CatchN1 with Captain Casey
Fishing Louisiana Style
Sunday, February 21, 2016
Sunday, February 7, 2016
Minimalist or Maximus??
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This year’s Minimalist Challenge, put on by Bayou Coast
Kayak Fishing Club, turned out to be one for the record books. With a record amount of anglers, a record
amount of weight at the scales, and a record sell out time, anglers from all
over Louisiana showed up at the public launch in Leeville to take part in what
some call, the best little tournament of the year.
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As 125 anglers sat floating in the holding area awaiting the
blast off horn, the breeze slowed, hats came off, and the voices silenced as
Bill Crawford began to speak. Bill, also
known as Revredfish, said a prayer to guide us all in our endeavors, to bless
the fleet, and most all to recognize the passing of Capt. Kristen Wray. Kristen was a pioneer to the sport of kayak
fishing in and around the Grand Isle area.
Kristen and her husband Danny operated Calmwater Charters and were known
to many as the founders and operators of the famed Ride the Bull kayak fishing
tournament. Kristen was instrumental in
developing, growing, and educating many about the sport of kayak fishing in and
around Grand Isle. While Kristen lost
the battle with cancer her memory will continue to live on. At last year’s Ride the Bull tournament a
kayak only launch was dedicated in the name of Kristen and Danny Wray, so the
next time you venture down to Ludwig lane on Grand Isle to launch your yak in
search of that catch of a lifetime, think about Kristen and all she’s done to
aid in the welcoming of the yak community, because I know she will be looking
down upon all of us in our little plastic boats.
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As I pedaled my Hobie back toward the launch, I could
already see 50 plus people standing in line with weigh bags and ice chest. This was a scene I haven’t seen in at least 4
years in the tournament. Usually the
winds are horrible, the water is low, and weight numbers for this event aren’t
always good, and rarely ever great, but today was a new day, and based on the
line, there were a lot of fish that were going to be hitting the scales.
I talked with many anglers, some had beautiful reds and
couldn’t find trout, some had limits of beautiful trout and couldn’t find reds,
and then there was a handful of those that found the gold under the rainbow and
were standing in line holding 5 fat red fish and 25 nice trout. Now keep in mind that’s 30 keeper fish and
likely another 20 to 30 throw back fish that didn’t make the cut, all caught on
only 6 lures, talk about some plastics that can hold up to a challenge.
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I can’t help but think about the passing of Capt. Kristen as
I put this piece together. I have stayed
many nights over the years with Kristen and Danny at their home in Grand Isle
talking about strategies, locations, family and life in general and I have to
believe that with years of foul weather for this particular event, that
Kristen, likely sitting in a yak upstairs in the sky, had something to do with
the perfect conditions that fell upon us that day. You will be missed by many,
but forgotten by no one
Winners of the MC 9 took home over $2900 and weighed in over
1200 lbs of fish
Steve Lessard 1, Steve Neece 2, Clayton Shilling 3, Kevin
May 4, Josh Reppel 5, big fish Josh Reppel, Leopard red Wayne Lobb
Sunday, January 17, 2016
Making a Transition from Fresh to Salt, Pro Style
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Matt is a big believer in fluorocarbon line and if you need
convincing he is happy to oblige. Matt
landed 4 trout in the boat before I landed one.
I knew he was a flouro guy and so am I, the only difference was he uses
pure flouro and I use a flouro 7 foot leader mated to braid, well needless to
say after being shown up for nearly an hour, I decided to start using one of
his rods that was spooled with straight flouro.
We actually did a little test prior to my hard headed transition and it
turns out that my lure was falling several seconds behind his lure, we chalked
that up to the buoyant properties of braid vs sinking flouro. These are the little subtleties that many
don’t ever grab hold too, and that’s just one of the advantages to getting into
the boat with not just a charter captain, but with one that’s spent a decade
competing for a living; this guy knows the little things that make a huge
difference.
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What’s your favorite way to fish?
Drop shot, I learned
it on Smith Mountain Lake in Georgia and it’s landed me more bass than I can
count. Bringing the drop shot into trout
fishing has really allowed my clients an exciting way to fish without watching
a cork.
What was your biggest challenge transitioning from Bass
Fishing for a living to Saltwater fishing for a living?
Learning the tidal
ranges, figuring out when and where to be on falling tides and rising tides in
different areas of the lake
Who was your biggest influencer or mentor when you
transitioned to trout fishing?
