Capt. Kelley
8/22/2011 1:50:00 AM

Trout to 23" & Ling to 28"...."What The Heck"?

Castaway Lodge Seadrift Report
By Capt. Kris Kelley

 

The fishing has heated up right along with the thermometer. With temperatures approaching 105 degrees, its never been more important to stay hydrated. Wednesday evening we welcomed a large Wine company in for a two day event. Thursday found hot fishing for Trout with less success on Redfish. Coming off the water, all Capts. reported the excessive heat taking a toll on the guests and guides alike. I know I wasn't quite right for about 3-4 hours after returning to the lodge with Trout limits.  That brought the early focus "dial in" to a fevered pitch.  Sure enough, Friday's fishing was lack luster at best early.  Digging into the heat of the day found the best action on Trout with near limits coming in for all the guests.  Capt. Terry managed to thump Redfish limits while Capt. Jake took full Trout limits over both days with a few Redfish mixed in.  Jake even stumbled into a small Ling and took a quick picture before releasing it.  Capt. James and I also went deep into the Trout numbers for both days working deep shell in SAB and Mesquite. 

 

We also welcomed in a charity benefit for a person in Victoria suffering from Cancer. Capt. Doug had the honors on the Shelby group today and right off the bat stumbled into a brawl with a 50+ Lb Black Drum.  Doug worked up a few Redfish and a short box of Trout for the auction winners.  This makes the third benefit/charity donation of the year for us here at The Lodge. 

 

If you are hitting the water any time soon, be sure and add some Gator aid or other electrolyte and carb replenishing beverages to the ice chest....then remember to drink it by starting early and often. 

 

We hope you have a great week, come see us!

 

Capt. Kris Kelley
Castaway Lodge
1-888-618-4868 
www.seadriftbayfishing.com

 

 


Capt. Kelley
8/16/2011 3:22:00 PM

Tournament Reds, Texas Slam Take Top Honors

Castaway Lodge Seadrift Report
By Capt. Kris Kelley

"First & Third, Castaway Capts. At It Again"

The big news around here is the Oilfield Helping Hands tournament befitting under priveledge youth.  I've been participating in this tournament since its inception fishing with Max B. and guests from Seaboard.  We've always done well and honestly, catching fish has been more of a focus rather than winning.  Somehow, we typically manage to place somewhere in the top 5. When Bob set the hook on a solid Redfish mid-morning I knew it was a brute.  As I pulled the fish from the net I felt like it was pushing the upper end 28" mark on the slot.  As I measured the fish on my Check-It Stick I struggled to touch the 28" line but could do it with different positioning.  A perfect 28" fish is a little "perilous" from a legality standpoint.  I decided we'd put it on ice hoping for a little bit of shrinkage and include it in the slot total.  We had a big run on Redfish taking all but one of the legal limit. 

We pulled off the Reds in search of some Trout action and immediately located a slow bite on fish to 23".  Returning to the ramp, I took another look at the bruiser that was pushing the slot.  When I laid it on the stick, it easily looked to me like the fish was an 1/8" over the 28" mark.  The guys were bummed but we had some solid fish that would surely put them in the money.  I thought the best course of action was to apply a tag to the Redfish in question while keeping it on ice and taking a back up fish.  That way, we would be covered legally, ethically, and also have a back up entry.  I told the guys that a Check It stick is a great tool but I wouldn't put 100% reliance on it's indications.  With the fish being on ice another hour or so prior to wiegh-in, anything can happen.  Sure enough, when the fish hit the boards at the tournament it was an 1/8" under the 28" slot and our team took 1st place biggest Redfish at 9.1 Lbs. 

Sometimes winning a tournament is separated by the finer details, strategy, and logistics or a "mental game" if you will.  Where there is a "will, there is a way".  Best way to fish a tournament that I've seen time and again is to not assume anything; don't think you know the outcome of a particular situation; and always have a backup plan; and think pro-actively.  Just think it's always better to be lucky than good. How about being both lucky and good!

Capt. James managed to find the elusive Flounder and hit a Texas Slam in the tournament.  For big stringer, the team really needed a Redfish, Trout, and Flounder.  His Team from Boots & Coots picked up a solid Flounder to add to their massive box fish including full limits of Trout and Redfish to take 3rd Place Big Stringer.  That Flounder came off a stretch of Trout real estate that both James and I have fished our entire careers without ever catching a Flounder, ever.  What are the odds?  Capt. Doug reinforced the B & C Teams efforts with solid Redfish and Trout to 21". 

Fishing Report

The Full Moon here in August has been much better to us than the Full Moon in July.  We had a pretty good tide dump out yesterday and Redfish were shoulder to shoulder over area flats on mud/grass.  Slick off conditions made them tough to approach but it was fun riding the burn bar with guests looking at the health of the fishery.  Trout continue coming off of deep shell beds.  Capt. James went long on number yesterday despite the glassy conditions taking full limits. 

We hope you have a great week, come see us!

