Posted By Kris/ In Castaway Lodge / Sunday, July 11, 2010

Rubberbands & Freight Trains, Fishing SAB During A Flood Cycle I



Fishing success is day to day right now as we adjust to ever changing bay salinity levels and a wide range of weather conditions. What's working one day may not work at all the next and it's tough to get two straight days of "normal summertime" weather to get a good handle on anything. Producing shell as far north as the ICW took a hard turn for the worse late week. The First Chain of Islands seems to be hit and miss along with area shorelines.

Conditions like these can keep things interesting and we may be looking at the beginning of our NEXT STRONG TROUT CYCLE right here and now. I'm not talking about a strong cycle today or tomorrow but perhaps for years to come. One can only hope.

I've got to our guests that comprise the Baby Boomer Generation, you are the aging ambassadors of the American Way to say the least! It has been my absolute pleasure to interact with your generation as much as I have. You are hard core "get it on" sportsmen and the good Lord knows we've seen some weather on the water this year and "over the years". God Bless you all and may you be "The Next Greatest Generation".

Fishing SAB In A Flood Cycle

San Antonio Bay is on the move, literally. Late week, we had water piled up into the parking lot at the boat ramp from the latest Tropical Low and
remnants of Hurricane Alex. We picked up 14+ inches of rain with Alex during late June and our July rainfall totals at this point are 10.43" according to our monitoring gauge here at The Lodge. Combine local runoff and Gauadulpe River inflows and you've got outbound water movement that can "counteract" any tide predictions. I can remember a few years back under similar rainfall and river flooding conditions where we fished what looked like a falling tide everyday, that is water movement heading from West to East or from San Antonio Bay to Port O'Connor. This was despite tide predictions clearly indicating an incoming tide (water moving from POC to San Antonio Bay) and it was just the opposite everday, all day.

This is a peculiar environment and occurence unique to this locale. There will be times where the outbound water flow will encounter an incoming tide strong enough to essentially stop the outbound flow but seldom will overpower it and turn it the other direction. This is a particularly lethal combination for SAB fishermen insofar as a tide running the same direction as your dominant wind (Southerly) can produce big results. This scenario played out for the first time Saturday with tide indications clearly indicating that we were deeply centered in an incoming tide yet the water movement was "outbound". Talking to Capt. Jake fishing the Port O'Connor area, he mentioned that the tide was coming in as it should be. However, San Antonio Bay waters were eastbound through the incoming tide prediction. We may see this scenario play out day after day with as much rainfall and I'm sure future tropical weather events on the horizon.

Rubber Bands & Frieght Trains, Fishing SAB In A Flood Cycle "to be continued", until then good fishing to ya!

Capt. Kris Kelley
Castaway Lodge, Inc.
1-888-618-4868
www.seadriftbayfishing.com
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