Tag Archives: fly-fishing

Six Miles for Six Inches

I’m excited to write this post. Not because we are about to tell the story of a giant fish being landed, or because we traveled to some Pina Colada plentiful international location. I’m excited because I am a true believer in full circle moments, and a few six inch fish gave me some major sense of reward this year during a time where quite frankly I needed it as a guy.

As y’all may know, I’ve been fortunate enough to live in GA for about the past six years. Although some excellent angling opportunities exist here, I would be lying if I told you that I frequently didn’t miss the trout fishing opportunities that I was spoiled with growing up in Colorado and living in Utah for three years. To this day, I will scream from the top of the mountain that Utah may have the best Brook Trout angling opportunities in the United States…not exaggerating. With this said, for years I have heard and “known” about Brookies living in North GA and North Carolina, but I truthfully never made a huge effort to go figure it out.

During a few long weekends in the Highlands with my girlfriend this year, we decided to change this and go figure it out. After countless research online (and super honestly spending tons of time fishing some dud areas), we finally found a location that rewarded us with some of the most beautiful Brookies I have ever seen. No phone service…six miles hiking…the kind of brook trout fishing that can make anyone with a soul feel something outdoors. By no means was it like Utah or Colorado where you can stumble upon a casual 50+ fish. day, I found cold water…studly looking fish…and another fly fishing opportunity close to home that I will be returning to shortly.

Joe Petrow – Brook Trout

Overlooking step one of actually finding these fish (this is the hardest part it seems), I also realized that these brookies acted a little bit differently than their western counterparts. Similar from the fact that they sat in super shallow and hard to reach places, but I found that you needed to make your shots count in each spot. I.e., some of these southern brookies were not super forgiving and you needed to get them on the first eat. The standard size 18 Royal Wulfs did the job with amazing takes, and getting to see this fish swim away strong and no worse for the wear was the ultimate reward. Was lucky enough to land a handful of these little guys (including one very nice brookie that was 12+inches) on our major hiking excursion day.

I cannot wait to explore the small streams of North Carolina more to see if I can find some new areas that are more densely populated with these fish, but for now I will gladly be at peace with the ones I encountered this year. No matter how big or how small…it brings peace catching the same species of amazing fish in different locations…a perfect example of the importance of making the effort to make home feel more like home.

Tight lines!

Joe

Getting Lucky on the Beach

As every avid fly fisherman knows, God willing, there will always be a couple of days on the water during the year that make you go “damn…it’ll be awhile before that happens again.” These days are to be cherished like gold as they don’t happen often, and many times they will come when you least expect them. I personally have felt that these kind of banner days will often present themselves after you’ve been humbled as of late.

In 2025, I had a day fly fishing from the beach in Southwest Florida that truthfully may never be replicated. In the area for a long weekend getaway, the day started pretty normal…early wake up call, grab a coffee, rigged up a fly on some 20lb fluro that seemed nice, and hit the beach. I lucked out from the jump as the wind was minimal, and water crystal clear. With that said, within a few minutes of walking on the sand I was seeing huge schools of baitfish, with predators lurking nearby…Snook. Although I’ve been fortunate enough to get more familiar with fly fishing for Snook off the beach in the past two years, this is something that is still relatively “newer” to me that gets my heart going. Not only do these fish put up incredible fights and jumps, but they can be tough off the beach…spooky, line shy, and very picky on the retrieve.

Lucky for me on this day specifically, the fish were AMPED up…it seemed that any small mullet imitation was getting obliterated. Leading fish by a couple of feet with a long leader was the ticket. Throughout the day (and another day to follow), easily put a dozen nice Snook to hand DIY’ing it from the beach. Great fun.

Joe Petrow – Snook

However, and as crazy as it sounds, the Snook were not the stars of the weekend in my eyes. While casting into a school of about 6 snook, I noticed two other huge fish that were lurking just outside of the school…I threw a cast, stripped, and had one of the fish start to follow…after a little bit of quick strips to coerce, boom…fish on. The fish immediately when airborne…a huge Gator Seatrout. For those that know, catching a true beast of a Speckled Trout on a fly is one of the toughest tasks in the salt…sure you can catch them in boatloads when stacked up and the fish are smaller, but the true 26+inch trout are beyond smart and picky. I was objectively shocked to see this fish at the end of my line. After a solid fight, and a few close calls towards the wave break, I landed the biggest Speckled Trout of my life…although I did not get an exact measure, my guess is that this fish was 28-29″ inches long. Unreal.

