New Port O’Connor Library Well on its Way! by Bridgid Berger

Archived in the category: Fishing Reports
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 20 Apr 17 - 0 Comments

New-POC-Library-Well-on-Its-Way

Port O’Connor Chamber Chat by LaJune Pitonyak

Archived in the category: General Info, Organizations
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 20 Apr 17 - 0 Comments

CRAWFISH FEST–APRIL 29th

Hope everyone is looking forward to attending the 5th Annual Crawfish Festival. Plans are coming together, with lots of cookers competing and many vendors showcasing there eats, drinks and many wonderful and unique items for sale. So bring the chairs, blankets and plenty of sunscreen and make this a family day for all. If you have a couple hours to volunteer, please email Mary Jo–shrimper@tisd.net or Darla–darla611@aol.com. They will find a job for you, plus your help will be appreciated.

Then coming May 27th, if you have children ages 3-12, plan on entering them in the Annual Kids Fishing Tournament. Entry is free and bait will be furnished; time 9-11 a.m. at King Fisher Park, THANKS to Donnie Klesel for heading up this project.

Beginning around 1:00 p.m. will be the Annual Kite Contest. All ages are welcome with either homemade or bought kites, THANKS to James & Shirley Harper and Ronnie Ragusin for heading up this contest
.
If you are not a member of the Chamber, we welcome your membership. The Chamber is here for the community and businesses.

New & Renewed Memberships:
American Inn & Suites
Rhoe Builders
Hammertime Guide Service
POC Hardware & Supply LLC
Coastal Boat Services
POC Electric, LLC
Texas Saltwater Magazine
Beacon 44 Seafood Market
Capt. Tom Horbey
Junek Consulting
Robbie & Marie Hawes
Shane & Susan Simon
Steve & Shelley Ferguson
Green & Mc Elreath CPA PLLC
Marty’s Landing & Mama’s Pizza
Bob Bonar/ State Farm
Designs by Darla
Port O’Connor Rentals
Sonny’s Marine
R & R Guide Service
All Season’s Guide Service
Beacon 44 R. V. Park
10th Street Lodge
Doyle Adams
Steve & Susan Gumina
Carol Fox
POC R.V. Park

Honors at Port O’Connor School

Archived in the category: General Info, School News
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 20 Apr 17 - 0 Comments

A-honor-roll-3rd-9-weeks
A Honor Roll

Front Row: Remington Eure, Lillyan Gibson, Pryncess Few, Bradley Eure, Laela Aranda

2nd Row: Kyndra Carriles, Grace Brown, Audrey Rhoads, Abygail Gonzales, Kobe Guzman, Christian Gutierrez, Connor Ferrell

3rd Row: Gracie O’Shields, Matilyn Gibson, Nicholas Ragusin, Emily Ferrell, Landon Jones, Byron Ferrell, Dane Spencer, Aubrey Ragusin, Blake Bowman, Cole Spicak

Back Row: Jaydin Rhoads, Rowan Holley, Matthew Stapp, Dylan Ramirez, Layne Brown, Alex Mallory

AB-Honor-Roll-3rd-9-weeks
AB Honor Roll

Front Row: Leland Carriles, Lexi Ruddick, Leon Hill, Tadam Hamilton, Corbin Washburn

2nd Row: Kitty Mezzell, Derek Tausch, Alex Lopez, Adamariz Zuniga, Mato Sanchez, Shaneesa Mallory, Stephen Bowman

3rd Row: Rylie Ragusin, Antonio Gloria, Justice Epley, Maddix Guevara, Lyric Lopez

Back Row: Annabelle Thurman, Alex Lopez, Aislin Guzman, Christopher Richter

Perfect-Attend-3rd-9-weeks
Perfect Attendance

Front Row: Jakob Donaldson, Haiden Dean, Marcos Blanco, Isaiah Ochoa, Pierre Wilburn, Ollie Busby, Riley Pagel

2nd Row: Abygail Gonzales, Pryncess Few, Bradley Eure, Laela Aranda, Eli Busby, DaltonFowler, Kobe Guzman

3rd Row: Mato Sanchez, Cole Spicak, Aubrey Ragusin, Shaneesa Mallory, Landon Jones, Leon Hill, Corbin Washburn, Tadam Hamilton, Blake Bowman

