|



|
|
Los
Roques is a series of 365 islands located about 80 miles
offshore (north) of Caracas, Venezuela. And while Los
Roques means "the rocks", the islands and
surrounding area are really built up of coral. The result
is a series of dozens, if not hundreds of skinny water
flats that hold the potential for bonefish. The point is
almost academic, since most are too far away for the run
from the camp with the boat, but those within boat range
cover hundreds of acres with ample fishing, with care,
forever. Fortunately, all of the islands in the chain are
a part of the federal Venezuela Los Roques National Park. Two
of the best camps are Chapi Sport Fishing and Pez Raton
Lodge, both used by Frontiers, International, a premier
booking agency for both domestic and international
fishing trips. Trips are based on double occupancy, with
rates exclusive of the air fare to Caracas, Venezuela,
and meals at an overnight hotel there at the front and
back end of the trip. Both camps are located on a few
minutes from the paved runway on El Gran Roque, the main
island in the chain and one populated by about 1,000
natives. The paved runway provides easy access with a 40
minute flight from LaGuaira area east of Caracas,
Venezuela.
Also provided are large open boats for the run
to and from the fishing grounds, guides to help with
tackle and to spot the bonefish. Included in the charter
are accommodations in Caracas after arriving there and
the flight by small plane to the islands the next
morning. Return is just the reverse, with the option of
visiting the interior of Venezuela or trying billfishing
offshore from the coastal La Guaira, near the airport and
a suburb east of Caracas.
Typical bonefishing can be among the best in
the world, perhaps even rivaling that of Christmas Island
in the south Pacific and certainly both closer and
cheaper,particularly for eastern anglers where flights
from New York and Miami to Caracas run on a regular daily
basis.
The flats are rated as the top discovery in
Atlantic water bonefishing in the last 20 years.
Depending upon the flat visited each day, the fishing
will vary both in numbers of fish and also the type of
fishing and wading. All fishing is by wading, none by
skiff or boat. In part this is because the flats are so
shallow - so much so that other fish such as sharks,
barracuda, permit, typically found on good bonefish flats
in other areas - were never seen during our visit
there.

Occasional catches of permit, sometimes tarpon
and snook are possible, and fishing for barracuda is
rated high. But this is mostly a bonefish area, almost
exclusively bonefish.
Typical flats water ranged from about ankle
deep to knee deep, mostly of hard white sand, but with
some conch, sea cucumbers and coral, and occasional
patches of turtle grass. The turtle grass seemed far less
frequent than that found on other tropical bonefish
flats. In all there are about 20 or 30 flats within range
of most camps, some small and some large. Most are
mangrove lined with white, black and red mangrove,
typical of bonefish flats anywhere.
Most flats are almost uniformly shallow with
bonefish scattering and feeding evenly as they zig zag
over the white sand. Some flats seem to have better
fishing in certain areas, such as one we found where the
best bonefish and most frequent sightings of bones was
along the deeper water on the edge of the flat. All of
the flats are affected by the tide with the shallow ones
emptying rapidly of bonefish at the tide falls, but
producing good fishing in the channels that empty the
skinny water. Some small lagoons in the middle of flats
are also good. One such small lagoon on one flat produced
several good bonefish when fishing typical bonefish flies
by blind casting into the several feet deep pocket.
Though the hard flat sandy flats made for easy
wading, the bonefish are at first difficult to see,
although with the numbers that frequent the flats
spotting them does become easier very quickly. While the
shallow sandy water often reveals tailing bonefish, the
constant wind hides the tailing and the mudding that
these fish make as they course their way zig zag fashion
across the flats. The wind is not all bad through, since
it also makes it harder for the bonefish to spot anglers
and spook. It also helps to hide casts that might line
and spook a fish while allowing more frequent casts into
a feeding school or pod.
Fly casting is easy most of the time. Four of
us used fly rods. Since the area is right in the trade
wind area, (about 12 degrees north of the Equator), the
constant wind must be coped with. Fly rodders need nine
foot long 8 and 9 weight fly outfits, even though 6 and 7
outfits could handle the flies used and the hooked fish
in a no-wind situation. But Los Roques is not a
"no-wind" situation or fishing and the heavier
outfits are a must to have control necessary to get the
line out and the fly down when and where you want it in
front of a school of bones.
While any outfit can be used, we varied
between direct drive and anti-reverse reels, with all of
us finding that the almost-clear Scientific Anglers
Mono-Core lines proved best in preventing spooked fish,
and where necessary, allowing several casts to the same
school to get a hook-up.