Joe Petrow – Speckled Trout

The day could’ve stopped here and I would have been ecstatic. BUT…clearly I had an insane amount of juju and luck on my side, as this wasn’t even the highlight of the day. After a little bit of a lull from the Snook, I got distracted by some Sheepshead that were messing around a really shallow section of surf. Upon watching these fish, I was noticing some dinner plate sized silver flashes moving quickly through the flat. My gut screamed “Pompano” as I have actually never caught one of these fish on a fly, and it was been on my list for awhile. After a long lead through, I started to slow trip and to my excitement immediately saw three pompano raise to chase the fly! I kept stripping and stripping, Pompano slashing at the fly, and finally had a UNIT of a Pompano come out of nowhere and smoke the fly. Line starts screaming…backing almost immediately. Pulling stronger than the Snook and beast Seatrout. After a long fight and a near crucial mistake of leader going between my legs while landing, I landed not only my first Pompano on fly, but the biggest Pompano I have laid eyes on. This was one of those fish that even looked 2x the size of some of the others in the water…as much as I would love to say I will see another Pompano this size on a fly in my life, I doubt it. Stoked would be an understatement and after this fish, I called it a day to find a cold beer.

Joe Petrow – Pompano

Not to be dismissed, I also caught a handful of ladyfish and my first ever giant Houndfish on this weekend. The Houndfish was another new species, and an awesome sight fishing moment.

In all fairness…I want to come back to earth here for the end of the blog post. For every day a true fly fisherman has like this, you will have 10 that genuinely kick your butt. You will also have fish that break your heart. Exhibit A in 2025 for me was with my Dad chasing musky in TN for two days..had a huge musky finally eat at the end of our last day that broke off after grinding it out for 15+ hours on the water. Why I bring this up is days like this on the beach wouldn’t be as appreciated without some of those tougher fishing moments. Most importantly, fish aside, days like this where everything goes right make me extra thankful for the time spent with my Dad and friends on the water where everything didn’t go right. Why? Because at the end of the day the stories become memories, the people you are with mean more than getting the actual fish in, and make us better in the end. In summary…have some fun, enjoy the day, and know that it will all wash out in the end.

Tight lines and thanks for reading!

Joe

Hometown Throwdown

In case anyone hasn’t noticed it yet…human beings are funny creatures. We have a big, big world around us, but no matter how much excitement or adventure may exist somewhere, it is in everyone’s nature to occasionally have a desire to go back to “normal” at the end of the day. Call it familiarity…call it nostalgia…but it’s wild how you can return somewhere time and time again, and not get tired of it. I think this relates to fishing as well…tons of water to fish, but we all tend to have our favorite spots. For me personally, this is the most true for when I am in Colorado fishing the waters that I literally spent thousands of hours on.

As won’t be a shock to those who are kind enough to read some of my blogs, from a fly fishing standpoint in my mind, Colorado = Carp. Sure the trout fishing is amazing (new post coming soon on that actually), but there’s something about driving 10 minutes down the road and getting into 10+ pound gold. Not only that, but it’s not easy…they make you earn it. In the spring this year, my Dad and I had a kick a$% couple of days “urban angling” around Denver.

Upon arriving in Denver, the weather was abnormally hot for April. I’m talking t shirts and shorts warm. From my years of fly fishing for Carp in CO, warm weather + a lack of recent snow/rain can be a recipe for absolute beauty if you play your cards right. Fortunately for us…this played to be true for our South Platte outings. Big, happy fish sitting in the currents…sifting through the riverbed, obviously a munchy mood. With a 6 weight rigged and a handful of my go-to carp flies in tow, it was time to do some “dragging and dropping”. After sneaking down the bank into a back eddy right by a bustling current, I hooked an absolute brute of a carp and it took me down river. After a 10+ minute fight and a chase through one of the chutes, we landed the fish right before dark, and went to enjoy some cold Coors and Mexican food after.

