He told me that there were snook and tarpon and there were large bonefish and permit to fish for. |
|
Perhaps it had just polished off a fat snapper or snook and had no appetite for a couple of scrawny teenagers. |
|
Crucial traits all, when your reel is screeching and a 20-pound snook is towing your skiff into deep water. |
|
The saltwater river harbors prized snook, trout, largemouth bass, redfish, and even tarpon. |
|
She is a serious angler, the holder of a record 49-pound snook, and understands the priorities at Parismina. |
|
They are cocking a snook at the council and just open the floodgates for similar situations. |
|
Sadly, while cocking a snook at the health police is irresistible, the effects on the figure are likely to be anything but. |
|
Proper in his manner, he was still not beyond cocking a snook at authority. |
|
The south is mobilising Italy's top division and enjoying cocking a snook at the game's governors. |
|
But once out there, it's not unusual to see spotted rays or even nurse sharks cruising along a 2,000-foot wall, or for anglers to hook bonefish, tarpon, or snook. |
|
It does not mind cocking a snook at conventional codes in the process. |
|
Perhaps they could be made to live on wartime rations tins of snook, dried eggs, carrot pudding until they return to normal size, and are ready to rejoin the rest of us again. |
|
It's a fast growing branch of angling today and I suppose it can be likened to fishing for redfish, snook or tarpon except it's done in freshwater. |
|
He cocked a snook at the special task force of both the states. |
|
On calmer mornings, walking the beach and casting diagonally across the surf line can produce a mixed bag of trout, reds, jacks, snook and mackerel. |
|
Any anchorage with a mangrove shoreline is likely to produce mangrove snapper and, if you are in the Greater Antilles or along the South American coast, snook. |
|
At least two snook, one of which was within the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department's 24-to 28-inch legal slot length, were caught this past summer from the Surfside jetty. |
|
He said some people were cocking a snook at the criminal justices system while others had no confidence in it because they saw criminals appearing to escape punishment. |
|
Football has always cocked a snook at the laws of economics. |
|
The bad news for them is that Argentina, alone among G20 countries, has a habit of cocking a snook at ICSID rulings. |
|
|
Biologists also are in varying stages of research and replenishment of cobia, speckled trout, tarpon, snook, crappie, bluegill and striped bass stocks. |
|
Yeah, problem was, there literally wasn't anybody to paddle out with, and I could see all the mullet, and the snook, tarpon and sharks feeding on them out there. |
|
It has cocked a snook at Europe and won the necessary domestic plaudits. |
|
Think of the bearded Sir Richard Branson of Virgin Atlantic, grinning at his incessant photo-calls, or the foul-mouthed Michael O'Leary of Ryanair cocking a snook at stodgy old British Airways. |
|
The common snook is actually more closely related to striped bass than largemouth bass. |
|
The snook is a euryhaline species, meaning they can tolerate completely fresh water. |
|
Fish that occasionally enter freshwater and estuarine environments include snook, jewfish, mangrove snapper, and mullets. |
|
To the underdogs of the world, provided they did not actually have to live in Iran, he was an engaging populist, cocking a perpetual snook at the Great Satan of America and other lesser Western devils. |
|
Pay attention to obvious gathering points like gaps in understructure where snook can sit and ambush tide-borne prey. |
|
My grandmother lived in Florida, and when I visited her I fished dreamily, and unskillfully, and, among the many kinds of fish I never caught but wanted to, number one was the snook. |
|
And Carinthians, they say, have always taken pleasure in cocking a snook at those dowdy bureaucrats and grey politicians in the distant federal capital. Maybe so. |
|
My fishing buddy and I keep no redfish, possibly one or two snook each per season and the occasional bunch of trout for a combined family fish fry. |
|