- Home
- Trip Reports
- My Week in Florida
My Week in Florida
- By Brendan Mason
- Published 06/17/2007
- Trip Reports
- Unrated
Brendan Mason
Brendan Mason is a Canadian born angler who now lives in Seattle, Washington. Brendan has fished all of his life and started a passion for fly in British Columbia where he grew up. His father a search and rescue expert and his mother a teacher, Brendan has the brains and skills to both out think and survive longer than the average Joe Blow. Brendan has fished extensively for trout and salmonids but in recent years has attacked the saltwater with gusto. His travels have taken him to Australia, Mexico, Argentina and beyond. Brendan also has the distinction of catching a 600 lb Mako on fly while fishing San Diego in 2006. You can often find him stalking carp in the shallows of Green Lake in Seattle.
Another highlight was fishing at night around the urban dock lights for snook and occasional redfish. It's incredibly peaceful except for those times when a weirdo tweaker decides that he doesn't want you fishing near his dock and begins flashing the lights and running around like a crazy person.

![]() |
|
Brendan with a little snook |
![]() |
|
eye refelection |
![]() |
|
Nighttime RedFish |
Our second night mission didn't have the numbers of snook around, and they were being extremely selective, but this 31 inch redfish made up for it.
![]() |
|
31 inch Redfish my personal best |

It wasn't until Wednesday that I jumped my first tarpon; a nice fish we estimated at around 80 pounds. On the second jump, it came loose and we found the tippet had frayed in the class section. Over the next few days we saw hundreds of tarpon and had several good shots, but no eaters. On Saturday morning, it was "now or never" time before I had to fly home that evening. We got out onto the flat and spotted a laid up tarpon almost immediately. A few others rolled and showed themselves. With the sun just coming over the horizon, it was difficult to pick out individual fish, so I just cast to where I thought the edge of the school was. On my third cast, I hooked up, but this fish didn't seem to know it was hooked. It made a slow run and shook its head a bit, but never jumped and eventually the hook pulled. Oddly enough, there wasn't any scuffing on the shock tippet either.
After that, we got back in position and two casts later I was hot into a tarpon! What a way to finish off the week.
![]() |
|
Tarpon before release |