Joe Petrow – Carp

Returning to the same spot the next day, chaos continued. Similar to the day before, we saw fish immediately, but there were more out and about…tough to beat. In a two hour outing, we landed three great carp and hooked a fourth (all on one of my trusty mop type flies that feeding carp seem to really hone in on). Below are a few pics from the fish, and as you will see they were more than fed and in a great shape.

Joe Petrow – Carp
Joe Petrow – Carp

This long weekend also had a surprise guest for Colorado…some huge Largemouth Bass. I won’t provide exact spots due to the rarity of finding this species of size in the area, but my Dad and I stumbled across an area that had Largemouth bedding way earlier than usual. With that said…the fish were beyond tight lipped. After try and try again, we finally figured out the ticket by sinking a large black wooly bugger to the bottom, and doing some sporadic twitches. Below was one of my nicest Largemouth ever in Colorado, and it made for an extra cherry on top from some excellent days of carping.

Joe Petrow – Largemouth Bass

Appreciate your hometown honey holes…they made an imprint on who we are. We fished them with some of the most important people in our lives… spent countless days trying to figure them out…and quite frankly probably needed them to reset on occasion. Have to give credit to where credit is due.

Tight lines!

Joe

Exotic Hopping

As many of my friends and family know, I’m a huge fan of trying to test the boundaries of what species are possible to catch on a fly rod. Although the pursuit of the “populars” like tarpon, redfish, and striper will forever be engrained into my being, I have found that learning to embrace what else is out there has led to some of my best angling opportunities between the “bigger trips” that take place throughout the year. And when it comes to “I wonder what we can find that will eat a fly…”, South Florida honestly may be the mecca in the United States.

Fortunately enough for me, I find myself in South Florida often with a fully gassed up rental car. My favorite part of coming here is that you can literally find water for every .2 miles you drive it seems like…no matter if you are in a huge metropolis like Miami, or in one of the smaller towns off the Tamiami Trail. This year, I made it a point to “explore” away from my usual Peacock Bass spots, and boy did it pan out…not just for new species, but also finding some of my best peacocks ever.

In 2025, I was blessed to spend a plethora of days around the water in South Florida, but a few quick stories were highlights to me. With my smaller clousers, wooly buggers, and baitfish flies (nothing crazy) I found some great success on a warm day in March. One day while searching for Peacocks, I noticed literal oranges swimming in the water…not exaggerating. This excited me as I knew they were Midas Cichlid and I had never been able to catch one (very spooky usually). After a soft landing of a brown wooly bugger about 6 inches off of ones nose…I slow twitched and boom. After a nice fight, I landed my first Midas Cichlid. About 10 minutes later, I also caught my first ever Spotted Tilapia that was guarding a bed next to a rocky ledge in the water. This day was also accompanied by a handful of nice Peacocks that would only slam a fly stripped at blistering speeds. I also landed a good number of Florida Gar, and even saw some Snook in some predominantly freshwater areas…

Joe Petrow – Midad Cichlid

A few months later (and once the weather was HOT), I wanted to spend some time going after a land based “monster” Peacock. After a half day of finding some pretty small Peacocks and Largemouth around Miami, I drove 30 minutes further north to an area that a few Reddit threads had indicated had some nice Peacocks. Upon arriving in the area, I knew there were some huge fish around…within the first couple of casts, I had fish blasting my fly right by the bank. After hooking a nice Peacock that got off right before the bank, I threw an EXTREMELY small yellow/green bead chain clouser right next to a rocky ledge, and had chaos break loose. I stripped the fly about 90% of the way in, went to pull the fly line for recast, and a HUGE Peacock surged out of the rocky ledge to inhale my fly. After a run to the backing in my 6 weight and holding on for dear life (as the fish was digging for structure), I landed the biggest Peacock of my life. No exaggeration or fish stories here when I say that this fish was 8+ pounds. Unreal moment. I also want to call out the fact that this fish was caught 2 hours before I had a flight scheduled to take off…moral of the story is “when in doubt, give it a go”.

