Tuesday, 6/17, I fished 18 miles west of New Pass with father and son anglers, Ricky and Tony Castillo. It was rough heading out, as it was coming the day before also. Fishing was tougher than it has been lately, but the two managed to box eight keeper whitebone porgies, a half-dozen 12-inch grunts, and two keeper lane snapper. They released twenty porgy shorts, yellowtail and mangrove snapper shorts, and a half dozen red grouper shorts, along with a 38-inch bonnethead shark and a 3-foot sharp-nose shark. Everything bit on live shrimp.
Friday, 6/20, I headed out in calm seas to 36 miles west of New Pass with Russ Maavich and his three sons, Alex, Brett and Ryan. The guys had a great day of fishing, with a good mix of sport fishing and food fishing. They got to feel the thrill of goliath grouper on the line, as we lured them with crevalle jacks for bait, and the guys released three of those, ranging from 150 to 200 pounds. We also lost one that must have been huge, as it was pulling the boat sideways, and finally pulled the hook and got away. We switched to shrimp for bait for some food fish, and the guys did well with those too, landing eight nice yellowtail snapper keepers to 16 inches and fifteen keeper mangrove snapper that measured 13 ½ to 15 inches. They added to the box a dozen large grunts, all around 14 inches and ten whitebone porgies, including five at 15 inches and one at a whopping19 inches.
Seas were not nearly as calm on Saturday, 6/21, as they had been on Friday. Philip and Judy Arsenault fished with me at the reefs just six miles off the beach, and even there, it was choppy. But the couple did well with a variety of fish caught on live shrimp, including a 15-inch keeper pompano, two lane snapper keepers, a whiting keeper, a flounder keeper, and a few grunts. They released a 24-inch cobia, along with lots of crevalle jacks."


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