After a few nights of fishing Sebastian Inlet, we decided to try another spot. My mom, who owns a bait shop, put us in contact with a customer who owns a house on Dragon Point, a narrow strip of land which divides the Banana River and the Indian River. Neither of which are rivers, but are just narrow sections of a saltwater lagoon. The homeowner gave us run of the property and she gave us pointers on where to cast from the dock to target red drum. She had recently hauled in a bull, so we were hopeful.
Stopped by Man Overboard (mom's bait shop) to pick up some live shrimp and tackle. Loaded with bait and beer, we set up on the dock. The live shrimp didn't last long, as there were plenty of pecky carnivores to pull them off the hooks. We switched to smaller hooks and smaller pieces of bait to catch the little buggers. Soon, we had a few live pinfish to put on bigger hooks and cast out for reds. We sent them out into the river, sat back, and cracked open beers. A manatee cruised by the dock and dolphin were spotted out in the river.
Footsteps on the dock warned us that we had company. We turned to see my mom, sister and young nephew walking out to see us. Avery had a fishing pole and my sister helped him cast the big rubber "lure" into the water and retrieve it. When he bored of that, I cut the "lure" off and replaced it with a hook and shrimp. Soon, he had caught his first fish. Despite his mother's jerking reaction when the fish flopped, he was still willing to touch the fish before I released it. Halfway through the second catch, he was over it and left the rod for me to finish. Kids these days...
After little while after they departed, one of the bait rods bent over double and started singing. The (fairly tight) drag on the Penn 8500 was spinning fast. By the time we grabbed the rod and tried to set the hook, the rod went straight. I figured that we had been broken off, but the hole rig was intact. When it happened again a few minutes later, we realized what was happening. I have fished saltwater for decades and done so several times around dolphin. I had never had one take a bait and assumed that they were too smart to grab something with a hook and line. Apparently, they are smart enough to grab the bait and rip the fish right off the hook. After getting ripped off another time, we pulled the rods out of the water, ate lunch, drank beer and soaked in the sun.
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Let's play "spot the Canadian"
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