Joe Petrow – Peacock Bass

One last story worth mentioning involves an early fall day exploring a new canal around the West Palm area. I had a few hours to mess around while waiting for some work colleagues to come in, and after some research found an area filled with fish. Initially hoping to find some Peacock, I was surprised to find a canal with a good number of Snakeheads. None of these fish were caught on this excursion (I will be back for vengeance…), but I fortunately ran into some other action. In one area of the canal by a bridge, I saw a ton of different exotics bedding and swimming around. I truthfully had no idea what they were…all I knew if they were beyond spooky and colorful. After several fly changes and lengthening leader, I was able to catch a handful of Mayan Cichlids, but more importantly landed two awesome Viejas Cichlid. These were objectively some of the craziest looking freshwater fish I had ever seen, and put a great bend into the 6 weight considering the overall size of the fish.

Joe Petrow – Viejas Cichlid

As mentioned earlier, I was really fortunate to get out and explore the FL canals this year. Really look forward to more exploring, and making sure that I make the most out of these “exotic” opportunities when they present themselves.

Tight lines!

Joe

A Season Full of Gold

Almost six years ago now, I moved to Georgia to pursue a job. Pretty wild to think how quick time can fly, and how every year brings its own unpredictabilities that can bring both challenge and joy to life. With that being said, I’m a believer that wherever you live, it is crucial to have a handful of consistent people and activities to look forward to in order to maintain internal peace. Since moving to Georgia, I can say with confidence that one thing each and every year keeps me amped up for 6 months: Carp Season.

As those that are kind enough to follow this blog know, I’m a huge fan of the carp fishing opportunities in Georgia. I’ve fly fished for carp for nearly my entire life (and in countless places throughout the United States), and I can truly say that carping here is among the best. Not only can the numbers of carp here be unparalleled, but the sheer size of some of these fish is insanee. To emphasize further, the largest carp that I have seen in my entire life have been in Georgia.

In 2024, the word I would use to describe the season would be “unreal”. I caught my largest common carp ever this year, and several amazing, very large fish were brought to hand. In between these fish were countless other terrific carp that kept drag screaming, smiles on faces, and paddle boards getting pulled around.

Joe Petrow – Carp

Due to the sheer amount of carp outings had throughout the year, I’m not going to do a “play by play” in this post, but instead go through some of my biggest lessons learned and highlight a few specific fish outings.

From a lessons learned perspective, these were the three common themes throughout the year:

  • When in doubt, have a “grub” fly ready. Although I have a handful of patterns that I’m confident a carp will eat, my hand-tied grub patterns this year produced the most amount of fish. They can be deadly with a “drag and drop”, and there were some difficult days in which this was the only fly the carp would be open to.
  • Don’t be stubborn on leader/tippet size. I traditionally am a fan of 15lb tapered to 12lb fluoro, but found that my landing rates on BIG fish increased this year on straight 15lb as I could horse some of the fish that were attempting to take the fight into structure. The heavier tippet may lead to less eats on tough days, but it’s worth it if you have a better chance to land large fish.
  • Don’t overlook an early evening paddle/outing. Although the majority of my carp days were mornings (lower wind, less people on the water), a few of my most productive sessions of the season were between the hours of 3pm-6pm. Lesson here is give it a go whenever you can.
Joe Petrow – Carp

From a highlighting of a few fish/outings perspective, these were the big three:

  • As mentioned earlier, I caught my largest common carp this year. This fish slowly slurped a grub fly and proceeded to put up the craziest fight I’ve had on the paddle board. This fish was absolutely 25+ pounds.
  • I caught my first, large Koi/Carp hybrid this year. The spawn was an extra sight to behold this year (hundreds of carp going crazy), and for about a month you could catch the non-spawning fish in thee midst of the spawning fish. Wild to watch.
  • Earlier this year, my larger Bote board when out of commission (we had a great run). In the interim of purchasing a new one, I did a few carp outings on my much smaller paddle board. I landed a huge common carp on this board that dragged me all over the place for 10+minutes, and I had to get out to land it without falling in. Good news was that it took me close to a shallow flat!
Joe Petrow – Koi/Carp
Joe Petrow – Carp

Cannot wait for Carp Season 2025 and always grateful for these fish! Long live the carp.

Tight lines!

