As I was thinking about what to write about this week I have to admit I have sheepshead on the brain. A good friend of mine tried to talk me out of working today and playing hooky on the reefs, but I really had too much to do to break away. My thoughts kept going back to fishing all day long, spring fever began to set in and the next nice day we have I may find myself on the reefs. A question that comes up quite frequently is how to make a reef anchor. Here is an article that Tim wrote 3 years ago that explains how to make a reef anchor complete with pictures. Enjoy and we’ll see you out there.
Reef Anchor Made Easy
Last year my father and I found a calm Saturday in July and decided to run to Capers Reef and try the Spadefish. We arrived at the reef with our jellyballs to find several other folks on the structure. We maneuvered around them to a spot just off the reef, or so we thought, and decided to drop anchor and play the tide and wind to drift onto the structure. The second the anchor hit the bottom it hung and my father and I both knew we had messed up. Evidently the tide was running a little harder than we thought and the anchor landed in the structure. After playing out all the anchor line we had, the school of fish were just beyond our reach. We eased the boat up on the anchor and attempted to pull it free by hand, but had no luck. I knew our only hope was to pull the anchor using the boat motor; however, with other boats in close proximity we did not want to possibly jeopardize their fishing by scaring the fish. We spent the next 3-hours trying to tease the fish over to our boat, but had no luck. We then spend an embarrassing 45-minutes or better attempting to pull our anchor free from the structure. Finally we had to cut the anchor line, and headed for home and without a single fish in the box and short $100 worth of anchor, chain, and 1/2 line it made for a long ride.
Possibly the hardest part of this event to deal with was the simple fact that dad and I had talked multiple tim