each drop may hold make bottom fishing one of the local favorites.
Live Baiting -
An excellent and popular method of trolling for kingfish, cobia, dolphin, sailfish and the occasional giant wahoo. Boats catch their livebaits along the beach and near shore waters. The baits consist of mullet, pogies, and greenies. Pogies or menhaden are the most commonly caught bait. They are cast netted from large schools, which congregate in 30 to 6 feet of water along the coast. Large muddy areas and diving pelicans are good indicators that pogies are about. Watch and listen for small flips on the surface. A large, circular livewell with plenty of fresh water is a must to maintain that lively quiver. Livebait trolling is done near shore as well as offshore. The baits are trolled as slow as possible on light wire with 2 #4-6 treble hooks. A twenty pound conventional or spinning outfit is all that is needed as long as you have some line capacity. A light drag is essential to keep from pulling the small hooks being used. This is a popular type of fishing due to its relative simplicity and accessibility to smaller boats. There is nothing like seeing your bait get nervous and then get blasted from below.
Trolling -
The fertile waters lapping the coast of east central Florida are teaming with many diverse types of gamefish and sealife. Trolling is an effective and popular method of catching many of the resident and seasonal pelagic fish. The warm, northward flowing Gulf Stream is normally found approximately thirty miles from land and its fluid boundaries are often the haunts of dolphin, wahoo, sailfish and marlin. However one need not be in the Gulf Stream to catch fish. Most species come inshore to feed on the many different kinds of bait that gather over natural bottom contours and wrecks. Kingfish, blackfin tuna, cobia, barracuda, and little tunny are also frequently caught while trolling and give variety to a day's action. Trolling methods vary as much as the fish to be caught. Anglers pull dead baits such as ballyhoo, mullet, and bonita strips. Alone or in combination with lures and skirts, these dead baits are resurrected to swim again. Artificial lures and spoons are also trolled and can be an effective way to cover more ground if the fish are spread out. Trolling slowly with live baits is a highly effective method when the fish are concentrated. Port Canaveral is one of the safest and most navigable inlets on the East Coast. It harbors a great charter fleet and two boat ramps. Local shops have all of the bait, tackle, ice, and advice that you will need to tap into this awesome fishery.
Otherside -
You have been running for hours now and the water is still that same bottomless blue, but the excitement is mounting because your temperature gauge just dropped a degree and a half. You have just emerged from the warm-water river known as the Gulf Stream. You have entered a realm of incredible fishing potential that has come to bear the name the "Other Side". Now your eyes scan the horizon and all points in between trying to find something to focus on. You are searching for a "pack" of birds because they are the ever-watchful companions of the yellowfin tuna. The yellowfin are using the slightly cooler waters bordering the Gulf Stream as a highway on their northward migrations. They are cruising quickly, stopping only to annihilate any baitfish that happen to be in their path. The birds, spying from incredible altitudes are always on hand to clean up the carnage left in the path of the ravenous yellowfin. So as the food chain goes, the birds are watching the tunas and we are watching the birds. We are not alone in the hunt for yellowfin, because blue marlin are cruising about using their own time-tested method of fishing. If you can find some floating debris or a weed line you might add dolphin, wahoo and tripletail to your menu. The fishing is best described as " hit and run". Often the tuna spook after a pass or two with the boat. You need to make the most of your first pass with multiple hook ups. A spread of small to medium high-speed lures maneuvered into the path of the tuna can often result in five to six reels screaming at once. If the school dives or the fish get shy about striking, then you're off to find another pack and repeat the procedure. More and more boats are now investing in radar units that can detect the packs of birds for approximately six miles or more. This greatly increases one's chances of finding the tuna. Generally this great fishing takes place between sixty-five and one hundred miles out. Safety and planning are incredibly important. A life raft, epirb and single side-band radio are important safety features on a long voyage such as this. These factors and others tend to make this a "big boat" fishery though many small boats have been making the run in order to tap into this awesome fishing. Come join us and encounter the thrill and suspense of dragging your lines through the "OTHERSIDE"
Inshore/ Flats-
Central Florida is home to an incredibly diverse inshore saltwater environment. Thousands of acres of shallow grass flats, miles of canals and shorelines are home to many resident and migrating fish. Stalking redfish, sea trout, snook, tarpon and many others are becoming increasingly popular to a wide variety of anglers. Light tackle and fly fishing for these inshore species are both relaxing and exciting. Accessing these flats can be as easy as pulling off the road in places or skimming the glass-like rivers at dawn in a high dollar flats boat. There are many experience inshore guides available to visitors or residents alike. Manatees, dolphin, and birdlife round out the experience.