Joe Petrow

Baja Birthdays

Although I believe that every birthday should be a day to reflect, celebrate, and make some time to do the things that bring you joy, there are a few birthdays that seem to have more “weight” to them. For me this year, I hit the big 30 (and my girl friend hit the big 29) and we decided to add a little extra flare to the birthday travel plans. We landed on Cabo and I selfishly was salivating at the thoughts to throw some line and see what happens.

Having never fly fished in Cabo before, I didn’t fully know what to expect other than the content I have seen online surrounding Roosterfish, Mahi, Jacks, Tuna, Marlin, etc. Although I made sure to book an afternoon from a boat for one day during the week, I was most excited about the chance to find some fish from shore.

Upon arrival at the hotel in Cabo, the water was gorgeous. Deep blue, relatively calm, lots of rocks around – I thought it was going to be easy to hook some snappers, groupers, and other reef species around the rocks. Upon fishing for hours the first two days, my assumption proved to be majorly WRONG…only had some action with a few very (very) small reef fish. With that said, we had our half day charter coming up, so wasn’t horribly concerned about us finding some fish at some point.

For the spirit of full transparency, the half day charter was extremely difficult and a bit of a cluster. The winds in Cabo this week were brutal (especially in the afternoon) and we were met with consistent 25-30 mph gusts and significant waves while on the boat – this obviously limited the number of areas in which we could throw a fly line. In addition to this, with my girlfriend in tow, I knew as soon as we launched that there was no way we would be spending 4+ hours in the conditions. With that said, we were able to get the fish monkey off our back this day by catching the largest Jack Crevalle of my life. There was a school of about 20 fish, and it absolutely hammered a big white baitfish fly made with bucktail/white hackle. Put a crazy bend on the 10-weight, so not complaining!

Joe Petrow – Jack Crevalle

The day after our charter, I made the decision to abandon the rocky areas I was previously targeting and go scout a public beach that was a further walk away. What a decision that panned out to be as it was like a light switch turned on…

Although the wind was still howling, I immediately saw bait fished being blitzed on 10-feet from the shore, and was hooked up on my first cast with a larger white/chartreuse clouser minnow. New species! Gaffttopsail Pompano – these guys don’t get very large, but put up quite the bend in the 8-weight. I caught about four of these guys (in addition to some smaller Green Jacks and Jack Crevalles) rather quickly, but the weird thing was that the fish I saw blitzing were not pompano…they looked like tuna. Curious as to what was crashing bait, I down sized my fly to a very simple white baitfish pattern, and immediately was hooked up. Skipjack tuna! An unreal fight for their size, and was catching fish after fish for about a 30-minute period. Easily landed over half a dozen.

After the blitz was over, this is when things got interesting. I slowly started my walk back to the hotel and saw a 10-15 pound fish swimming 60 feet off the beach. ROOSTERFISH…seemingly just gliding through the waves. I rushed to get a cast in front of this…strip strips strip…holy cow the fish is following…all the way up to my feet…denied. What a bummer. but it happens. MORE IMPORTANTLY – I found Roosters. Within the next 15-minutes, more fish arrived. A pack of 3 fish and a few more singles. I had a handful of great throws that led to the same result of the roosters chasing it all the way in but not committing. I also had just as many “yikes” throws that the optimist in me still wonders if I would’ve caught one of these bigger roosters had I not been a slacker. After getting humbled by these fish for a couple more hours (and being rather sad that we would be heading back home the next day), I headed back to the hotel to celebrate my girlfriends birthday with some great food and margaritas.

The last morning of the trip is where I was blessed with the perfect ending. I decided to wake up super early and see if the roosters were still along the beach before needing to head to the airport. I had never caught a Roosterfish on the fly before, and really was itching to check this one off my species list. While targeting the larger fish the day before, I noticed that several small baby Roosterfish were zipping around the wave breaks, so I decided to rig up a smaller whit and red deceiver fly and just focus on getting one of these guys. Upon arriving to the beach, I saw a baby rooster zip and zag right by the shore…put a throw into the wave breaks…and finally! Rooster on. Although this Rooster was in no way a giant, it meant everything and put up quite the battle. I made sure to just snap a quick selfie with this fish and get it back in the water quickly so it could grow to be the giant it deserves to be.