4th Row: Eben Smith, Justice Epley, Antonio Gloria, Keegan Short, Landin Rhoads, Jaylah Ramirez, Emily Ferrell, Alex Lopez

Back Row: Matthew Stapp, Sergio Sanchez, Dylan Ramirez, Alex Mallory, Aiden McClelland

District-Tech-finalist
Technology Showcase District Finalists

Front Row: Gracie O’Shields, Mimi Mezzell, Haiden Dean, Marcos Balnco, Addie Ruddick

2nd Row: Stephen Bowman, Rylie Ragusin, Maddix Delgado, Nicholas Ragusin, Landon Jones

3rd Row: Antonio Gloria, Eben Smith, Kamyla Guzman, Emily Ferrell, Lyric Lopez, Alex Mallory

Back Row: Justice Epley, Jackie Gutierrez, Christopher Richter, Annabelle Thurman

Seadrift School Honors

Archived in the category: General Info, School News
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 20 Apr 17 - 0 Comments

A Honor Roll

First Grade: Gaige Cady, Saige Carter, Izabella Chatham, Nikolas Clayton, Riley Dworaczyk, Brennan Gregory, Olivia Hunt, Liam Key, Marcus Moncrief, Brylie Penney, Ava Salazar, Riley Saylors, Evelyn Scroggins, Karley Sexton-Mohon and Kiley Sexton-Mohon

Second Grade: Clay Brumfield, Kendell Cady, Zoe Canchola, Aspen Crittenden, Kayden Garza, Keegan Goode, Alexis Green, Brice Petrisky, Ashton Sternadel, Amaya Stringo, Callum Taylor, Evan Tompkins and Lorena Torres

Third Grade: Jada Dean, Angel Galeana, Kylee Gray, Zoey Henning and Jaxson Key

Fourth Grade: Maci Bryan and Briley Christensen

Fifth Grade: Andrea Hataway and Jonathan Nguyen

Sixth Grade: Jacob Nguyen

Seventh Grade: Evan Clifton and Maritza Jaramillo

Eighth Grade: Kristopher Salinas

A/B Honor Roll

First Grade: Christopher Barcenas, Talen Henson, Anna Nguyen, Ethan Rodriguez, Tatum Semmler and Conner Tompkins

Second Grade: Briley Clark, Jason Joines, Chance Lewis, Hunter McGill, Alaina Morgan and Cash Shirhall

Third Grade: Sarah Armbruster, Baylee Bates, Yuliana Hernandez, Logyn Middaugh, Matthew Morgan, Christina Ragusin and Kyle Staggs

Fourth Grade: Jasmin Banda, Taylor Blevins, McKenna Boedeker, Brilee Crittenden, Layton Davenport, Braylyn Galloway, Ariel Henson, Francis Hoang, Natalie Hunt, John Jacobs, Olivia Krause, Draven Maldonado, Dillon Morales, Trevon Ragusin, Ethan Saenz and Destiny Starkweather

Fifth Grade: Eric Anzaldua, David Cano, Mirakle Gutierrez, Rhiannon James, Trinity Morgan, Edgar Munoz, Morgan Russell, Mia Salazar, Tyler Salinas and Natalia Zarate

Sixth Grade: Isabella Arriaga, Tres Canales, Allison Fowler, Andromeda Gilliland, Leah Lucey, Ayden Maddux, Hector Perez and Kendyl Smith

Seventh Grade: Noah Estrada, Erik Jaramillo and Jayda Nguyen

Eighth Grade: Malachi Arriaga, Shelby Cady, Sierra Callaway, Cassandra Casas, Karime Castillo Martinez, Alexander Flood, Jasmine Guthrie, Caleb Lehtinen, Jamie Martinson, Fernie Mendez, Franklin Murcia Rivera and Jason Nguyen

Saltwater Lodge Outdoor Report by Captain Jeff Larson

Archived in the category: Fishing Reports, General Info
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 20 Apr 17 - 0 Comments
Sgt. Miranda De La Morena getting in on some Combat Redfishing before she heads to her 1st tour in Iraq next month. Shoot often, keep your head down, and Thanks for your service.

