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Destination - The Keys

 Fishing The Florida Keys

The Florida Keys

For those of you who haven't been here... the Florida Keys are a chain of about 1700 islands in the extreme southeast of the United States. The Keys extend from the southeastern Florida peninsula near Miami, run south and then curve west to Key West, and out to the uninhabited Marquesas and Dry Tortugas. Famous for our diverse sport fishing opportunities and diving . The Village of Islamorada, where I live, is know as "the Sportfishing Capital of the World." The city of Key West is the county seat of Monroe County, which covers mostly the Everglades on the mainland, and all of the islands from Key Largo south and west.

Florida City, Flamingo, Biscayne Bay

Florida City, is the closest point on US1 to Flamingo; the mainland’s Southwest corner of the Everglades National Park. Biscayne National Park is in the opposite direction of Flamingo, this area includes a string of keys; Elliot, Ragged Keys, Soldier Key, to mention just a few. These islands form the outer barrier of Biscayne Bay southwest to where it meets Card Sound and the northern end of Key Largo. "Stiltsville," is a unique community of fishing and weekend homes built on pilings on top of the flats, defining the northern region of Biscayne Bay. Water depths vary in Biscayne Bay, from large flats where bonefish frequent, to channels and deeper edges of flats where tarpon and permit, are inhabitants too.

The Upper & Middle Keys

Heading southwest on US 1, you enter the "Keys proper" as you leave what we call the “stretch” as you drive southwest along US 1, Florida Bay is the large body of water on the right or northwest side of the road. The Florida Straits containing the Gulf Stream to the left or southeast is a narrow body of water in the Atlantic that separates the Florida Keys from Cuba. Florida Bay encircling the coastal Everglades National Park is home to redfish, snook, seatrout, jacks, sharks, snapper, bonefish, tarpon, permit, and many other species too numerous to mention. On the ocean side flats, however, live bonefish, tarpon, and permit; these areas are not productive for snook and redfish. more

From Biscayne Bay through the Upper Keys, bonefish are on hand year round, and it is not easy to narrow best time of the year for bonefishing. During summer they require deeper and cooler water during the hottest part of the day, during spring and fall they may stay on the flats all day. more

For tarpon in this portion of the Keys, the best times are normally April, May, and June. Tarpon may sometimes start migrating through the area in early March, it all depends upon water temperatures, with warmer waters raising the odds of the fish showing up earlier but possible departing sooner. The migration usually peaks in May and June and will taper off into late July. Throughout the year there are are always tarpon or “locals” around the Keys and in the Everglades but they can be weather dependent. more

The Lower Keys

Around Marathon and southwest down to the end of US1, the water on the northwest side begins to open up to the Gulf of Mexico. Further South, Key West may be the end of the road, but not the end of fishing opportunities.

The best months for bonefishing in this area of the Keys are considered by for the most part to be March through November. In the winter, the fishing guides from this area frequently trailer their boats to the Upper Keys for bonefishing. Permit also can be found here all year, but hunting them from February and through November is best. more

Similar to in the Upper Keys, the tarpon begin to show up sometime in late March and April, again depending on existing weather conditions. The peak of their migration occurs generally in May and June, for Key West and the Marquesas.

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floridakeysflyfish.com - The Keys
Updated :

Re: Tropical Storm Gustav
I'm in Panama City, FL and they are talking about landfall very close to where Katrina made landfall.  Can't wait to see what the gas prices do? 
Author : jseiffer@comcast.net
Publ.Date : Wed, 27 Aug 2008 23:43:58 GMT

Re: Tropical Storm Gustav
Come on up!  I hope we get lucky and miss them both!   
Author : jseiffer@comcast.net
Publ.Date : Fri, 29 Aug 2008 02:08:35 GMT

Re: Tropical Storm Gustav
For the moment, Hanna is headed straight for me on the east coast!  Looks like we might all be headin' north to stay w/ Seef.
Author : MagicSFK@aol.com
Publ.Date : Thu, 28 Aug 2008 23:45:58 GMT

Re: Tropical Storm Gustav
I don't think I have ever seen computer models change on a TS/Hurricane as much as they have with Gustav... and now with Hanna's five day track showing up at the same time within several hundred miles... looks pretty scary; especially for the Gulf. Han...
Author : tarpon54@bellsouth.net
Publ.Date : Thu, 28 Aug 2008 19:39:30 GMT

 

Information and Links

Florida Keys Links

 Keys News Feeds


Identity of four dead bodies still a mystery
The identity of the four people found dead this week in the waters off the Florida Keys remains a mystery. U.S. Coast Guard officials, who on Saturday morning conducted a search by air and by sea, came up empty of any clues to the consequences that led to their deaths.
Publ.Date : Mon, 25 Aug 2008 08:34 EDT

Tropical Storm Fay brings rain, little else to Florida Keys
From Key West to Key Largo, the reaction to Tropical Storm Fay sounded the same: ''I can't believe this is it,'' said Christine Russell, of Key West. ``Very disappointing. I loaded the cooler with beer and ice and got the candles out and we won't even need them.''
Publ.Date : Tue, 19 Aug 2008 03:01 EDT

Fay deals one more blow to battered Keys economy
More sandwiches are going uneaten at the Quiznos Subs at Mile Marker 100 owned by Frank Navarro. Ever since hurricanes Dennis, Katrina, Rita and Wilma in 2005, sales have been off, he said. So far this year, Quiznos sales have been down about 15 percent from last year, said Navarro, who opened just for lunch on Monday.
Publ.Date : Tue, 19 Aug 2008 03:01 EDT

Book focuses on the keys to saving the Keys
Joyce Newman has considered what qualities she shares with more than a dozen other women who are subjects of a new book called Women Conserving the Florida Keys by Susan Nugent. She has come to this conclusion:
Publ.Date : Mon, 21 Apr 2008 07:46 EDT

Bodies found in Florida Keys remain unidentified
Autopsies performed this week offered a few clues about physical appearance, but no cause of death for the four unidentified bodies found floating in separate locations off the Florida Keys last week.
Publ.Date : Wed, 27 Aug 2008 03:01 EDT