Flounders Chowder House on Pensacola Beach will be the place to be Monday April 3 if you’re interested in learning about catching cobia in the Gulf of Mexico along the beaches off Pensacola. The ...
Millions upon millions of migrating animals are visiting Alabama right now and almost no one knows it. In this case, the migrators have fins, not wings, and are slipping silently through the state's ...
The Hook, Line and Sinker Seminar Series will hold their monthly event Monday at Flounder's Chowder House on Pensacola Beach, and the topic will be catching cobia. The migrating fish referred to as ...
With stone crab season over, all of the rafts of trap buoys which have attracted and held cobia for months will be gone. The end result will be a lot of the big ling schooling around looking for new ...
Capt. Freddy Gamboa is on a roll, thanks in part to a big sunfish. The Andreas' Toy Charters captain has tracked down the cobia on two successful trips this week. The first one, a 45-pounder, was ...
Like the lionfish in the Caribbean, a large fish called Cobia, which has escaped from an aquaculture facility in Ecuador, has the potential to become an important invasive species in the Central and ...
Capt. Chris Venable and other Cocodrie-area guides, including Josh Ellender and Rob Dupont, have been running just a few miles south of the coast to load up their bay boats with cobia. Capt. Chris ...
Now is the time to catch a tasty cobia, also known as ling. Spring and early summer are prime times for Big Bend cobia action. They pass by on their migration north, only to return again in the fall ...
One spring invader of our shallower coastal waters is a fish with many monikers. Most widely known as a cobia, it's a.k.a. ling, lemonfish, crab eater or brown clown. One thing for sure is, you won't ...
Getting in and out of Manasquan Inlet has gotten easier now that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has dug out more than 60 million pounds of wet sand to rid the shoaling. The job is not done yet but ...
Cobia, a promising fish for aquaculture, lives throughout the world’s oceans except in the Central and Eastern Pacific. In August 2015, a large number of young fish escaped from offshore cages in ...
This news release is available in Spanish. Cobia, a promising fish for aquaculture, lives throughout the world's oceans except in the Central and Eastern Pacific. In August 2015, a large number of ...
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