Thursday, December 18, 2014


 Jerry has been busy working on the landscape. Here he trimmed the palm tree just outside 708. It has never looked this good. Although I don't have a picture, he trimmed all the brush from the corner where we turn in from the Hwy. 35 direction.
 Some of our Bird of Paradise plants are growing out of proportion to the rest of the vegetation next to the buildings. They are susceptible to cold so Jerry is moving them to the south end of 308 or 501 or both. The first one is going in the hole below next to 308. He is being careful not to block any windows.



I had Nick Baker come by today to change out my AC unit. The AC would run until it over heated and then trip a breaker and the heat coils would do no better as a bearing had gone out on the motor. I probably got a good price because of the time of the year. I have learned that whoever JR uses as subs on his homebuilding has to be pretty good and that is what Nick does. It's not too often that a company provides a two year parts and labor warranty. Nick is from Fayetteville, Texas. I thought that was only in Arkansas. 


This will be my last post for 2014. Those of you who call when I don't post for a few days, please give me a holiday break. I'll start back up after the new year. See you in 2015. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. 

OUTDOORS

Reopening of pass to Mesquite Bay restores fishing hot spot

Reopening of pass to Mesquite Bay restores fishing hot spot

December 11, 2014 Updated: December 12, 2014 2:26pm
ROCKPORT — With the roar of the Texas Gulf Coast surf in his ears and the swift tidewater rushing past his legs, Capt. Ron Coulston took a trip back in time last week to fish a newly opened Cedar Bayou.

“I haven’t been able to do this since 1995,” Coulston said as he waded near the channel cut through shifting sand in hopes of enticing a flounder, redfish, black drum or speckled trout into attacking a bait bounced along the bottom.

“This is a natural funnel for bait moving out of the bays into the Gulf. Where you have bait, you will have fish ready to feed. Cedar Bayou was a hot spot I spent a lot of time fishing in the old days, and it is great to be back here now.”
The only natural pass for a 70-mile stretch between Port Aransas and Port O’Connor that allows water to move back and forth from Mesquite Bay to the Gulf, Cedar Bayou was reopened Sept. 25 more than 35 years after the state took emergency action to cut off the flow.
The decision to seal up the pass was spawned by the June 3, 1979, blowout of an oil well in the Bahia de Campeche, about 600 miles south of Texas in the Gulf of Mexico. Concerns about possible damage to the bay system — if some of the more than 3.3 million barrels of oil released was carried through the pass into the bay — prompted the closure.
While the potential natural catastrophe was avoided, closing the pass between San Jose and Matagorda Islands also inhibited fish and wildlife productivity in the bay system. Two earlier attempts to reopen Cedar Bayou, one in 1987 and one in ’95, were short lived and neither project connected the pass with Vinson Slough in order to create the necessary hydraulic flow to keep it open.
The latest effort, costing about $9.4 million, started in April and was completed in September.
“The Fish Pass at Cedar Bayou has long been a special and storied place for Texas’ saltwater anglers and coastal enthusiasts,” Texas Parks & Wildlife Department executive director Carter Smith said in a news release. “Reopening the historic Fish Pass will undoubtedly provide additional high quality recreational opportunities for Texas’ anglers to enjoy the bountiful outdoor resources for which this stretch of the coast is so well known.”
Coulston is just one of many anglers to take advantage.
“There were people out here catching fish the day it reopened,” he said. “Everything comes through here — reds, drum, trout and flounder. I prefer to fish during a falling tide that just seems to suck the bait through and the big fish come right in after the bait.”
On a visit to the pass last week, Coulston used a lead jig head threaded onto a Gulp molted shrimp colored plastic tail or hooked through the head of a live shrimp to fire up the action. A five-fish limit of speckled trout, all about 16-18 inches long, found their way into the live well of his boat in just a short time.
I’m kind of surprised to be catching so many trout now,” he said. “I expected to pick up some nice flounder and reds. It is rare to come out here and not catch anything.”
No boats are allowed within about 400 yards of the mouth of Cedar Bayou where it empties into the Gulf waters, so anglers are required to wade fish or cast from the shoreline in search of a saltwater tussle.
Coulston said waders should be aware the waters moving through the pass can be quite rapid and move a lot of sand, which can catch an inattentive angler by surprise. Unless a wade fisherman keeps moving, they might have sand fill in around their legs similar to quick sand.
“If you start to get stuck, the best thing to do is just lie down on the water and swim out of that spot,” he said. “I don’t think the sand will pull someone completely under, but you can get stuck pretty easily.”
The guide said that since the pass has reopened, angling pressure has been pretty intense. However, he added that with the free flow of water between the Gulf and the bays, there should be plenty of action for everyone.
“Reopening Cedar Bayou is just a win-win for everyone,” Coulston said.


Saturday, December 13, 2014

All twenty five palm trees have been planted and seem to be doing well.
 These lathes mark the spot for our new sign that will show our new name of Bayfront Condominiums. The two on the left will have the sign facing Hwy 35 and the two in front will have the sign facing Fulton Beach Road.
The water is finally clearing up. This picture shows water about one foot deep next to the breakwater. The seagrass is on the bottom, but looks as if it's on the surface.
The trout in the marina have slowed. I only saw one caught yesterday. However, Vic(708) waded along the HEB beach this afternoon and found these two keepers.(There are two, but hard to see the second one.) He used silver spoon.

