| Fishing In Indian Rocks Beach, Florida |
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Love to fish? Then you've come to the right place. Whether you are looking to throw a line in the water while relaxing on the beach or you're up for a deep sea charter-fishing adventure; IRB is an Angler's paradise. Be sure to read about Florida's fishing regulations below and check out our local fishing reports, to see what's running during your visit.
Local Fishing Reports http://www.cyberangler.com/fishing-reports/florida/tampa-bay/ http://www.floridasportsman.com/4cast/we/ http://www.centralfloridafishingreport.com/ http://www.fishin.com/reports/fl/tampabay.htm http://www.flafish.com/charters/reports/reportsearch.php?state_region_id=5 http://www.fintalk.com/fishing-reports/
Florida Recreational Saltwater Fishing Regulations (Republished from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission)
Basic Recreational Saltwater Fishing Regulations This is a brief summary of regulations governing the taking of saltwater species in Florida for personal use. It is not intended, or designed to provide specific information on commercial harvesting of these species. The failure to include complete laws, rules, and regulations in this summary does not relieve persons from abiding by those laws, rules or regulations. State waters extend to 3 nautical miles on the Atlantic and 9 nautical miles on the Gulf. Federal rules apply beyond state waters. For species that do not have an established bag limit, more than 100 pounds or 2 fish per person, per day (whichever is greater), is considered commercial quantities. A saltwater products license and commercial vessel registration is required to harvest commercial quantities of unregulated species. * Fishing regulations change periodically. For the most current regulations it is best to visit the Florida Fish & Wildlife Commision site at http://myfwc.com What you Must Know Before You Go This information relates to recreational hunting and fishing only. The Rules and Regulations section of MyFWC.com has information on commercial activities related to Hunting (taking furbearers) and Freshwater Fishing - including information about license requirements and exemptions. Also online is an area devoted to license requirements for Saltwater Commercial Fishing. Recreational licenses and permits for residents and nonresidents are available at county tax collectors' offices. In addition, you can buy them from subagents, such as sporting goods stores or other retailers that sell hunting or fishing equipment; on the Internet and by phone. All license, permit and issuance fees are subject to change by the legislature. Lifetime licenses For avid sportsmen who want the convenience of securing licensing, once and for all, for all your hunting or fishing activities, the lifetime license is for you. Your lifetime license will remain valid for use in Florida even if you move out of state. For hunters and anglers who like a bargain, the cost of a lifetime license is less than what you would spend on annual licenses, permits and fees. The earlier you make your purchase, the bigger the savings. The lifetime license is for parents, grandparents and family friends who want to pass on the joys of outdoor recreation to young people and help ensure that today's youth have the natural resources to share hunting, freshwater fishing and saltwater fishing with their children. The lifetime license is for conservationists who want to contribute to the long-term management of Florida's natural resources. Only the interest from the trust fund is appropriated. The principal is held in perpetuity to ensure future funding for fish and wildlife programs. This endowment will ensure that Florida's natural resources are conserved today for the future and that your children can pass on your family's hunting and fishing tradition to their children. Florida residency For the purposes of hunting or fishing in Florida, a Resident is defined as: • Any person who has resided in Florida for 6 continuous months prior to the issuance of a license and who claims Florida as his/her primary residence; or • Any member of the United States Armed Forces who is stationed in Florida (includes spouse and dependent children residing in the household). For license and permit information (including application forms) regarding captive wildlife, freshwater commercial fishing and alligator trapping, follow this link. Exemptions You do not need a freshwater fishing license if... You do not need a saltwater fishing license if... • You are a resident fishing in saltwater from land or from a structure fixed to the land. • You are a resident fishing for a saltwater species in fresh water from land or from a structure fixed to land. • You fish from a for-hire vessel (guide, charter, party boat) that has a valid vessel license. • You fish from a vessel, the operator of which has a valid vessel license issued in the name of the operator of the vessel. • You fish for recreational purposes from a pier with a valid pier saltwater fishing license. • You have a valid saltwater products license. • You fish for mullet in fresh water and you have a valid Florida freshwater fishing license. How to Order Your License If you have a major credit card, the FWC offers you 2 ways to buy your hunting or fishing license without leaving your home. • Click here to buy your license online. *(A $2.25 + 2.5% surcharge of total sale per person will be added to your purchase.) With either method, you'll have a temporary license number within minutes, enabling you to hunt (in season) or fish right away. Your permanent license will be mailed within 48 hours.
Note: Lifetime license may only be purchased at Tax Collectors offices or you may purchase online if you are age 16 or older and have a valid Florida Driver License that is at least 6 months old.
