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Current Reports
Bob Marriott's now provides up to date fly fishing reports for all your favorite hotspots:
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Boca
Paila
If you are a novice or world
class fly fishing expert this place has it all. Terrific
personable guides know enough English to put you on the
fish and get you hooked up with plenty of them.
Bonefish, permit and tarpon are plentiful and are eager
to take a fly with the guides quiet poling and uncanny
vision. You won't find a more relaxing place anywhere
after the fishing is done. Bring a camera and PLENTY of
batteries and film! You'll be busy!
Guests stay in spacious duplex bungalows, each with it’s
own private bath, nestled in stately palm trees and
white sand beaches. You can walk the beach for miles and
never see another soul. Easterly trade winds cool the
lodge complex. The lodge is on a narrow spit of land
between the Caribbean surf 60 yards to the east and the
expansive lagoon and flats to the west. The lodge
continues to upgrade the already fine facilities on a
regular basis.
For the fly fisherman Boca Paila is one of the very best
flat fisheries in the Atlantic or the Caribbean. A
winning combination of fresh and brackish estuaries
intermingling with a complex shallow-water reef systems
creates Boca Paila’s quintessential food-rich flats
resource. Boca Paila is best known for superb
bonefishing and unparalleled permit population, but
there’s a bonus: tarpon, snook, barracuda, jack crevalle
and cubera snapper. Numerous, and eager to take a fly or
jig, Boca Paila bonefish average just under 3 pounds,
although fish in the 4 to 6 lb. class are taken
occasionally.
We hear frequent accounts of 10- 15 lb. bonefish days
and about people catching two or even three permit in a
week in the lagoons -this is unprecedented considering
most flats anglers have never landed a single permit.
Other than year-round fishing, privacy, exclusivity (no
more than 18 guests at one time), perfect climate, warm
Mexican hospitality and a mixed bag of species and
fishing methods, Boca Paila is also a great place to
take a non-fishing spouse or companion to get away from
it all - whether that’s blustery winters, telephones or
traffic. |
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