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			#1  
			
			
			
			
			
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|  sheepshead for dinner 
			
			Went spearfishing off Jacksonville today and got some flounder and sheepshead.  The sheeps on our wrecks are huge, right now.  For reference, the smallest flounder in the grass at the bottom of pic 3 was 13.5" (he was the only fish measured, although the littlest sheep was barely legal, too).  My buddy, John is holding up the two bigger flounder and that's me with two sheephead.
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			#2  
			
			
			
			
			
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			Awsome!
		 
				__________________ *************************************** Stay Safe! Sold - 1984 V-20 Cuddy with a 2003 Johnson 140 hp gas sippin 4-stroke. 1995 Ranger 250C with a 2015 Suzuki 300 hp 4-stroke. | 
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			#3  
			
			
			
			
			
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			Man those are some nice size fish....
		 
				__________________ 1986 V-20 1986 Yamaha 150 HP | 
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			#4  
			
			
			
			
			
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			Not a thick fillet on sheepshead, but really good to eat. The nearshore oil production platforms around here are stacked with them all the warm months. It's hard to get them to bite, but it's easy to stick a bag full of them with a pole spear. No famous chef has ever made a name for them so they're still plentiful.
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			#5  
			
			
			
			
			
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			Great looking fish...  I'm totally jealous.    Interesting names for the flatfish. In northern waters those Flounders would be called Flukes. Up here a left sided fish is a Fluke and a right sided fish is a Flounder. Fluke have teeth and a large jaw, Flounder have no teeth and a small mouth. Fluke are sometimes called Summer Flounder. I call them delicious.   
				__________________ 1987 V20 w/1987 150HP Yamaha on a Shoreland'r Trailer 1978 16.5 Airslot w/1996 120HP Force on a Four Winns trailer 1996 V21 w/1993 200HP Mercury on a Shoreline Trailer All towed by a 5.7L Hemi Durango. If God didn't have a purpose for us we wouldn't be here, so Live simply, Love generously, Care deeply, Speak kindly. (Leave the rest to God)  Silence, in the face of evil, is itself evil. Not to speak is to speak, not to act is to act. God will not hold us guiltless. | 
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			#6  
			
			
			
			
			
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			read this about flounder http://www.mrl.cofc.edu/edrpt/edrpt20B.pdf | 
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			#7  
			
			
			
			
			
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   I found it interesting to note that the methods described by that author for catching southern flounder are similar to the way we catch Fluke up here in the north. Even the authors own special rig is very similar to the rig I tie when I fish for them, although he uses 2 three way swivels and I tend to use dropper knots and a different hook instead, the basic configuration of the rig is identical. The trolling and drifting sections are also similar to the way we catch them up here. What is different is the part about gigging them. I don't know of anyone that gigs Fluke up here, although I suppose that it could be done in Barnaget Bay due to the shallows and flats in some areas there...., but for the most part the water here is simply too deep to be able to do that, so we drift or troll for them. Live Killies with a triangular squid pennant are the favorite bait around here, (we call it ham and eggs). I know a few people that use artificials (some type of bucktail mostly) to catch them, but 95% use the aforementioned bait. You can buy live Killies at the various bait shops, but I like to catch my own since it'a a LOT cheaper. A few Killie traps, a 5 gallon bucket and a 6 pack are a great way to while away an afternoon the day before you go fishing.. If you know what you're doing and have a good spot you can catch several quarts of good sized Killies in about 3 hours.. more than enough to last you and your friends for a day of fishing. I take them home, put them in a holding pen (5 gal bucket with small holes in it) in the river across the street from me and I'm good to go in the morning. As to the eating part, although I know a lot of people like to bread them and then fry them, my personal favorite way is simply to fry the fillets in real butter without any breading. Damn... now I'm getting hungry!! 
				__________________ 1987 V20 w/1987 150HP Yamaha on a Shoreland'r Trailer 1978 16.5 Airslot w/1996 120HP Force on a Four Winns trailer 1996 V21 w/1993 200HP Mercury on a Shoreline Trailer All towed by a 5.7L Hemi Durango. If God didn't have a purpose for us we wouldn't be here, so Live simply, Love generously, Care deeply, Speak kindly. (Leave the rest to God)  Silence, in the face of evil, is itself evil. Not to speak is to speak, not to act is to act. God will not hold us guiltless. | 
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			#8  
			
			
			
			
			
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			Is the pic below the same as the killfish you use?  We have those down here too but also have what we call mud minnows.  Like a killfish without the stripes.  One of the biggest flounder I've caught was on a striped killfish I caught in the thrownet. killfish mud minnow   
				__________________ 1994 Wellcraft V21 | 
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