You Do Not Need a License If You Are: -- A child under 16 years of age. -- A Florida resident saltwater fishing for recreational purposes from land or a structure fixed to the land--a pier, bridge, dock, floating dock, jetty or similar structure. -- Fishing from a for-hire vessel--guide, charter, party boat--that has a valid vessel license. -- A holder of a valid saltwater products license. -- A Florida resident--65 years old or older and you possess either a Resident Senior Citizen Hunting and Fishing Certificate or proof of age and residency. -- A Florida resident who is a member of the U.S. Armed Forces, who is not stationed in this state, while on leave for 30 days or less, upon submission of orders. This does not include family members. -- Any person who has been accepted as a client for development services by the Department of Children and Family Services, provided the department furnishes proof thereof. -- A nonresident fishing for recreational purposes from a pier that has a valid pier saltwater fishing license. -- Fishing from a boat that has a valid recreational vessel saltwater fishing license. -- A Florida resident who is fishing for mullet in freshwater--with a valid Florida freshwater license. -- A Florida resident fishing for saltwater fish in freshwater from land or from a structure fixed to the land. -- A Florida resident certified as totally and permanently disabled, who possesses a Florida Resident Disabled Person Hunting and Fishing Certificate. Applicants need to provide a certification of total and permanent disability from the United Stases Armed Forces, Railroad Retirement Board, Florida Worker's Compensation or the United States Veterans Administration. Alternatively, current documentation for the Social Security Administration for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) or Supplemental Security Disability Income (SSDI) benefits also will be accepted.
Recreational Gear Additional regional gear restrictions may apply in your county. Call the local DLE offices listed below. Hook-and-Line Gear Hook-and-line anglers must tend their gear at all times to prevent people, marine life, and shore life from becoming entangled in the line or injured by the hook. Also, it is against the law to intentionally discard any monofilament netting or line into or onto state waters. Monofilament line can entangle birds, marine mammals, marine turtles, and fish, often injuring or killing them. Nets The following types of nets may be used for recreational purposes in Florida waters: -- Bully nets (for lobster only) no greater than 3 feet in diameter. -- Frame nets and push nets (for shrimp only) no greater than 16 feet in perimeter. -- Hand held landing or dip nets no greater than 96 inches in perimeter. -- Cast nets measuring 14 feet or less stretched length (stretched length is defined as the distance from the horn at the center of the net with the net gathered and pulled taut, to the lead line). Cast nets may be used as harvesting gear for the following species only: black drum, bluefish, cobia, flounder, mullet, Florida pompano, red drum, sheepshead, shrimp, Spanish mackerel, spotted seatrout, weakfish, and unregulated species. -- Beach or haul seines measuring no larger than 500 square feet of mesh area, no larger than 2 inches stretched mesh size, not constructed of monofilament, and legibly marked at both ends with the harvester’s name and address, if a Florida resident. Non-residents using beach or haul seines for recreational purposes are required to have a commercial saltwater products license and legibly mark the seine at both ends with the harvester’s saltwater products license number. Beach or haul seines may be used as harvesting gear for the following species only: black drum, bluefish, cobia, flounder, mullet, Florida pompano, red drum, sheepshead, shrimp, Spanish mackerel, spotted seatrout, weakfish, and unregulated species. Explosives, etc. The use of powerheads, explosives, chemicals, or the discharge of firearms into the water to kill or harvest marine life is prohibited in state waters.
Points on Posession Possesion Limits for Multiple Day Recreational Fishing Trips- Many anglers are unsure or unaware of how bag and possession limits affect them during fishing trips which exceed one fishing day. Bag limits are daily limits for the 24 hour period beginning at midnight and ending the following midnight. These bag limits may not be exceeded at any time and are not considered "per trip" limits. What's important in this definition is that once you have caught and possess the bag limit for a species, you may not harvest any more of this species until the next daily period. Taking the catch to shore and then going back to harvest another daily bag limit is illegal. But what if you were fishing in the Bahamas? In this instance, you are subject to the environmental laws of the Bahamas and a violation of their rules may constitute a violation of U.S. Federal laws. Contact the U.S. Coast Guard and Bahamian officials for current information Or what about camping on an island in state waters? Are you able to possess an equal number of bag limits as the number of days fished? In this case you are restricted to one daily bag limit regardless of the number of days fished. Other scenarios might be that you are camping on the mainland, staying in a motel, at your beach house, in transit over land from an extended fishing trip, etc. Under these circumstances, the possession of multiple daily bag limits depends on the species you intend to keep and more importantly, the location where you possess the fish. The following table provides you with the information needed to: 1) determine whether or not you can possess more than one daily bag limit (on land) for an individual species when fishing for multiple days 2) the locations where it would be prohibited to possess the fish in excess of one daily bag limit Tarpon - has no daily bag limit, but it is illegal to posses more than two tarpon at any time. Any tarpon possessed must have tarpon tag affixed. Reef fish (snappers and groupers included within the aggregate bag limit, hogfish, Atlantic coast red porgy, and Atlantic coast black sea bass)- Any person who has fished for more than one day may possess double the daily bag limit once such person has departed