Fishing in the Florida Keys, with green and blue waters enveloping Islamorada, signaling sandbars, flats and channels. All of the Florida Keys are a playground for sport fish and anglers alike.
The Florida Keys is a coral archipelago stretching far into the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Ocean, providing numerous launch points to some of the most diverse and productive salt waters in North America. The coral shores lead to pristine flats and coral reefs, with the reef edges acting as the final step out to deep bluewater. Anglers in flats skiffs and bay boats explore the extensive grass-and-sand flats, deep channels, and bridge structures. Light-tackle boats make hay along the wrecks and reefs. Offshore center-consoles and sport-fishers roam the open waters in search of pelagics. The Keys remain a saltwater angler’s paradise.
You don’t have to travel across the globe for great sailfish action. The Florida Keys winter sailfishery seems to be getting better and better. The fish run pretty small, and the seas can run pretty big (when north winds driven by frontal systems offer the rugged conditions that get sailfish packs tailing down-sea in numbers). From Stuart, Florida and farther north, anglers generally troll ballyhoo; to the south and into the Keys, live baits fished under kites or slow-trolled are the norm.
Why Should You be Fishing in the Florida Keys?
Hot sailfishing from January into May. The run to fish is often within 10 miles; for some areas it might be just two or three. No shortage of charters, marinas, etc. At times, many exciting sight-casting/pitch-baiting opportunities. Most sails run 30 or 40 pounds, so fish light. Weekends might get a bit crowded in popular areas offshore.
January Offshore Fishing in the Florida Keys
New this year, up to six anglers can form a team to put their 20-pound line skills to task, competing for cash prizes and trophies for the top three finishers.
The winter subtropical fishing event kicks off Friday with a 6 p.m. registration, followed by cocktails at the tournament’s headquarters, Sundowners on the Bay, located at mile marker 103.9 bayside.
Saturday, Jan. 7, lines-in begins at 8 a.m. through 4 p.m. Sunday anglers can fish 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. A final evening of cocktails, dinner buffet and awards ceremony starts at 6:30 p.m. Entry fee for a boat’s first angler is $495 and each additional angler pays $450.
The second leg of the three-event Florida Keys Gold Cup Championship series, the 27th annual Cheeca Lodge Presidential Sailfish Tournament, is scheduled Thursday through Saturday, Jan. 19-21, in Islamorada. Kickoff for “The Presidential” is set for Thursday, Jan. 19, at Cheeca Lodge, mile marker 82 oceanside, at 5:30 p.m. with a cocktail party and buffet dinner to follow.
Up to 25 boats can register. Entry fee is $695 for the first angler per boat. Additional anglers’ entry fee is $645, up to four per boat, until Jan. 6, 2017. After Jan. 6, the entry fee for the first angler increases to $750 and each additional angler is $700.
A courtyard-to-ballroom gala banquet is set for Saturday evening when trophies, created by Islamorada artist Pasta Pantaleo, are to be awarded the tournament’s top anglers.
The Gold Cup Series traditionally concludes with the mid-week final leg, the Islamorada Fishing Club Sailfish Tournament, set for Jan. 25-26, 2017, when the overall Gold Cup Series champion is crowned.
January Inshore Fishing in the Florida Keys
“During these months, redfish tend to push out of the very shallow flats into the channel runoffs, island moats and creeks of the mainland Everglades,” he says. “The areas may be anywhere from 2 to 10 feet deep. In many instances, we catch them over hard, rocky bottom.”
During a cold front with a hard north wind, reds school up heavily in areas like these channels. On a high, rising tide, redfish move out of the holes and find similar structure along the shorelines.
“My favorite technique is probably pitching live shrimp or pilchards around the shorelines, islands, and in the creeks of the mainland,” Stanczyk says. “You have a shot at catching redfish, snook or even little tarpon while doing this. You can also chum areas that look productive and attract fish away from structure.”
Source: January Fishing in the Florida Keys | Sport Fishing Magazine