Capt. Kris Kelley
Castaway Lodge
1-888-618-4868 
www.seadriftbayfishing.com

 


Capt. Kelley
8/8/2011 4:32:00 PM

Trout to 28", Redfish Busting The Slot

Castaway Lodge Fishing Report
By Capt. Kris Kelley

"Redfish Reflections"

Remembering that first Redfish; I had a couple of anglers on the boat this week that had yet to catch a Redfish. One of them was an eager 10 year old fishing with his twin brother and dad and the other was in his 20's. That got me to thinking back on it, can you remember your first Redfish? For some it will jog the fog of many years ago as a child. For others, the experience may be more recent. Well, early August will emblazen the memories of the two anglers that tangled with their first Redfish with me last week. For the 10 year old, it was a solid 25" fish coming out of a foot of water over mud/grass with his brother and dad watching. For Marcus, in his 20's, it would be a bruising fish in the upper middle slot coming out of similar shallows.

I was surprised that it was an easy recollection for me, the year was 1989, October 16th to be exact. I was new to the Gulf Coast of Texas having spent my youth prowling the freshwater lakes from Texas to New England. My passion for fishing came as a kid fishing with my mom and grandparents on small farm tanks around the Waxahachie and Ennis, Texas area. At a young age, we relocated to Cedar Cove living on Lake Tawokoni in East Texas. At the time, it was a hydrilla choked lake that yielded some great fishing around every corner and in every pocket of those grass beds. I can remember stick steering Skeeter boats and shotgun starts with flares and fireworks as the new breed of Bass Anglers raced from tournament starts. Those are some fond memories as I recall barefooting it all over every creek and cove in that area. Bull frogs, Cane poles and Crappie, Black Bass, Bluegills, and Catfish off the docks were great entertainment for me and my friends.

On that day in October, I made my first run at some wade fishing on Galveston Island. I had gathered as much information as I could, picked a location, and set off around mid-day. It was heavy overcast and there was some rain bouncing around. I pulled up to the area and started getting my gear together, I had a new Shimano Bantam level wind and a Shimano Rod to match. Gold spoons with the trademark hot pink teaser were the bait I'd heard about the most; that and some strawberry/white shrimp tails. I eased into the water shortly after lunch. The overcast was building and I could see rain squalls bouncing around. A little rain wasn't going to stop me. I worked the tail end of this cove on the South shoreline fan casting as I eased around. I was not too sure about retrieve speed or much else but as luck would have it, on one of the cast the retrieve came to a stop and I rared back and set the hook! I can remember being impressed with the fight of the fish; that feeling that at times both rod and line were maxed out. I remember working the fish down and flag poling the rod as we both worked to see who was going to win the battle of the moment. As the mid-slot fish came to hand, I was absolutely in awe of the size and beauty of it. I knew that I had just tackled a magnificent fish. I placed him on the stringer and began dialing in on what I'd just learned. By now, the rain was getting worse. As luck would have it, I managed to tangle with several more of the bruisers stringing a limit. As a bonus, I managed to pick up a handful of Flounder as well pushing 22". What a great day. It was getting close to dinner time as I exited the water, the weather was continuing to deteriorate. Returning to my truck, I squared away my gear and flipped on the radio. That's about the time I learned that Hurricane Jerry was approaching landfall on Galveston Island! I saddled up and skeedaddled the Big Island and made it back home shortly after it made landfall around 7:00pm.

While this wasn't my first time saltwater fishing, it would be the basis for a new found love of saltwater fishing. Where was I? On that day, my Hot Spot map had taken me to Jumbile Cove next to Jamaica Beach. I fished it alot as I cut my teeth on foot in saltwater. Little did I know where the experience would lead me.

Fishing Report

Trout to 28" and Redfish in the slot and above dominate this weeks report. Capt. Jake put a solid thumping on a mixed bag including a solid 28" beauty that he released while wade fishing live bait with guests mid-week over sand/grass in W. Matty. In SAB, Trout seem to have made a move slightly with depths from 4-6' paying off while Redfish continue to invade depths of as little as 10-12" en masse over mud/grass; sand/scattered shell.

We hope you have a great week and that your fishing is "catching". Come see us!

Capt. Kris Kelley
Castaway Lodge
1-888-618-4868
www.seadriftbayfishing.com

 

Kris,


Thank you for calling to check on us. Eric was home by about 10PM last night and I made it home about 1PM today. It was well worth the 600 miles each way to get to fish with you. We had a wonderful time - the fishing was great, the accommodations were excellent, and the food was out

Mel S.
Lubbock, TX

Miss Wendi & Capt. Kris,


Man what a day! The only problem was it was over too fast. Thank you both for your kindness and all your help. All the time I spend with sons is great but to spend it with good people also, makes it priceless. Have a great day!

Johnny & JD
Houston, TX

Kris and Wendi


I can't tell you how much the guys enjoyed the Norm Invitational.


The wind kicked our ass, but we did catch some fish. You have the best guides. I believe Steve would have stayed out all day if we wanted him to. I am so glad my brother got to fish with you. This was

Larry Prellop
Round Rock, TX

Hey Kris! Thanks again for the great fishing trip and EXTREME patience you had helping us get our limit. You are truly a professional and know how to produce even when the fish aren't biting and the conditions are all wrong. This sister's trip will always be a wonderful memory.

Sissy Lastinger
Melbourne, FL

Tracy, Joe, Dennis and I had a great trip with Kris the fishing was great the food was outstanding. We had some tough weather and Kris still found the fish. I'm planning on return to Seadrift to fish and visit as soon as I can.

Rick King
Midland, TX
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