Central Florida Sight Fishing Charters
Coca Beach Fishing Guide
Light Tackle and Fly
Mosquito Lagoon & Indian River
June 19, 2008
It has been some time since my last report but I have been on the water nearly every day. In addition to the
Mosquito Lagoon, I have been able to fish the Charlotte Harbor are of southwest Florida as well as the Stuart
area north of Palm Beach.

My first trip this month was with Capt. Tom Van Horn in the Banana River no motor zone. We fished from Tom's
canoe and it was my first chance to experience his new outrigger and deck systems installed by Kay-noe Paddle
Products. The outriggers provide stability and allow anglers to stand in a canoe or kayak for better visibility while
fishing. Tom also had a decks installed in both the front and rear. The ability to stand makes fishing from a
paddle craft much more comfortable. We had to fight the wind all day but we did encounter some nice redfish
and black drum. I finally managed to fool a big drum with a DOA shrimp in golden bream color.























The next three days, I was tarpon fishing with Capt. John Kumiski along the beaches outside Boca Grande
Pass. Conditions were tough with some wind and dirty water. We didn't see as many fish as we had hoped but
we did get a few shots with our flies. John got one bite, I only had a few half-hearted follows. We did see the bait
fishermen jump a few fish. We took a drive through the pass and saw hundreds of tarpon coming up from the 70
foot depths rolling on the surface. Though there are many fish there, the pass is not a place for sight fishing.
Dozens of boats are stacked on top of each other fishing with very heavy tackle. Though not my style of fishing,
it was interesting to witness.












































Saturday the 7th, I fished Mosquito Lagoon with Randy and Paul. At the first spot we stopped, Paul caught a 34
inch redfish to kick off the day.























We fished schools of redfish and black drum and worked the deeper edges of flats fro some trout. They ended
up releasing 10 reds, 2 black drum, and around 20 trout. The 3 inch DOA CAL in Silver Rush color accounted for
most of the fish including this multi-spot beauty landed by Randy.






















I spent last week fishing in Stuart Florida. I had the honor of being invited to participate in the DOA Outdoor
Writers Festival held on Wednesday and Thursday. I spent the other days fun fishing in the Indian River, St
Lucie River, and along the beaches with the owner/inventor of DOA products Mark Nichols, Capt. Duber
Winters, and my wife, Julie. During the event, I had the pleasure of fishing with Capt. Mike Holliday, the editor of
Florida Fishing Weekly and a regular on the Chevy Florida Fishing Report show. The fishing was great but the
catching varied. We did catch a variety of fish including tarpon, jacks, snook, tripletail, lookdowns, snapper,
tunny, and more. The holographic DOA shrimp produced the most fish and the Baitbuster accounted for the
largest.























This Monday was a fly fishing charter with British angler Vaughn and his father in law Cliff. They found the
casting skills needed to catch our fish a bit of a challenge. Cliff managed to fool a black drum on a black crab fly
and Vaughn followed up with one more on a spinning rod.























We had plenty of shots throughout the day and Vaughn fooled a redfish with a green and copper bendback fly.

Tuesday, Mike and Tony joined me for another fly fishing excursion. We began the day searching for some
tarpon. Tony, a fresh water fly angler from Colorado, was not used to casting the distances normally needed for
flats fishing. While we were working on Tony's casting, Mike jumped a small tarpon that ate a holographic DOA
shrimp. We moved out to the flats where we had consistent shots at both schools and single redfish throughout
the day. Learning to break of lifetime of casting habits in a day is a huge hurdle and was a struggle. The breezy
conditions did not make things easier. As a nasty looking storm approached us and staring at a school of several
hundred redfish, Mike and Tony abandoned the fly rods and hooked up with a pair of nice redfish on spinning
gear.






















Wednesday, Vaughn and Cliff were back for another try at redfish on fly. Vaughn had a nice bite early in the day
but the hook pulled. Cliff was fishing a spinner as backup and caught a redfish on a shallow running Baitbuster
which would prove to be the only one of the day. We had some shots at large reds and big black drum but never
got another bite.  After dropping them off at the ramp, I was able to get in a few casts of my own and landed a
redfish on an EP pinfish fly before lightning chased me off the water.

Water levels in the Mosquito Lagoon are extremely low so be careful when navigating at low light. The water
temperatures are in the 80's at daybreak and are climbing to near 90 by the afternoon. Hot water means low
oxygen and the fish will easily become stressed if not brought the boat quickly and handled with care.
cocoa beach black drum
cocoa beach redfish
cocoa beach fishing guide
snook
fly fishing guide
Cocoa Beach Fishing Guide
Capt. Chris Myers
Fly and Light tackle Fishing Mosquito Lagoon
321-229-2848
This is an archived Mosquito Lagoon Fishing Report from  Capt. Chris Myers. I offer fly and light tackle fishing
charters
near Cocoa Beach in the Indian River and Mosquito Lagoon for redfish. I specialize in sight fishing the
shallow flats of east central Florida. Please visit my current central Florida Fishing Report for the latest
conditions. You can find more information  on my the home page at -
Cocoa Beach Fishing Charters