Venice Pier Anglers
1600 Harbor Drive South
The Venice Fishing Pier where "You Caught the Big One!"
Venice, FL 34285

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1600 Harbor Drive South Venice Pier Anglers


By
Ruth Anderson


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"We have Bait, Fly, Soft Plastic and Top water fishermen who all seem to have a very different focus. There are some user conflicts arising. One group seems to think the other is taking more than their fair share of fish. Some want to have areas designated for specific use only such as no motor zones or wade fishing only. The tournament fishermen are after the trophy big dollar catch. The guy who occasionally fishes just wants a few fish to have for dinner." And it all could down to a crashing end! Are you interested in being able to fish next week? Next Year or how about to only to a select few select people; NOT YOU because NOAA said so. Like that idea? I think it stinks like a red herring left out in the trash can too long. Want to continue to fish? Join our FREE group of America's top elite anglers to just guys like you and me. Together we can fish next week and if we are lucky, next year if YOU GET INVOLVED!

 

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The Shark-Tooth Coast

End of the year report!

With colder temperatures again here along our Shark-Tooth Coast, Charlotte Harbor through Nokomis Florida, anglers can expect to find much of the action taking place in the deeper waters of the Venice Inlet, as well as in holes throughout the canals, under docks and piers of the area. Live shrimp fished very slowly in these areas are catching trout, black drum and redfish. Best bet right now around Venice, Florida is the Alley, which is accessible both by boat and along its shoreline of the ICW. El Jobean pier has trout, mangroves and some slow to go big Snook up under the boards. Plenty of Sugar Trout to eat up your baits to, so bring the kids because, there is a lot of catching to do and they don't care; they caught a fish. Remember those days? As usual, plenty of ray to go along too, so be careful of the tail. Placida as well, Englewood on these cold snaps on the incoming tide, early in the frigid mornings have been producing nice heads (Sheepshead) on shrimp to fiddlers. The rocks to along the inlet will pull up a head or two along with the Mangos and many a tackle eating rock. Lots of rockfish to loose your rigs to, so bring plenty of gear. Before the blow of Christmas, reports of a few flounder off both Venice and Nokomis beaches on DOA or Luv lures pulled dead slow and using cut bait to live shrimp. Sharks to big Jew fish (Goliath) have been caught off the boards in Venice out on the “T” with those with serious gear, as that is to what they are fishing for and big boys are but what are out there. Cut baits to live mullets on six to eight foot and longer steel wire and 12/0 or better hooks, generally mean big fish. Boaters in the area are talking about the tripletail out along the crab-lines and a few Cobia too.

Back in the canals to the river it has been slow to no on the Bass with even shell cracker and his sun buddies too on the hide. Best action on the North Port Canals we saw was a 8 foot gator startled off the bank as we slipped by in our canoe, a few ducks and a bass, sunning itself in six inches of water that was a state record in the making; though he wanted nothing we had to offer and with a flip of the tail, he was gone. Nice Pan fish and small buckets on minnows from Captain Moss at his bait & tackle shop in North Port, from up the river along with some nice sized channels reported.


”FISH ON!”

 

 

Florida Sea Turtles

Many a Snowbird visit Venice, Florida yearly as do our friends of the shell, returning where it all started and life goes on.

Sea Turtles Found in Florida

 

TURTLES!

http://www.cccturtle.org/support.php?page=member

1998 Florida Sea Turtle Tracking Project

http://www.cccturtle.org/satellitetracking.php?page=tracking10

 

Green Turtle

Named for the greenish color of its body fat, this turtle is on the endangered list in Florida. For centuries, Green turtles became popular table fare, especially as a soup dish. Hunting and egg gathering greatly reduced their number. Green turtles graze on the vast beds of sea grasses found throughout the tropics and are the only sea turtles that eat plants. Some travel over a thousand miles to nest on islands in the mid-Atlantic.

Hawksbill Turtle

This turtle is a relatively small turtle, on the brink of extinction for its beautiful shell. Once relatively common in Florida, these turtles now rarely nest here. They feed on sponges and other invertebrates and tend to nest on small, isolated beaches.

Leatherback Turtle

This endangered turtle is the largest and most active of the sea turtles. Up to eight feet in length, these huge turtles have a rubbery dark shell marked by seven narrow ridges that run the length of their back. Many travel thousands of miles and dive thousands of feet deep. They also venture into much colder water than any other sea turtle. These turtles feed on jellyfish and soft-bodied animals that would appear to provide very little nutrition for such huge animals. Ingestion of plastic bags and egg collecting are reasons for mortality and population declines. About 200-leatherback nest in Florida each year and are common along Venice beaches.

Kemp's Ridley

The rarest and smallest of all the sea turtles, this endangered turtle feeds in the coastal waters of Florida on blue crabs, other crabs and shrimp. They nest on a single stretch of beach on the Gulf Coast of Mexico.

Loggerhead Turtle

This is the most common sea turtle in Florida and classified as a threatened, but not endangered species. Named because of its large head, which can be ten inches wide, it has powerful jaws used to crush the clams, crabs and encrusting animals on which it feeds. As many as 68,000 loggerhead nest in Florida each year and too visit our area beaches each year.

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