Joe Petrow – Roosterfish

What a trip and what a time. I cannot wait to chase Roosters again in the future, as they really are an amazing fish that I’d like to spend the time getting to know better. The moments when the hard work pay off is makes fly fishing so rewarding, and I’ll never forget the memories made this trip for my 30th. My first drink as a 30-year old was a cold margarita with my girlfriend on the beach, and my first fish as a 30-year old was a Rooster on the beach. Can’t beat that.

Tight lines!

Joe

Long Weekend Stripers

As most serious fly fisherman can relate to, the fish you frequently target can often evolve throughout the course of your life. Some fish you grow up with, and some fish join the journey later in life – both have a special place in your heart. For me, Striped Bass (specifically in Maine) were one of those fish that I really started to become ecstatic about later in my twenties. Over the past couple of years, I’ve continued to dedicate the time (on both the water and fly tying vice) to learn more about how to catch Stripers, and our annual trip to Maine in 2024 led to some of the best encounters I’ve had with these fish.

Similar to pervious years, we ventured to Maine in late May, and were met with the best possible weather conditions (not an exaggeration). Super sunny skies, warmer temps for the early summer, and low winds. Although Stripers typically prefer some clouds/wind/elements to really turn on the feed bag, the sunny conditions on this trip really allowed some terrific opportunities to sight fish. To mix it up from previous years, I wanted to do two things this trip when it came to fishing: throw bigger flies and find new water. Although I had a few terrific spots that produced fish on my usual clouser/smaller baitfish patterns, I really wanted to throw some larger bucktail patterns and explore my “spot” horizons. With that said, I was optimistic that this could be a fishy weekend, as I was able to catch a nice striper on a larger bucktail fly (in one of my usual areas) on the very first evening in Maine. This fish was sitting in a HEAVY outgoing tide and hammered the fly only about 5 feet from the trip of the rod, and put up quite the fight. After a few quick shots, the fish swam off strongly and I went to go celebrate with a blueberry beer.

Joe Petrow – Striped Bass

The next day ended up being a day that really one that dreams are made of when it comes to throwing some fly line. My girlfriend and I slept in a bit, picked up some donuts, and arrived to a new fishing area that I wanted to check out by about 10am. I had my same larger bucktail fly on from the evening before, along with an intermediate sinking line to help get the fly down if current was present. Within about 30-minutes of walking the beach and jetty looking for fish, I couldn’t believe my eyes…there was a school of about 25-35 striped bass circling the beach about 80 feet off the shore. I sat and watched these fish slowly get closer to the rocks/shore, and tried to keep my heartbeat down and fly line ready. The school of fish settled in about 60 feet out and I let out a long cast…let the big fly slowly sink…did some quick sporadic strips…and the fish were on it! Four to five fish started chasing but not committing, until finally a BIG striper came up and engulfed it. Striper on! The fight that ensued became utter chaos from the rocks, and I was able to fortunately land this fish for an awesome picture. This was my largest striper to date, and I was extremely grateful for the moment.

Joe Petrow – Striper

For the next hour, the school continued to patrol the area, and I was able to land 3 more fish (had another get off by the rocks). All of the fish were extremely nice, but not as big as the first one). Similar to the first fish, these stripers were all over the larger fly – just had to adjust the strip based on the body language of the fish. I threw to one specific fish multiple times, until finally I ripped the fly as fast as I could and then it finally hammered it. You could tell that the sunny conditions definitely had these fish a little skeptical to eat, but the sheer number of fish in the school kept them aggressive enough (and competitive to beat each other to the fly) where it didn’t prevent fish from being caught.

Joe Petrow – Striper

As for the final day of the weekend, we returned to the same area, and was able to land one smaller Striper and hook another. The large school was no longer there, but I noticed some fish sitting in the fast current a little bit closer towards a river mouth. Had a few very nice fish (including one possibly bigger than the first day) chase the bigger flies in, but not commit. I ultimately down sized the fly to focus on the smaller fish I was seeing, and this proved to work.

Joe Petrow – Striper

As always, can’t wait for the next trip up to Maine and continuing to put the time in to go after these awesome fish.

