It's quite obvious to any shipping expert that the ship comes under the category of a floating ship. The alternative is a sunken ship which you find underwater! 😂
Great vid! For the record that is an aircraft carrier, not a frigate! The jets are inside and they launch out the front door? Fools the enemy every time!
@@FishGum this comment doesn't reflect upon your product well. Neither does admitting to losing 3 li-ion batteries in the water for the sake of product promotion.
Its a cargo ship owned by Jeff Bezos. The water is around 25-30' deep in that channel. The minnows on the bottom we call "chubs." The small fish at the end is an oyster toadfish. Their jaw pressure is absolutely incredible for their size. As far as mangrove baits, it's really hard to beat a live LY or micro pinfish on a dropshot rig
I cought a oyster jawfish once.i thought it was a bad ass mutant.i didn't want to injure it's teeth so I just cut the line at the hook and let it go.i figured it had a hard anough time being so small and ugly...😂 And dangerous looking.
The "minnows" are juvenile Glassy Sweepers, Pempheris schomburgkii. They turn more coppery as they mature. And you did have a toadfish, but I think a gulf toadfish, not oyster toadfish, given the location and the very well-defined bars on the dorsal fin.
Good video Tony. I was just at the Ft. Pickens spot yesterday and got some mangroves. Will have to get to that spot, it looks ripe for the picking. Postal Larry speaking, now TSA Larry
This is a $300 camera system which is easily lost. for a 360 camera you're looking at alot more money, more weight and size and more chance of it getting lost. Give it a year or 2. We'll have the affordable technology!
I was thinking I'd use a float system with the camera. You know more about that than I do but you wouldn't loose it. If saltwater fish are anything like freshwater fish look for the shadows and dark water.
Now I’m not a salt fisherman but watch a lot of fishing videos and I think the minnows maybe be triggerfish. Triggerfish have thoughts spikes on their backs so I’m thinking it can be that.
This is one of our go-to spots. Get baits or stay and catch some of the snapper and even some spanish once in a while. Have not targeted the sheepshead but i will now!
Yeah that was a toad fish, aka dog fish. I would use smaller hooks or a cast net and catch little pinfish or grunts for the snapper, or use those minnows. But use just enough weight to get the bait down, a half oz is probably too much and will cause snags. If the current allows I'd try with no weight or a split shot. Same for the sheepshead but use shrimp or fiddler crabs or sand fleas or blood worms. You want the minimum amount of weight you can get away with, and the lightest line.
Thanks! really enjoying your vids! I believe you're right and that toothy ugly critter was an oyster toadfish. That one was kinda small but they are freakin DELICIOUS! Think lobster (especially the cheeks) Almost nobody eats them because they so ugly. I took a chance on a big one I caught about 8 miles out ( maybe 16") because they look like monkfish. They ARE like monkfish! Ugly and tastes like lobster. Worth a shot next time you catch one (Just dont try to lip him like a bass)😄
That looked like a toad fish to me I’ve worked with them at work before. They’re pretty venomous so carful if that is what it is they’re related to lion fish
If your fishing here, know what the bottom is rocky... but here is an undisclosed location, somewhere in some harbor... Such a top secret piece of information... SMFH
I have to disagree on the live bait... ANY snapper will eat almost ANY piece of fish/crustacean/mollusc you throw near them... They reeeeally don't care if it's alive or not xD been fishing for them with shrimp, salted squid, sardines, other snapper, pinfish, catfish, clams, snails, crabs... Anything from the sea you cut in to pieces and put on a hook they'll eat....
That’s jeff bezos space retrieval ship. It’s been there being prepped and retrofitted for years. I’m pretty sure they stopped or are stopping that project.
I used to believe exactly the same things you do regarding catching grover's. Yes, they like live bait, but no live shrimp is not the way to catch them. You might go through eight to a dozen live shrimp just to catch one keeper. Everything picks the s*** out of live shrimp especially the small mangroves and pinfish. Your catch to cast ratio is lame and you hardly ever catch the big boys. I'm going to figure out which way the tide is moving, throw a brick in a chum bag and let it marinate. Then I'm going to drift nice size chunks of Sardine.. 1/0 Circle hook.. 17 lb fluorocarbon leader.. couple split shot.. towards the very back Edge of the Chum plume. Once you drop a chum bag several things happen but the most important is a sorting of larger and smaller fish. Closest to the chum block is a swarm of smaller fish and medium fish darting in and out. But the big boys will hang way back looking for significant pieces that have been missed or ambushing smaller fish caught up in the feeding frenzy. That's a good spot. If you use this method you might be able to tease up some 18 to 22's... these older wiser fish you won't see very often on your camera but they cannot resist a big chunk of Sardine in such circumstances. Use your cameras to check out the fish behavior in a Chum slick and you'll see what I mean. Whenever we establish a Chum slick we basically cast over the main body of the slick especially for yellow tails. The big boys are always off in the shadows behind the action. Don't just Target species, but size of said species as well. Took me a long time to figure this one out. Used to go down to the Keys and go through four dozen live shrimp trying to catch my limit of 10 to 11 inch Grovers always praying for the big boys. Never caught them. Started throwing good chunk bait behind a slick and blammo I don't fish for 12-in Snapper anymore.. not that you don't occasionally get a big boy but trust me the big boys love the chunk bait and if the water is fired up they'll hit it like a freight train. I only throw chunk bait for snapper now
I guess I’m old school…. The verb cast is conventionally uninflected in the past tense and as a past participle. Casted is an old form-examples are easily found in texts from every century from the 14th to the present-but it has given way to cast in modern English.
@@petemoore8923 There absolutely is good content. But… you will turn some people away with grossly incorrect grammar. Particularly in the title. Besides, these comments all help his algorithm!