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#1 Oct-26-10 8:04AM

Ernie
Administrator
From: Ashburn VA
Registered: Feb-03-06
Posts: 15610

Miami-Area Peacocks

While there are good numbers of peacock bass in southeast Florida as far north as the Palm Beach area, most are found from Boca Raton to Florida City. That said, most of the guides who target peacocks do so in the Miami and south Miami areas because consistently warmer water temperatures there produce larger concentrations of peacocks than in Ft. Lauderdale and other areas north of Miami.

If you fly into Miami and look out the window as you land, you will see several lakes. These lakes were dug in the late 1950s to obtain fill for the airport runways and are more than 20 feet deep. This is one of the few places where you can use a 400- to 500-grain sinking line. All of these lakes are prime peacock habitat and can be fished by canoe, kayak, or small boat. There is a boat ramp located at Antonio Maceo Park on NW 7th Street and NW 51th Avenue that will put you into Blue Lagoon Lake. All of the other lakes are accessible from one another.

If you have a small boat, the western lake that is accessed through a canal running parallel to the Pan American Hospital is an excellent place for peacocks. Try the northwest corner of this lake. The southern lake (called Blue Lagoon) is the best of all these lakes. This lake gets almost no fishing pressure because it is only fishable from a kayak or canoe. The canal exiting the west end of this lake leads you to 20 or so miles of prime peacock-bass canals.

If your spouse is with you and you need a good excuse to go fishing, the canal behind the Falls Shopping Center on South U.S. 1 (Dixie Highway) at 136th Street is a great peacock canal. Start directly behind Bloomingdale’s department store (you can drop your spouse off for some shopping while you fish).

To reach the canal, drive north out of the shopping center parking lot, around the shopping center, and across the bridge that crosses the canal. You will see an access road running down the other side of the canal. Drive down this access road. As you approach the dam behind Bloomingdale’s, you will see two small boat ramps. This is the C-100C Canal. Fishing is good behind the shopping center as well as on the north side of the bridge for a half mile or so to the west where it goes under 136th Street and SW 95th Avenue. Drive or walk along the south side of this canal and sight-fish. Look closely around any structure, obstructions, debris, and drain pipes. This canal has a lot of room for backcasts.

This same C-100C Canal can be found near the intersection of SW 100th Avenue and SW 104th Street next to the clubhouse of the Killiam Golf Course. This area is also a good place to walk along the canal looking for peacocks. O. J. Simpson lives nearby.

You can launch a kayak or canoe in most of the canals in southeast Florida, and many have launch access for small boats on trailers.

Jim Anson, one of Miami’s top guides who has fished the canals in southeast Florida for peacock bass since 1988, says, “The beauty of fishing these canals is that it is run-and-gun fishing—you are up on the berm of a canal or bridge and the water is so clear you can see the fish, and you can drive from spot to spot until you find fish.” Anson guides by driving slowly along the edges of the canals until he spots fish.

The convergence of two Snapper Creek canals in the C-2 canal system at SW 99th Avenue and Snapper Creek Drive is worth a look.

The Baptist Hospital at SW 91st Street and Kendall Drive has two lakes that are fishable from land and hold largemouth bass to 10 pounds and peacocks up to 6. The area adjacent to the helicopter pad on the east lake is off-limits for safety reasons.

At SW 80th Street and SW 102nd Place there is an offshoot of the Snapper Creek Canal with a bridge going into the Kendalltown Condominiums. In addition to spotting peacocks from this bridge and the adjacent canal berm, there are some large (10- to 20-pound) grass carp around this bridge.

The intersection of the canal along U.S. 41 (a.k.a. SW 8th Street or the Tamiami Trail) and the canal at SW 94th Avenue has two bridges, and both canals hold numerous species including peacocks, snook, and tarpon.

Ft. Lauderdale Area Peacocks

Griffin Road west of the Florida Turnpike is easily fishable from the bank all the way west to I-75. This is the C-11 Canal, also known as New River. Numerous side canals intersect New River, and these side canals generally get less fishing pressure and hold more fish than the C-11/New River. Be sure to fish all of the bridges along the C-11/New River canal as well as other structure.

The G-15 or North New River Canal, which runs along Highway 84 and I-595, is another easily accessible canal, although it receives heavy fishing pressure.

The C-14, also known as Cypress Creek Canal, in north Ft. Lauderdale is not particularly productive, but many of the C-14’s side canals between Atlantic Boulevard and Copans Road hold peacocks.

An unnamed canal runs along Sunrise Boulevard and NW 9th Court. This canal starts just west of Highway 7/441, runs several miles west, and has good peacock fishing from Highway 441 west to Pine Island Road. You can fish this canal from the bank for the first mile or so, but it is best fished from a kayak or canoe west of NW 63rd Avenue.

The C-13 Canal crosses under Oakland Park Boulevard a mile or so west of the Florida Turnpike and continues west. You can walk the bank of this canal for several miles starting behind the shopping center at Oakland Park. Stop and fish around any structure.

The C-11 Canal runs east-west along the north side of Griffin Road for approximately 12 miles and has several side canals that are good for walking and looking for peacocks. However, the C-11 gets a lot of pressure due to its ease of access, and the intersecting canals are generally better than the C-11 itself.


License, Identification, and Bag Limits

Nonresidents and most Florida residents must have a freshwater fishing license to fish for peacock bass. You can get one in a Florida tackle store, by phone at (888) 347-4356, or on the web at www.wildlifelicense.com or www.basspro.com/.

Two species of peacock bass live in Florida: speckled peacock and butterfly peacock. Speckled peacocks have three distinctive bars on their sides and black markings on the upper part of their cheeks/gill plates. Very few speckled peacock bass live in south Florida, and for this reason they are protected and must be released alive.

Butterfly peacocks have no black markings on their cheeks/gill plates. The daily bag limit for butterfly peacock bass is two per day, only one of which may exceed 17 inches.


Walt Jennings is a Fly Fisherman editor-at-large. He lives in Venice, Florida.


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