I have been in the Fishing and Hunting business in Maryland since
1971,but hunting season only went through the end of January,and
fishing didn't get started in Maryland until May,so I always had
Febuary,March, April,and most of May with nothing to do.
My father was born and raised in Florida,and had three brothers
spread out from Jacksonville to Miami. Every winter since I can
remember,we went down there for a couple of weeks.
My father and all
of his brothers were fishing maniacs so all we did was go from one
uncles house to the other,and go fishing.My wife was also born and
raised in south Florida,so after I got married,we continued to take
our winter vacation to Florida where,you guessed it,we fished from one
uncles house to the other.Add her father and brother to the
equation.Now we had a whole bunch of fishing fools. She had a
particular liking to the Keys, so after being married to her,the trips
started revolving around the Florida Keys. I must say,it is hard to fish here much
and want to fish anywhere else.
In 1992,we got our last child out of the house,and it was a "No
Brainer" to come down here and start a winter fishing business.We had
fished for Tarpon a couple of years with a friend at the seven mile
bridge here in Marathon,and decided this is where we would settle. We
baught a house and a Florida Keys custom made boat. She
appropriatly named it "fishin'fool".As I was fishing and hunting in
Maryland the season before,I told all my customers I would be booking
charters that winter,and it was unbelievable how many of them came
down to fish with me that first year!
I have now done 16 years of winter seasons here and most of those
same customers have been coming every year,and of course many more of
my customers from Maryland have found out how great the Florida Keys
are in the winter,So I have no complaints about the business I have
built in that time!

When I first get here at the end of January,we catch Spanish
Mackeral,Bluefish,Mangrove Snappers, Grouper, Seatrout, and many other
species.It is not uncommon to catch over a dozen different species of
fish on any given trip. That is one of the truly great things about
fishing here. By the middle of March,the Mackeral and Blues leave,but
Tarpon move in.They don't get here in any numbers however,until
April.From then until I leave towards the end of May,the Tarpon
fishing only gets better.I must say,it is hard to beat having a
hundred to hundred and fifty pound Tarpon jumping six feet out of the
water on the end of your line, twenty yards from the boat. Come down
and check it out once,and I'll probably see you down here again every
year. The weather is great,the food at the restaurants is fabulous,and
the fishing is fantastic.
Hope to see you soon!
Capt. Wayne Gatling