7.12.2007
Volume VIII
Issue #24

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July 14
Charleston Coastal Anglers Tournie

July 17
Tips and Tricks for Targeting Spanish Mackerel, with Daniel Nussbaum - The Charleston Angler

July 21
1st annual Rob Kinneman Memorial Tournament

July 21
Beginners Fly Fishing Class - The Charleston Angler

First Sunday of each month
Sunday Morning Fly Tying with Mike Benson - The Charleston Angler

For More info,
see our website home page

Tide Conversion Chart
 12 Thursday
 12:45AM LDT 0.2 L  06:32AM LDT 4.8 H
 12:40PM LDT -0.5 L  07:10PM LDT 6.4 H
 13 Friday
 01:40AM LDT 0.1 L  07:31AM LDT 4.9 H
 01:35PM LDT -0.5 L  08:05PM LDT 6.4 H
 14 Saturday
 02:32AM LDT 0.0 L  08:26AM LDT 4.9 H
 02:28PM LDT -0.4 L  08:56PM LDT 6.3 H
 15 Sunday
 03:21AM LDT 0.0 L  09:19AM LDT 5.0 H
 03:18PM LDT -0.3 L  09:43PM LDT 6.1 H

Complete July Tides

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Trident Fishing Tournament Standings
Week 34 - Click here
 Recipe of the Week

Wahoo Delight

Ingredients:
¾ cup long grain rice
6 ounces of crab meat
½ cup frozen peas
¼ teaspoon salt
8 ounces chopped tomatoes
1 ½ teaspoon chicken bouillon
1 clove minced garlic
¼ cup onion chopped fine
hot sauce to taste
2 tablespoons dry sherry

Directions:
In a skillet cook rice, onion, and garlic over medium heat. Stirring occasionally until rice is golden brown. Remove from heat. Add water, tomatoes, bouillon, salt and hot sauce. Cover and simmer for 15-minutes. Stir in peas, crab and sherry and heat through.

  More Recipes HERE  
Slick
     This is your latest NOAA Weather synopsis from South Santee River to Savannah Georgia, and out 20 nautical miles. High pressure will dominate the area over the next two days. Tonight light and variable winds seas 1 to 2 foot, in the morning west winds 5 knots seas 2 foot or less, tomorrow afternoon winds switching to south west 10 knots seas 2 foot."
     It sounds like an offshore fisherman’s dream come true! Fishing out of my 23-foot center console I have always been a fair weather fisherman, but is there a such thing as too fair of weather?
Read the article HERE

Recreational Boating Safety Record Never Been Better
NEWS From BoatUS
     Contrary to what you may be hearing from US Department of Homeland Security officials lately, recreational boating has never been safer.
     According to the latest available statistics for 2004, more people died in bathtubs and swimming pools (847) than in recreational boats (676). Operating a boat is far safer than riding a bicycle, motorcycle or off-road vehicle. In fact, you have a much greater chance of perishing from a fall involving a bed, chair or furniture (838) or falling from a stairs or steps (1,588) than you do in falling from a boat.
     "Recent calls by Department of Homeland Security and US Coast Guard officials that recreational boating would be safer if boaters were "certified" and required to show proof of identification is just not backed up by the facts," said BoatUS President Nancy Michelman.
     "The rate of recreational boating fatalities per 100,000 boats has been cut by 75 percent and the number of boating fatalities has been reduced by 58 percent since the implementation of the landmark Federal Boat Safety Act of 1971," Michelman noted.
     Currently, Congress is considering Administration-backed legislation that could result in licensing boaters in the name of national security because the Coast Guard does not believe it has the authority to require a boat operator to produce identification absent probable cause.
     "Requiring millions of recreational boat owners to be licensed and tasking the already overburdened Coast Guard with implementing a duplicative system solely to identify those operating a boat will be costly to develop, take years to implement and will not result in a demonstrable improvement in national security," said BoatUS at a recent "summit" meeting held under Homeland Security Department auspices.
     Instead, BoatUS believes a comprehensive waterway security program needs to be established. It would be far simpler and much less costly for the Coast Guard to ask Congress for the authority to require boat operators to produce the same identification now required to board a commercial airline flight. In addition, the Coast Guard should substantially expand its Waterway Watch program to enable thousands of recreational boaters to be the Coast Guard's eyes and ears on the waterways and, it should clearly mark security zones - both public and private - to ensure that boaters know where they can and can not go.
     High pressure, summer heat, afternoon thunderstorms all typical July fishing in the lowcountry. Weather has been good and hot this week for the fish; Reds, Trout, and Flounder are being caught on live finger mullet and mud minnows. Bonnet Head sharks are dominating the tidal creeks, hitting crabs. Schools of Spanish and small Blues are working in the harbor and just off the beach and hitting Clarke spoons. Spadefish are on the reefs.
     Offshore action has been fair this week. The southerly afternoon sea breeze continues to push the weed in shallow. Dolphin are being caught in as close as 65-feet. Some nice Wahoo are being picked up around the ledge and Sails are hitting beyond the ledge. Looks like the Cuda action is picking up.

Tight lines…
Captain Tim Pickett
CharlestonFishing.Com
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