Sgt. Miranda De La Morena getting in on some Combat Redfishing before she heads to her 1st tour in Iraq next month. Shoot often, keep your head down, and Thanks for your service.

Once again, Spring is in full swing. That means some great days on the water and some days that you don’t want to get caught in fast moving High Wind Thunderstorms. We send our condolences to the families and friends of the passed fishermen who have drowned while fishing in our area over recent years. The weather and currents this time of year can be pretty extreme from calm to steady winds, to violent winds switching directions with powerful rain and lightning, all within minutes. I’m by no means a meteorologist but have over 2 decades of on the water experience in this stretch of the Gulf Coast. The on shore flow from the Gulf of Mexico plus changing water temperatures causes unstable weather patterns in this section of the Coast. The severity, violence changes and timeliness of the pattern makes our weather unpredictable causing fishermen great grief, really it is anyone’s guess when and how the systems arrive here. So when northers meet our primarily southerly wind flow this also causes un predictable weather patterns which mean hazardous conditions on the water that even the saltiest boat captain needs to stay ashore.

Over the last several years, I have been involved in searches, rescues and other distressed incidents. Thank Goodness they have been favorable. Since we live in an outdoor oriented community surrounded by water, My personal opinion is we are exposed to more abnormal situations that normally don’t exist in most other communities inland. The vast landscape and hard to get places with limited on the water responders puts boaters at a distinct disadvantage when needing immediate on the water help. We already have great 1st responders and on Big Weekends, Holidays and Tournaments, they are consistently keeping us safe without any major disaster. It’s the rest of the time that boaters are exposed in our shallow water Bays. Obviously the deeper areas are easily traversed to get to open water accidents and scenes. I am talking about the shallow bays, back bays, small lakes which don’t have names and even smaller areas the seasoned Captains may have issues finding a distressed boater. How about the little ponds off of Pringle???? There are several small ponds or lakes that don’t have names but have subtle landmarks such as duck blinds broken roads and other washed up debris. This is where visitors young and old, locals and out of towners run the highest risk of unfavorable outcomes of needing assistance when lost or have an accident. Throw night into the mix. Add high winds with approaching Thunder boomers. Some of the Local Guides are having growing concerns of needing faster responses quicker assistance in the shallow out of reach places that only special boats can get to those locations. There is always multiple units sent out to accident scenes. See where I’m going with this? Shallow Running boats equipped with 1st responder equipment and airboats to get personnel in the hard to reach shallow water areas.

This growing need for an on the water team of responders that have shallow water knowledge of the terrain and current conditions is a topic that is a growing concern with our growing population of on the water boaters. Our County is growing, the population of boaters and on the water recreational users is the primary reason for a County Marine Response Team. This would be a great asset to our community and help save lives having on the water ready to go Marine Responders when time is of the essence.

It is our hope that we keep our waters safe through our articles and advisories. I always like to throw safety reminders in my articles hoping I keep someone from making a mistake on the water.

Back to the Report:

The fishing has been lukewarm to red hot. We went out on a scouting mission yesterday hours before the last storm. Top waters were the bait of choice. Bone Chrome Bone was the color and what those shallow water predators wanted as the barometric pressure was dropping, pre front. Trout responded on cue. The reds were a little skeptical but we inked out 4 keepers. The best thing about the grind of the day we had a guy in the group that paid attention to the Radar and picked us up about an hour before it hit the ICW. Now, I cleaned fish in the rain and wind but we were home safe waiting for VEC to restore power from the violent rain and winds. I did wonder about the couple of boats that were possibly still out when the Boomer hit the Bay.

The other day we were able to take trout on shrimp and popping corks. Other reports, Croaked are showing up at local bait stands and are already producing nice stringers of trout. Reds, well they still like mullet and sardines.

I’m not a fly guide so I never really have any fly stories. However, I was able to drop 3 fly fishermen off in a Sandy Pocket in the back bays and low and behold they each landed a fish on fly rods. That’s about the the extent of my Fly Fishing Guide Sessions.

Happy Easter and Hope your Holiday was Safe.

If you are looking to Book a Fishing Trip with Saltwater Lodge, Call Scott at 361 785 3825.

Re-Tie often, Don’t forget a rain jacket, and wear sunscreen.

Captain Jeff Larson

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