the fishing site and is no longer within 100 yards of any state waters, docks, fishing piers, or other fishing sites. Additionally, any person who has fished aboard a charter vessel or headboat on a trip that spans more than 24 hours may possess double the daily bag limit provided that the vessel has a sleeping berth for each passenger aboard the vessel and each passenger possesses a receipt issued on behalf of the vessel that verifies the length of the trip. If further clarification is required, please contact your regional FWC office. Spearing Spearing is defined as "the catching or taking of a fish by bowhunting, gigging, spearfishing, or any device used to capture a fish by piercing its body. Spearing does not include the catching or taking of a fish by a hook with hook and line gear or by snagging (snatch hooking)". The use of powerheads, bangsticks, and rebreathers remains prohibited. The following is a list of species which areprohibited for harvest by spearing. Any other species not listed which are managed by the Commission, and those not managed by the Commission are allowed to be harvested by spearing: Billfish (all species), Bonefish, Nassau Grouper, Pompano, Spotted Eagle Ray, Tarpon, Spotted Seatrout, African Pompano, Sturgeon, Goliath Grouper, Red Drum, Permit , Manta Ray, Snook, Weakfish, Tripletail, Sharks, Blue Crab, Stone Crab, Lobster. Also: Families of ornamental reef fish (surgeonfish, trumpetfish, angelfish, butterflyfish, porcupinefish, cornetfish, squirrelfish, trunkfish, damselfish, parrotfish, pipefish, seahorse, puffers, triggerfish except gray and ocean) You May NOT Spearfish (excluding bowhunting and gigging): -- Effective July 1, 2001, Spearfishing of marine and freshwater species in freshwater is prohibited. Possesion of a spear gun in or on freshwater is also prohibited. -- Within 100 yards of a public swimming beach, any commercial or public fishing pier, or any part of a bridge from which public fishing is allowed. -- Within 100 feet of any part of a jetty that is above the surface of the sea--except for the last 500 yards of a jetty that extends more than 1,500 yards from the shoreline. -- In Collier County and in Monroe County from Long Key north to the Dade County line. -- For any fish for which spearing is expressly prohibited by law. -- In any body of water under the jurisdiction of the Department of Environmental Protection, Division of Recreation and Parks. (Possession of spearfishing equipment is prohibited in these areas, unless it is unloaded and properly stored.) Fishermen who catch and/or sell fish harvested by spearing are subject to the same rules and limitations that other fishermen in the state are required to follow.
Regional Field Offices Northeast Region South Region Special Enforcement Area Southwest Region North Central Region Northwest Region RESOURCE HOTLINES Marine Fish Kills: 800-636-0511
For Current Federal Regulations and Information Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council www.gulfcouncil.org The Division of Law Enforcement (DLE) - The Division of Law Enforcement patrols Florida's coastal waters to provide assistance to boaters and anglers as well as to enforce Florida's saltwater fishing and boating laws. FWC officers assist boaters who are in distress, provide advice and direction to those who are traveling Florida's coastline and waterways, and may issue citations for violations of state and federal fishing, wildlife and boating laws. Tallahassee Headquarters - Bureau of Field Operations, 850-488-9924
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 09 February 2011 12:27 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ride the Beach Trolley...
Our Indian Rocks Beach vacation rentals are all conveniently located and within walking or bike-riding distance to: shopping, dining, live entertainment, parks, tennis, fishing, churches, hair/nail/massage salons, public boat launch, and the Beach Trolley stop.
For your convenience, we offer 2 adult beach cruiser bicycles and a couple of 2-person kayaks; available for your use during your stay with us. The Beach Trolley is equipped with a bicycle carrier, and is a great way to get out and explore some of the neighboring beach towns or nearby mainland towns, via the Pinellas Trail.
Indian Rocks Beach has several lovely parks scattered throughout the city. All of the parks are located within walking or bike-riding distance of our rental homes. Pack your picnic basket and spend the day exploring all of the wildlife that call these parks their home. Many of our parks have covered pavilions with picnic tables. Or maybe you prefer to dine under a large oak tree, or to enjoy your meal on a sunny dock overlooking the intracoastal waterway? Whatever your preference or desire, we have a park nearby that will exceed your expectations! The sights, sounds and smells of these wide-open outdoor spaces are sure to calm the nerves and provoke a peaceful, relaxed state-of-mind.
You don't need to "stay on the beach" to "play on the beach". All of our rental homes are just a few minute stroll from their front doors, to having your toes in the warm white sand and crystal blue waters of the Gulf of Mexico. The City of Indian Rocks Beach maintains 27 beach access parks located all along the main Gulf Blvd. corridor. Four of our homes are just 7 houses away from the 20th Avenue beach access park, one is beachside and has private beach access, and the other is just a few minute stroll to the 17th Avenue beach access park. Limited parking spots are available at these accesses, and if you choose to drive, the trip takes about one-minute.
Take-In the Sights...
Our rental homes are surrounded by the intracoastal waterway to the east, and the Gulf of Mexico to the west. Our kayaks are a great way to get-out on the water and see the city from a different perspective. Take some time and paddle to one of the nearby spoil islands for bird watching, or grab your fishing license and a pole, and head-out past the Gulf buoys for some nearby-off-shore fishing.
Looking for a faster-paced option? Then you might want to rent a boat or waverunner for the day. Or maybe you don't want to be the captain... then you might want to consider taking a sunset dinner cruise. Whatever your preference; you'll find what you're looking for, in IRB!