Thursday, May 31, 2007



Wednesday May 30th was our first day of tagging off Isla Mujeres. Seas were 5 ft to 7 ft with a few waves up to 10 ft. Nevertheless we had an excellent day fishing with 28 dolphin tagged. We also caught 4 sailfish and one white marlin. We are fishing the reef edge in water 170-250 ft deep. Water temperature is 83.5 degrees with little variation. There is a strong current moving to the North so we just zigzag back and forth and try to keep the waves from breaking over the transom. Most of the tagged dolphin were less than 20" in length. We did catch two fish over 30 lbs. Getting those fish to the boat with the waves and current was a major effort on 20 lb tackle. We fished for 8 hours, covered 65 miles according to the GPS tracks and only fished a small section of the reef line. Soon as the waves drop out we will move further North and explore some large reef lines plus move out in deeper water around the Aerosmith Bank.

We plan to be here 3 weeks and I can already tell we will not have time to explore every major fishing area. There are pods of whale sharks in the area, large mako sharks on the prowl plus spectacular deep drop opportunities for grouper and snapper. We will also move over to Isla Contoy and Isla Holbox to explore the flats fishing for tarpon, permit and bonefish. We will tag everything we catch to help scientist understand migration patterns and support conservation efforts.

The Yucatan Straits between Mexico and Cuba is the major gateway to the Gulf of Mexico and Gulf Stream moving up through the Florida Straits. With the major upwelling zones, the bait fish and predators all congregate here to feed. We will try to document the ecosystem and share it with you on this blog. We will post more pictures soon. Best to all.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Isla Mujeres at last

We made the 334 mile run from Key West to Isla Mujeres arriving on Tuesday, May 29. The Makara left Key West at 1pm on Monday and made the run in under 20 hours. We ran with a 20 kt following wind into the Gulf Stream, where seas were 6-8 feet for much of the way. One lighting storm at 4am was the highlight of the trip. After a half a day to clear customs, immigration and get fishing permits, we are finally ready to begin tagging.

We will explore the fishing grounds today looking for feeding birds from the 170 foot line out to 250 feet. There seas are still pretty rough so we will wait another day to fish the Aerosmith Bank which is 20 miles offshore. Captain Ben from the Guarimba will join us today. He has been fishing here for 3 weeks and knows where the fish have been biting. So pictures, tag reports and stories will appear here later today. Best to all today.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Weather delay - Wind!

We had planned to leave on May 22 from North Palm Beach and head to Key West then across the Gulf of Mexico to Isla Mujeres. Reports from Isla are excellent - chance at a grand slam, 30 lb dolphin everywhere and great weather. But we have 6-8 ft seas here and the conditions are forecasted to last through the weekend. We use the Navy weather model forecast results from www.fnmoc.navy.mil. They provide an unclassified 7 day forecast for the North Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico. Shown above is the Gulf forecast for May 26.

We will sit tight, wax and polish the boat and keep watching the weather. Check back - I will try to tell more about the Isla Mujeres ecosystem in the next few days.

Monday, May 7, 2007

Yucatan Straits Tag Expedition



Our next tagging expedition is a trip to the Yucatan Straits where we will be tagging dolphin and white marlin for a month. Don Hammond will be with us again as we attempt to tag 200 dolphin in order to better understand dolphin migration out of the Caribbean up through the Florida Straits to the Eastern Seaboard. No one has ever tagged dolphin this far South (and West).

We plan to leave May 22nd from North Palm Beach Marina and run first to Key West. We will sit there until we have good weather then do an overnight run to Isla Mujeres. Isla is 400 miles SW from Key West so we will leave late afternoon, run ful speed until dark. Then we slow down to 10 knots, turn on the infrared vision system and carefully run until morning. We should be at Isla Mujeres by mid-morning the following day.

We will be reporting the results of our tagging efforts daily along with pictures of other marine life in the area. This is a major feeding ground for whale sharks that feed in the upwelling zone beyond the Arrowsmith Bank. We have gotten reports of pods of 50+ whale sharks on the surface feeding. We will definitely put on our snorkle gear, grab our underwater cameras and jump in and document any encounter.

More later on preparing for a month at sea. Tag and release.