Tight lines!

Joe Petrow

Tarpon, Triggers, and Right Place at the Right Time

This year, I was fortunate enough to have a rewards trip for work get scheduled in the Bahamas. Although I would’ve loved nothing more than to spend this entire week with my girlfriend searching for bonefish on one of the lesser populated islands of the Bahamas, this trip required some work, making me get creative when it came to finding some productive time to throw a fly rod. One thing that really held true to me in 2024 was “when in doubt, bring a fly rod if you’re going to the beach”, and this trip was no exception.

Although the water in the Bahamas was beautiful upon arrival, the area we were in was in no way secluded. Several resorts around, lots of boats in the water…that kind of deal. With that said, I had some hopes that if I just started putting in some miles on the sand that MAYBE I would be able to see something swimming around. Fortunately for me, I lucked out, found some fish, and made the most out of these rare opportunities.

During our first afternoon “off”, my girlfriend and I walked to a considerably less busy flat about a mile away from the hotel. Upon arriving to the flat, life was obvious. Stingrays swimming around, schools of extremely small baitfish getting bothered by baby barracudas…all extremely positive signs. I had a small shrimp pattern tied on (very optimistically thinking that maybe a bonefish would be around), and this would turn out to be a good call but for a different reason. After catching a few very small snappers throwing into a single deep hole off the flat, I noticed a big, dark tail appear on the flat itself. After staring at the tail for a good 20 seconds wondering what it was, I finally realized that it was a large Ocean Triggerfish and got to casting. Follow after follow…I got this fish excited on the fly. It would swipe at it, miss, swipe again, eat it but not get the hook in the face…until finally my line went fully tight after a surge towards the fly from the fish. Trigger on and the fight was unreal! This fish took me deep into backing on the first run, and easily took 10-minutes to get in. This was my first Ocean Triggerfish and I was ecstatic to get this guy off the beach.

Joe Petrow – Triggerfish

Later in the week, I took an early morning walk on the beach the following day, I noticed a pod of four to six juvenile tarpon patrolling around (!!!). These fish were swimming parallel on a specific stretch of the beach that seemed to have a slightly deeper trough about 30-feet off the beach. Having been on the search for more triggerfish again, I had a small shrimp fly tied on, and made the decision to switch flies as quick (and calmly) as I could. I had a few of my go to black craft fur and bucktail flies in my box, and got one rigged relatively quick (considering how much blood I had pumping). Fortunately for me, the fish had maybe only moved down 200 feet on the beach and I was able to track them down, get a leading cast out, and boom…tarpon on. After several jumps, unlimited head shakes, and a few too close to call moments right by the waves breaking, I was able to land this fish. What an awesome moment from foot right off the beach.

Joe Petrow – Tarpon

The moral of the story from these fish is when in doubt, bring a rod with you to the beach. Even though there will be many times where nothing is seen, the times where fish decide to show up makes it all worth it.

Tight lines!

Joe

Return to the Bayou

Every year, I need time on (and near) the water with those that I care about the most for my heart to feel full. Since I’ve been in middle school, spending time with my Dad fly fishing for Redfish in Louisiana has been something that has not only produced some unreal fish, but some of the best laughs, meals, and conversations as well. Luckily enough this year, we were able to return to the bayou to celebrate a birthday and chase after some nice fish.

Fishing in the spring can be a great time in Louisiana – the colder weather of the winter is gone, but big fish can still be found. For this trip specifically, we were fortunate from a weather perspective as Mother Nature held up. Not terrible winds, some sun in the sky…two blessings when you are in the marsh. Especially when you are fishing in a limited number of days and need to make each hour count.

As for the fishing itself on this strip, solid would probably be the word. Although nice weather was had, we were in a bit of a transition period after a cold front the week before, which didn’t have the reds schooled up (which typically makes life much easier). With that said, after putting in the hours, we were able to find some outstanding fish and make our opportunities count.

Not seeing large groups of fish had us actively searching the shoreline. After a slow first couple of hours on our first day, we started to see “single” reds swimming parallel to the shore pushing big wakes and having their backs out of the water. Close casts with dark colored flies were the trick here due to some murky water. Upon the proper fly delivery, we were provided with a handful of nice reds throughout the day – there really is nothing like the search and pull from a bid redfish.

