CAMPING
Everglades camping trip raises funds, awareness
An annual camping trip to Flamingo raises funds for introductory camping program and awareness of the wonders of nature in Everglades National Park.
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Henry Caimotto from the Snook Nook Bait and Tackle in Jensen Beach said it’s all about water temperature in his area. Offshore anglers are having a tough time finding sailfish but plenty of kings and mutton snappers are biting in 60 feet of water along the six mile reef. Cobias were thick along the 30-foot line but dirty water put a halt to that fishing. Snook are working the beaches as they feed on croakers and whiting. Bluefish and pompano have been feeding along the bridges when the temperatures drop, and free floating tripletails are holding next to many of the bridge pilings in the river.
An annual camping trip to Flamingo raises funds for introductory camping program and awareness of the wonders of nature in Everglades National Park.
Snook season re-opened Wednesday in Atlantic waters, and although many of these tricky line-sided fish tend to head deep into canals and rivers during the winter months, anglers are having success in the inlets.
• The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission meets Tuesday through Thursday in Midway, outside Tallahassee.
Captain Jimmy Rhodes has been fishing the backcountry rivers, creeks and bays of Everglades National Park since the 1950s. And Rhodes has been guiding anglers to quality fish in those waters since earning his U.S. Coast Guard captains license in the mid-1980s. But hes not really that keen on catch-and-release gamefishing.
Charlie Corbin out of Slims Fishing Camp in Belle Glade reported largemouth bass in the 8- to 9-pound range are being caught on live wild shiners. Best action has been in the pockets along the outside edges of the grass line in the areas of Ritta, Pelican and Kramer Islands. Fishing with spinner baits, flipping jigs and casting soft plastics over the grass is working on smaller bass. Speckled perch action has been good with a lot of fish eating live minnows and small jigs in the dynamite holes and around Tree Island.
On the morning after Sunday’s successful ING Miami Marathon and Half Marathon, race officials began work on next year’s event.
Through a trying weekend of fishing, the crew of Get Lit — skippered by Quinton Dierterly — persevered to win the Mayor’s Cup Tournament in Coconut Grove and a hefty $54,170 bounty.
The closest — and largest — ING Miami Marathon ended with a Kenyan outsprinting an Ethiopian by a quarter of a second
For Swedish runner Anders Forselius, Sundays race was part of his own marathon mission. Forselius has run six races since Jan. 1, and his goal is to run a marathon in all 50 states. Sunday marked his 22nd state. Three years ago a friend of his lost her 22-year-old son to a viral infection. Forselius runs each race with the sons ashes in a pouch wrapped around his waist. It was her idea and I told her I would do it, said Forselius, who finished in 3 hours 37 minutes. At first I was going to bike the states with his ashes. But I decided to do marathons instead.
Tesfaye Sendeku Alemayehu was en route to shattering the half marathon time until following the marathoners’ course.
Releasing only 66 sailfish on a single day in a fishing tournament is small number, and poor conditions are mostly to blame for a sluggish start to first day of the Mayors Cup held at Montys Raw Bar in Coconut Grove.
American sailors captured medals in four of 10 classes in the Rolex Miami Olympic Classes Regatta.
Runners, start stretching.
It didn’t take long for Marlene Persson to realize she was going to be the women’s winner in Saturday morning’s Tropical 5K race that started at Watson Island and ended at South Point Park in Miami Beach.
Four Floridians are among six disabled sailors who won berths on the U.S. Paralympic Sailing Team on Friday at the Rolex Miami Olympic Classes Regatta on Biscayne Bay.
Two groups of explorers hooked up last Tuesday in the middle of the Everglades after separate weeklong paddling expeditions that began on opposite ends of the region.
A final showdown awaits three Paralympic classes Friday and 10 Olympic classes Saturday at the Rolex Miami Olympic Classes Regatta, which has, thus far, provided sailors with four days of sublime sunshine and satisfying winds. The event is the only one of seven ISAF Sailing World Cup events to grace a shore on this continent and has attracted 529 sailors from41 countries from as close as Canada and as far away as New Zealand and China.
Frankie Ruiz survived challenges in his race’s first nine years.
Not only did Ryan Halls legs feel heavy, but his heart was heavy, too, in the autumn of 2010 when his running career seemed to have stalled.
