Central Florida Sight Fishing Charters
Backcountry Flats Fishing Guide
Light Tackle and Fly
Mosquito Lagoon & Indian River
October 16, 2009
The fishing in Mosquito Lagoon backcountry so far this month has been challenging. The water is high and, in
many places, cloudy making sight fishing difficult. On the positive side, the weather has remained unseasonably
warm. This has kept the tarpon around as well as the large schools of baitfish. When you can find the redfish,
they are willing to eat and I saw many tailing redfish during the past couple weeks.

Recent trips have resulted in varying levels of success. Last week, I fished with Duncan and his two sons, Ian
and Nathan. They each caught some trout and had shots at some jacks but the highlight of the day came when
13 year old Nathan cast a DOA CAL to several tailing redfish. It landed perfectly and as he twitched the bait near
the fish his rod bent over and he was hooked up.




















Two days later, brothers Dan and Gary joined me on their first trip to
Mosquito Lagoon. Gary cast an EP
pinfish style fly to a group of tailing redfish early in the day. He was hooked up for several seconds before the
fish broke off. Later on, we encountered a school of larger redfish. Gary made several attempts with the fly but
the fish did not seem interested. Dan made a few casts with a Baitbuster and had several follows but no solid
bites. He handed the rod to Gary. As he worked the lure on the surface across the school, we saw a fish come
up and engulf the mullet imitation.





















On Monday, John and his son David were with me for their second fly fishing excursion on Mosquito Lagoon.
We began the day in the backcountry surrounded by dozens of juvenile tarpon and 1-3 feet of water. David
started out with the fly while I had John throwing a holographic DOA shrimp. David caught a couple ladyfish and
a trout on the fly and John jumped a tarpon and caught a few trout. We came across a fair amount of redfish
throughout the day, most of which were feeding. John landed his first redfish on fly using a #4 brown crab
pattern.





















On Tuesday's trip, there were only half as many tarpon rolling in the backcountry flats when we began the day.
Throwing the holographic shrimp, Tim had a couple bites and landed a few trout but the tarpon eluded him.
Again, we found scattered redfish roaming the flats but spotting them before the saw us proved to be
challenging. Tim did catch a few more trout and a small gag grouper on CAL jigs before we called it a day.

Wednesday, I was with fly anglers Bryan and Bill. They were both very good casters and I had high hopes of
some tarpon on fly. Unfortunately, most of the tarpon had vacated the flat where they had been. They did get  a
couple bites and Bryan jumped one. Our next stop produced shots at some large black drum. Both guys made
some good casts with crab patterns that went totally ignored. By the time we turned our attention to redfish, the
clouds began rolling in making the sight fishing nearly impossible. After spending an hour running over fish, they
elected to go in and try another time.

Yesterday, I went to New Smyrna  with the intention of going out of Ponce Inlet for a shot and some big tarpon,
cobia, and sharks with my friend Capt. Drew. We stopped at a backcountry spot inshore and found some rolling
tarpon at first light. I hooked one on the DOA BFL but pulled the hook after a minute or so. When they stopped
rolling, we headed for the inlet. Unfortunately, we discovered the seas were much too rough and we were forced
to stay in the backcountry. The action was a bit slow but we did have shots at a few redfish and caught trout,
flounder and a Goliath grouper on the DOA shrimp.























A cold front will be moving through the area today dropping the temperatures twenty degrees. We will be back in
the 80's early next week, however, so hopefully the water stays warm enough to keep the tarpon around a
couple more weeks. Soon, the water levels will be dropping and the clarity will improve which will bring on some
excellent sight fishing for tailing redfish. As the baitfish head south, the reds will turn their attention to crabs and
shrimp. Fly anglers using small crab patterns will have plenty of tails to cast at.
backcountry redfish charters
backcountry redfish guide
mosquito lagoon redfish on fly
Mosquito Lagoon Backcountry Fishing Guide
Capt. Chris Myers
Fly and Light Tackle Fishing Charters
321-229-2848
backcountry grouper
You have reached an archived backcountry fishing report for central Florida's Mosquito
Lagoon from Central Florida Sight Fishing Charters. I specialize in fishing the
backcountry flats
with fly and light tackle in pursuit of
redfish (red drum), spotted seatrout, black drum, tarpon,
and more. My
flats fishing charters are designed to provide you with the ultimate sight fishing
experience. The pristine grass flats in
Mosquito Lagoon hold an abundance of game fish all year
round. Located between Daytona Beach and Cocoa Beach on Florida's east coast, the
Mosquito Lagoon is some of the last undeveloped coastline in Florida. The fishing is less than
one hour from all of central Florida including Orlando, Disney, Kissimmee, and New Smyrna
Beach. To
book a backcountry flats fishing charter and experience some of our great fishing,
call me at 321-229-2848.
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florida fishing guide