Chas Champagne was a
big mentor for years, he was an educator and a friend that really helped me
move forward learning speckled trout habits.
Mike Gallo of Angling
Adventures of Louisiana, Mike has been a teacher, a coach, and a business
professor. He has taught me all about
the saltwater industry and the business side of it all. I am not sure I would
have grown to where I am today without Mike in my corner.
What’s the best part of being a Charter Captain?
The kids, it’s all
about the kids. Getting a kid on the
boat and teaching him about more than just video games and seeing them smile
holding up their fish is just a pure joy to me. I take part in a lot of
charities and kid events because it’s the kids of today that are going to stand
up for all of us tomorrow.
Do you still have
sponsors that carried over from your bass fishing days to your chartering?
Well, Dockside marine
is my greatest supporter, but I am also on the pro teams for Skeeter, Yamaha,
and Seatow. I support a lot of products like Matrix Shad and Boss Outdoors, I
stick with companies whose products I believe in and actually use. 
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Sunday, January 3, 2016
Fast Trout Action in Nasty Weather//Video
In the Final weeks of December, I had the opportunity to host good friend and great angler Craig Dye, of Last Cast Productions, down in Delacroix, la. As a kind gesture Craig went home and made a short clip of what the day was all about.
Conditions were in the lower 50s and a strong north wind was blowing along with a 1.2 foot falling tide. We caught everything on Matrix Shad and Rockport Rattler jig heads and Live shrimp. We didn't have to travel far from Sweetwater Marina to get into the action and we finished off a 50 speck limit before 9 am. From specks we moved on to some shaded sight fishing, but as you can see in the video, Craig was successful. Just click the pic below to get started on a 2 minute clip of a lot of fish.
Until Next Time,
Stay Safe & Catch1
Conditions were in the lower 50s and a strong north wind was blowing along with a 1.2 foot falling tide. We caught everything on Matrix Shad and Rockport Rattler jig heads and Live shrimp. We didn't have to travel far from Sweetwater Marina to get into the action and we finished off a 50 speck limit before 9 am. From specks we moved on to some shaded sight fishing, but as you can see in the video, Craig was successful. Just click the pic below to get started on a 2 minute clip of a lot of fish.
Until Next Time,
Stay Safe & Catch1
Saturday, January 2, 2016
Get ready for January and the Minimalist Challenge?????
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Get ready for low tides, cold weather, and some fun camaraderie.
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Until Next Time,
Stay Safe & Catch1
December to Remember
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Capt. Bubby is a native of south Louisiana, a family man, a
father of three, an inspiration to many, and a captain that strives to make
sure you’re smiling the entire day on the water. With over 30 years of experience fishing the
waters of Louisiana mixed with a personality so entertaining it’s contagious,
you can’t help but have a good time.
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As we arrived in the middle of nowhere, all you could see
was crystal clear water and marsh grass for miles. Bubby and Josh got in the front of the boat
and I climbed up the T top and was perched like a bald eagle searching for his
next meal. Bubby knew these waters well
and was able to almost point out the fish before we could even see them. With matrix shad hooked up to spinner blades,
the flash and thump was too much for these reds to resist. First it was one red here and one red there,
and then it was schools of reds cornered in the back of ponds. Once Josh got his bearings and understood
what to look for and where in the column the reds were swimming, it didn’t take
him long to get in on the action landing his first sight fished redfish. Within a couple of hours there were three
limits of quality redfish on ice and I’m pretty sure some of the stories
throughout the day will be recalled and shared for years to come.
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I did an article earlier this year on Double D Meat Co and
the myth of whether or not you get your own meat back after you drop it
off. Well we already dispelled that
myth, and getting to know Josh and seeing who he is as a person says a lot
about the family touch that is put into their products, and based on the
success of their company, the quality of their meat, taste of their meat, and
the instilled family values that Josh portrays, there is no question why they
have they have been dubbed, “Home of Country Smoked Sausage.”
Josh, what did you think about the trip? “It was a great day
of fishing; Sight fishing from an elevated position was a 1st for me but won’t
be the last. Any day on the water fishing with good people is a good day but
putting fish in the boat makes it a great day. “
Capt Bubby, what did know about DD Meats? “Double D is my
favorite smoke sausage, I’ve tried the rest now I eat the best, Double D Smoked
Sausage.”
Capt Bubby, what is it that draws you to chartering and to
fishing in general? “Although fishing is about catching fish for most people,
it’s not everything. It’s the friendships and the enjoyment you have trying to
catch them that’s everything.”
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