Joe Petrow – Redfish
Joe Petrow – Redfish

In addition to this, we were able to land an extremely nice black drum on Day 1. As those who fish the marsh will know, these fish are absolutely catchable on the fly, but have the fraction of an attitude (and appetite) of a red. Slow strips and having the fly fall slowly right on this fish’s nose did the trick!

Joe Petrow – Black Drum

As for Day 2, it was a bit of a grind. We started off super hot by catching a nice red after spotting it from what seemed like a football field away (always awesome), but then really didn’t see a ton of life until the early afternoon. Fortunately, everything seemed to turn on in a major way in the last couple hours of day light. It seemed like we were starting to spook a good number of fish in the muddy water, and then we ultimately found some very large fish on the bank. We were able to make our throws count, and land a couple of very nice fish before we needed to head back to the launch. Similar to the day before (and most of the time in Louisiana), tight throws led to aggressive fish, and we were able to end our trip on a high note. Both of the fish below were high and happy, ready to eat a fly!

Joe Petrow – Redfish
Joe Petrow – Redfish

As I’ve shared on this site before, time on the water with my Dad will forever be one of my favorite things on this planet. Beyond lucky to be able to do this together, and getting to celebrate his birthday along with the fishing this year was icing on the cake.

Tight lines,

Joe e

Canal Hopping for Peacocks

South Florida…in my opinion, one of the best locations in the entire United States to throw a fly line (especially if you are like me where the more species encountered, the better). Although many people associate South Florida fly fishing with hitting the saltwater towards the Keys, my mind immediately thinks about the canals in Miami/Fort Lauderdale where you can find species that are no where else in the country. In addition to this, when the rest of the country is dealing with colder weather and fishing seasons winding down, South Florida remains warm enough where you can escape to a convenient “paradise” for a few days and get on some fish.

I was fortunate enough this year to visit the Miami area twice (once in January and then once in November), and during theses visits, I was able to find and catch a fan favorite… the Peacock bass. I found most of these fish in two specific canal systems in shallow water.

To kick it off, the conditions presented a major challenge. Peacock bass (with origins from the hot, humid climate of South America) THRIVE off of warm weather and warm water, and you will have an exceedingly difficult time finding them during big cold fronts. I ran into cold fronts in both January and November, but fortunately was able to figure a few things out and find some areas that held fish. Although the fishing was tougher, I found that doing the following produced the most fish for me: sleep in and only fish during the warmest part of the day, and strip the fly as fast as you possibly can. For full transparency (as I like to do on this site), I woke up super early two mornings thinking that this might have active fish, only to find out (and even see) that these fish weren’t ready and warm enough to eat.

Once it was warm enough, flies were eaten, fights were had, and beautiful fish were brought to hand. The best thing about fly fishing for peacocks is how visual it can be – these fish are often times hugging the shore shallow, allowing you to sight fish to your hearts desire. If you fish for them during the spring and summer (which I’d honestly recommend over the colder months), you can even find these fish on aggressive and shallow on beds. For my outings this year, I found my best peacocks under vegetation waiting in ambush to smack prey. Throwing any small white or chartreuse deer hair fly, and stripping as fast as I could, did the trick! I sight fished the below peacock (one of my largest ever) in this exact fashion, and it put up a terrific fight on the 8-weight.

Joe Petrow – Peacock Bass

Although I had a handful of successful outings, I very much look forward to returning to the canal systems during warmer months of the year to see if larger numbers of “bigger” fish can be found. I’m a big fan of any sized peacock as they are one of the most beautiful and best fighting fish you can find (great examples of what I’m talking about below) I’d love to sharpen my skillset on consistently finding larger fish. I also need to commit some time to searching for Snakeheads and Clown Knifefish on the fly!

Joe Petrow – Peacock Bass

In addition to this, I do want to highlight that the largemouth bass fishing seems to improve with some colder weather. While searching pretty exclusively for peacocks, I caught countless largemouth along the way. Need to appreciate this local species as they helped keep the rod bent during the colder days!

Tight lines!

Joe