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Permit's on the Juno Beach Fishing Pier
PERMIT ON THE JUNO PIER



Here's a photo page of some stud permit that were caught at the Juno Beach fishing pier several years ago. My friends and I have spent many of fishing hours out there just sitting and waiting for the permit bite, and as you can see by these monsters, the time waiting has paid off. Every once in awhile we get lucky and catch one or two. We use live calico crabs that we catch right there in the shore break. I have been tailcut so many times by these large strong running fish that we have started to use wind-on-leaders above the short leader to the crab for good casting ability.

I think that the permit is one of the hardest fighting game fish around. Some of our pier battles have lasted as long as one hour and a half. We have to hoop-net them to get them up and over the railing and onto the pier, which is another strenuous task. If you ever come to fish the Juno Beach Pier, make sure that you fish a crab and try for one of these big boys. You won't be sorry when you hang one of these monsters!!!

Now that the Juno Beach fishing pier is officially open 24 hours the Permit bite will be on! "Team Pier Rat" will have to be in full effect once again. Over the past few seasons my crew and I have caught a slew of monster permit on this new pier. We use calico crabs which we catch up in the surf line using dead fish or chicken in a crab trap. The hoop nets work rather well if you place a small mesh screen inside the ring and then fasten your crab bait to the screen. Wire ties also work to secure the screen inside the hoop-net (for those rough nights).

Once we have a bunch of live calico crabs we head out to the tee to cast them out and then sit around and wait for bite. I have caught probably more permit at night then in the daytime. Permit have those big round eyes that I believe assists them in locating the crabs in the sand in the day and night.

I primarily use a 4/0 on a 8-10 foot bridge rod so that I can reach out and touch someone on the cast. My fishing rig consists of 30 feet of 80 or 100 pound wind-on leader, so that if those monsters get me up around the barnacle covered pilings I will have no trouble keeping the line from chaffing and breaking off. For a hook I use a #5-7 Gamagutzu circle hook. A sinker depends on the ocean, if it's really rough with a stiff wind and current I'll use a grappling type weight or satellite as they are known in tackle stores. But, most of the time I just use a 5 to 6 ounce bank sinker on a sliding swivel. You have to use a sliding weight so that the permit doesn't feel the sinker when he picks up the crab and takes off.

Like I just stated, permit are very temperamental on the bite, they tend to drop the crab if they feel the least resistance. This is why I use a light clicker and the sliding weight rig. The weight will remain in the sand while the permit takes the bait and starts his run. The reason for the circle hook is simple; with all that line out and the fish running out, and the weight back in the sand I just lock over and start reeling. When the permit running and the reeling line both come tight against one another, that circle hook does the job and sets up usually right in the cheese (right in the corner of the mouth).

If you've never caught a permit you don't know what you've been missing. My biggest to this day is 40 pounds. But my buddy Tommy Vreeland caught one 41 pounds and Steve Harts sister came in visiting from Texas and she landed a 44 pounder one night, all at the Juno Beach fishing pier. As for Steve Hart himself well, he has caught a few over 35 pounds to say the least. Here's Steve's sister holding up her 44 pound permit.

Good luck fishing and hope to see ya'll up there some night. Until then...bent rods and screamin' drags!

The Pier Rat~~~~~~><))))'>





PERMIT

Family Carangidae, JACKS and POMPANOS
Trachinoyus falcatus

  • Description: color gray, dark or iridescent blue above, shading to silvery sides, in dark waters showing golden tints around breast; small permit have teeth on tongue (none on pompano); no scutes; dorsal fin insertion directly above that of the anal fin; 17 to 21 soft anal rays.


  • Similar Fish: pompano, T. carolinus. The permit is deeper bodied; dorsal body profile forms angle at insertion of second dorsal fin; pompano rarely grow larger than 6 pounds, permit common to 40 pounds.


  • Where found: OFFSHORE on wrecks and debris, INSHORE on grass flats, sand flats, and in channels; most abundant in south Florida, with smaller specimens from every coastal county. And of course the Juno Beach fishing Pier!


  • Size: common to 25 pounds.


  • *Florida Record: 51 lbs., 8 ozs.


  • Remarks: feeds mainly on bottom-dwelling crabs, shrimp, small clams, and small fish.

  • * The Florida records quoted are from the Department of Environmental Protection's printed publication, Fishing Lines and are not necessarily the most current ones. The records are provided as only as a benchmark.






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