Weather Links
http://www.weather.com/weather/map/USFL0311?from=LAPmaps
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=41010
http://www.sstcharts.com/
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=41009
http://fermi.jhuapl.edu/avhrr/gs_s/index.html
Where to eat
http://www.visitgrills.com/images/pages/grills.gif
http://www.visitgrills.com/
Grills Seafood Deck & Tiki Bar is located just one hour east of Orlando on the Space Coast, Grills is the closest waterfront restaurant to the Atlantic Ocean in Port Canaveral and is conveniently located to Cocoa Beach and Brevard County.
Grills Restaurant is a unique waterfront eating establishment with original island cuisine. You can savor a freshly grilled yellowfin tuna sandwich while watching the day's catches being brought in at 5 p.m.!
Many of the Charter Boats recommended on this site reside in front of Grills.
Grills can also cook your catch for a nominal fee at the end of an exciting days fishing!
Port Canaveral Area Accommodations |
Hampton Inn
3425 N Atlantic Ave
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
321-784-4800 |
The Resort on Cocoa Beach
1600 North Atlantic Ave
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
321-783-4000 |
Holiday Inn Express & Suites
5575 N. Atlantic Ave
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
321-868-2525 |
Clarion Hotel Kennedy Space Center
260 E. Merritt Island Cswy.
Merritt Island, FL 32920
800-584-1482 |
Wakulla Suites
3550 N. Atlantic Ave
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
321-783-2230 |
Best Western Oceanfront Resort
5600 North Atlantic Ave.
Cocoa Beach, Florida 32931
800-962-0028 |
Beach Place Inn
1445 South Atlantic Ave
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
321-783-4045 |
Super 8 Motel
900A Friday Road
Cocoa, Florida 32926
800-800-8000 |
Cocoa Beach Club Condominium
5200 Ocean Beach Blvd #214
Cocoa Beach, Florida 32931
321-784-2457 |
Courtyard by Marriott Cocoa Beach
3435 N. Atlantic Blvd
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
321-784-4800 |
Crown Resorts of Cocoa Beach
5604 North Atlantic Ave
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
321-868-7343 |
Comfort Inn & Suite Resort
3901 North Atlantic Ave
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
800-247-2221 |
Days Inn Oceanside
5500 N. Atlantic Ave
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
321-784-2550 |
Econo Lodge Resort Cocoa Beach
1275 North Atlantic Ave.
Cocoa Beach, Florida 32931
321-783-2252 |
Discovery Beach Resort
300 Barlow Avenue
Cocoa Beach, FL 32954
800-352-4874 |
The Inn at Cocoa Beach
4300 Ocean Beach Blvd
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
800-343-5307 |
Holiday Inn Cocoa Beach Resort
1300 N. Atlantic Ave
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
321-783-2271 |
Hilton Cocoa Beach Oceanfront
1550 N. Atlantic Ave
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
321-799-0003 |
Motel 6
3701 N. Atlantic Blvd
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
321-783-3103 |
Royal Mansions Resort
8600 Ridgewood Ave
Cape Canaveral, Florida 32920
321-784-8484 |
Ocean Landings Resort
321 North Atlantic Ave
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
800-323-8413 |
Ramada Inn Kennedy Space Center
900 Friday Road
Cocoa , FL 32926
321-631-1210 |
Radisson Resort at The Port
8701 Astronaut Blvd
Cape Canaveral, FL 32920
321-784-0000 |
Ocean Suite Hotel
5500 Ocean Beach Blvd.
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931
phone - 321-784-4343 fax - 321-783-6514
oceansuitescb@aol.com |
Quality Suites
3655 N Atlantic Ave
Cocoa Beach, FL 32931 |
Sunny Beach Rentals
Cocoa Beach
321.459.9388 |
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