As in bonefishing anywhere, the
competitiveness of the school fish (schools ranging from
10 to several dozen fish) made for easier fishing than to
the more skittish singles and small pods of three or four
fish. While Jackie's first fish was taken blind while
working a small plastic grub off of the beach, almost all
of the fish were taken by sight fishing - either our
sight or that of an accompanying guide.
While the camp will be open year round, and the fishing
is rated and expected to be good year round, the best
months, according to Molly Fitzgerald of Frontiers are
March through October when the wind is slight less and
the schools of bonefish plentiful. The air and water
temperature, comfortable for wading and warm all the
time, varies little.
 It
will come as no surprise that typical bonefish flies that
work anywhere and everywhere also work here. Crazy
Charlies, various shrimp patterns, crab flies, simple
reverse wing streamers in the popular tropical colors of
yellow, pink, white and tan are good, along with some
flies in dark shades such as the popular root beer and
even black. The darker colors are probably better for
spotting the fly and working it in relation to the
movement of the bonefish; the lighter shades usually
getting more hits.
Basically bonefish are scavengers, feeding
along the bottom on small brown worms (thus the
effectiveness of the short root beer-colored worm in
other areas), minnows, shrimp and small crabs. Bonefish
flies in sizes 6 through 2 worked best.
The fish were not that particular and the
specific pattern did not seem to make a difference.
Shrimp patterns proved good as did those shrimp like
patterns tied with red plastic bead eyes heat fused onto
short mono and tied into the head as are bead chain and
lead dumbbell eyes. The shallow water made these heavier
eyes that are used to sink bonefish and other flies in
deeper water unnecessary.
The Mother of Epoxy flies with the pyramidal
or diamond shaped translucent clear epoxy body also
worked well. While we used the reversed tied flies that
causes the fly to ride hook point up, the clear and
relatively open sandy flats would not require that and
traditional styles would also work well.
Techniques on Los Roques are simple. After
going over the side of the boat ferry to and from the
flats, simply wade the flats working in the direction
that will provide the best visibility and casting ease.
Often wind is a consideration here, since heading and fly
casting into the wind or directly away from it is easier
than trying to work with a cross wind. Once the fish are
spotted, cast in front of the expected movement of the
fish. Work the fly or lure slowly, since in the shallow
water it will immediately sink to the sandy bottom. If
the fish are on an intersecting path or aiming straight
for you, drop down to one knee to reduce your profile to
the fish and to try to get a hook up before they spook.
One advantage of the fly rod is that the zig
zag movements of the bonefish are easy to cope with,
since a school or pod that moves away from the fly can be
easily cast to again by picking up the line, back
casting, and dropping the fly again in front of the
scavenging school.
Catches range from an average of three to four
pound size, up to about six or seven pounds, based on our
experience. Some few small bonefish of about one-half
pound were also caught, a good omen for future fishing,
even though all the bonefish are released unharmed. And
you can expect larger fish, with catches up to seven and
sometimes even ten pounds not uncommon on the average
week-long trips or amongst a group of six anglers (all
each camp will hold).
While most bonefish catches on other flats in
Florida and the Bahamas seem to rate as excellent with a
half-dozen fish, our catches per angler ranged from a low
of that figure to up to about two dozen. Depending upon
experience, plan on about an average of up to ten fish
per day, more if exceptionally experienced or the fishing
is exceptionally good.
Early exploratory trips back in the mid-80's
indicated repeatedly that most anglers were catching
about 100 bonefish per week. One party of six anglers
took 560 bonefish in the first week there, another group
of seven took 700 fish, most in the three to four pound
range. While we did not get any the size of the 11
pounder taken on one of these trips, even larger fish,
though not common, are said to be there.
With catches like that, with the ease of
working the skinny water flats despite the wind, and with
the huge expansive flats to work that would take a
lifetime to cover well, Los Roques has rightly and
rapidly taken its place as a top bonefish area, certainly
one for any serious bonefish angler to try.
TRIP
PLANNING
For information on bonefishing Los Roques at
Chapi Sport Fishing or Pez Raton Lodge, contact
Frontiers, Box 959, Wexford, Pa., 15090 phone
1-800-245-1950 on in Pa (412)935-1577.
Weekly rates at this writing are approximately
$2,295.00 per person, double occupancy from Caracas (nine
days, eight nights, six days of fishing). Air fare is
easy with American and United and Biasa (Venezuelan
national airline) servicing Caracas. Flights are into La
Guaira, a suburb of Caracas with the overnight lodging
before the small plane flight to the islands located
right on the water in the same city, a short taxi drive
away.
|