Sunday, December 07, 2014

Work is continuing on lining our entrance road with palm trees as voted on last month. We now have 11 new trees planted out of the 25 planned. I found a guy named Bill Porter who had planted about 150 trees from seed about 10 years ago. He is now at the point he wants to sell them. Just to see what we were getting into, we tried one tree first. Jerry dug the hole. John Rice(402) hauled it here for us and Jerry planted it. From there we worked it out that Bill would charge us $80 per tree and we would have our choice of trees. He would dig them up for us. We then contracted with the son of a former maintenance man who worked here to haul them here and plant them for $20 per tree. Bill digs them as fast as she can, but it's not easy. He is trying to dig two trees per day.
Greg Jr. said his dad moved to Idaho after leaving here about eight years ago. John Knostman had hired Greg Sr. when John was managing our property for us.
The trees look pretty healthy and notice too that Greg has filled in the grass around the tree to look as if the tree has been growing here a while. We also added Miracle Grow to the trees to give them a better chance to get a good start. They are the Washingtonian species like most of the ones we already have.
Notice also the utility pole in the background. It appears to be broken about 15 feet up the pole. I think we need to call AEP before this pole decides to fall over on our entrance road. The utility wires are pulling it in that direction.

Pete(710) caught these trout off the pier after he got here late Friday evening. He got them on a DOA with a cork. I don't know that I have ever caught anything on a DOA after dark. That could be because I don't often throw a DOA after dark. It is encouraging that he caught these off the pier. We are all hoping the opening of Cedar Bayou is making a difference. Pete did have some success in the marina over the weekend. Game wardens checked him on both Saturday and Sunday.

Friday, December 05, 2014


Pretty much everyone who fished today was able to get their limit. The trout were not quite as large and there were a few throwbacks. The word is getting out and there are more folks fishing every day. I did notice when cleaning a trout that it had been eating shrimp about 2 inches long. I'm sure when the shrimp are gone, the trout will leave too. I caught all of mine on DOA again. Live shrimp were available this afternoon and those using them did well and caught a few undersized reds too.

The trout were still concentrated this morning. No live shrimp were available so Pat and Sibyl Noack caught their limit above in short order by throwing a variety of things.

Thursday, December 04, 2014

The trout were all over the area today. One, not to be named angler, caught these plus a few more. I hope the background doesn't give away just who the angler was. I wouldn't want the game warden to ask any questions. I won't say exactly where the trout were gathered up because the area was really quite small. I will say I know of at least 23 trout that were caught and no one left the property. I know of only one throwback and the largest catch was 20 inches. Most were caught on DOAs, but some with live shrimp.
Jerry caught a rotund 22 inch red on Tuesday on a dead mullet. Today marks two weeks since the fish first started to show up in numbers around here.
At the moment I'm watching the Cowboys on the NFL channel. I can't say enough about the TWC upgrade.

Monday, December 01, 2014

We had pretty close to a full house for Thanksgiving weekend. Fishing has seemed to pick it up a bit. Scott, Paul, Ray, and Esi went out on Friday and did much better than usual. They caught a variety of fish. Esi caught a really large sheepshead.
I went out this morning and tried my gold spoon and DOA in the marina and mitigation site. The DOA was what the trout wanted. They were hanging around the swim platform. I caught several, but only one was a keeper. It had been at least four years since I caught the last trout in the marina.
Jerry started work today on preparing to plant  palm trees along the entrance road as the owners voted for. The first one should go in the ground tomorrow.
We had all of our fire extinguishers inspected today. Four had to be replaced and three recharged. Four owners will not give us keys to their condos and we could not check those. I would not want to be one of those owners should a fire start in their condo and no extinguisher was available. We also cannot treat those condos for pest infestations. We recently found termite damage in a condo when it was being inspected for a sale. We had no key and that condo may not have been treated in a while.
Keith Burr was here today doing some repair work in 607.
The lock for the pier gate will be here on Wednesday. Jerry has a good plan on how he will install it.
It was also a big football weekend and I didn't miss a game with my new TWC  HD converter box. I understand several more owners will be getting one installed soon.  As it turns out the cost for 25 boxes will be four dollars more in total than the cost for all 62 boxes. I think we will see many more boxes installed when winter Texans start talking to each other about all the channels available to the guests whose owners have installed a box.
Kevin, from Rockport WiFi, will be here tomorrow to hardwire all the condos in the 300  building. Their service should be much better. Kevin says the use of WiFi has changed in the years since our system was installed. The demands for bandwidth have greatly increased. He will be able to access a fiber optic network in the next few days that will help our speed too. We will monitor the 300 building during the high traffic of the Christmas season. If all goes well, we will have him upgrade other buildings. It will mean that the 15 condo owners who have not purchased a router will have to have one to receive the hardwired CAT5 service.