Captain
Paul Duffey

Member since July 2022 Clearwater, United States
Background
Man, I love what I do! Being a full-time fishing guide for me is an excuse to fish with new friends and share this amazing place I call home! I am laid back and absolutely love to put people on fish! A screaming drag is one of my favorite sounds in the world! Let's go bend a few rods and make some memories!
Techniques
Light Spinning tackle sight fishing Fly Fishing for tailing redfish

Hey, I'm Captain Paul Duffey

Clearwater, United States
Background
Man, I love what I do! Being a full-time fishing guide for me is an excuse to fish with new friends and share this amazing place I call home! I am laid back and absolutely love to put people on fish! A screaming drag is one of my favorite sounds in the world! Let's go bend a few rods and make some memories!
Techniques
Light Spinning tackle sight fishing Fly Fishing for tailing redfish
Our Team
Captain P.
Captain

My Charter Listing

Excellent
4.7 / 5
(14 reviews)
Clearwater
 Instant Confirmation
Trips from US $300

Fishing Reports

October 2nd โ€“ Bridge & Dock Fishing for
October 2nd โ€“ Bridge & Dock Fishing for
Oct 2, 2025 Clearwater
If youโ€™re looking for some of the most reliable action this time of year around Clearwater, Tarpon Springs, and Dunedin, youโ€™ll find it around our bridges, docks, and pilings. These structures provide shelter, shade, and a steady food source for one of Floridaโ€™s most popular inshore targets โ€” the sheepshead. ? Targeting Sheepshead on Structure Sheepshead are famous for their bold black stripes and sneaky bite. They love to feed on barnacles, crabs, and shrimp clinging to hard structure. We position the boat tight to bridge pilings and residential docks where the tide pushes bait right to them. Light tackle and small hooks are key โ€” these fish are pros at stealing bait. Once hooked, a sheepshead puts up a strong fight for its size and makes for excellent table fare. Anglers of all ages enjoy the challenge of tricking them into biting and bringing one to the net. ? Other Species Youโ€™ll Hook Along the Way While targeting sheepshead, we regularly encounter: Mangrove snapper lurking tight to the pilings Spotted seatrout holding in deeper pockets around docks Redfish cruising in the shade lines of bridge pilings Snook, especially if the tide is moving strong at sunrise or sunset The occasional black drum when fishing cut bait near structure This makes bridge and dock fishing a versatile trip โ€” you never know whatโ€™s going to bend the rod next. ??? Perfect for Families and Serious Anglers Whether youโ€™re bringing the kids out for their first sheepshead catch or youโ€™re an experienced angler looking to fine-tune your dock-fishing technique, these trips deliver action and variety. With calm waters close to shore, itโ€™s an easy and comfortable experience for everyone on board. ? Next Weekโ€™s Preview: Nearshore Wrecks & Reefs Next week, weโ€™ll head offshore a bit to talk about nearshore wrecks and reefs. These hotspots hold grouper, snapper, mackerel, and plenty of other hard-pulling fish as fall patterns continue to build. Stay tuned for tips and highlights from those trips.
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Sep 25th Clearwater Inshore Report: Work
Sep 25th Clearwater Inshore Report: Work
Sep 23, 2025 Clearwater
Last week we teed up a pure inshore game planโ€”and itโ€™s paying off. With bait thick and tides pushing, the most reliable action around Clearwater Harbor and up into St. Joseph Sound has come from oyster beds, mangrove edges, and dock lines. If you fish the structure correctlyโ€”quiet approach, right angle, right timingโ€”youโ€™ll stay bent on snook and redfish, with bonus trout and mangrove snapper in the mix. Conditions Snapshot Bait: Pilchards easy at first light on markers and windward edges; glass minnows on sand troughs near the beach. Tides: The first 90 minutes of moving water is gold (incoming for reds on the bushes; either direction for snook on docks). Water: Clarity swings with wind; cleaner water = lighter leader and longer casts. Launch: Seminole Street Boat Ramp (Clearwater) and Turtle Cove Marina (Tarpon Springs) for short runs to protected structure. Oyster Beds: Donโ€™t Rush the Edges Why they work: Current wraps and slowsโ€”perfect ambush lanes for reds, trout, and snapper. Boat setup: Idle in and stake/power-pole up-tide; avoid wake on the bars. Live bait: Pinfish or pilchards on a 1/0 circle, 25โ€“30 lb fluoro; let the tide carry the bait along the shell edge. Lures: Gold spoon for search, then a 3โ€“4" paddletail (1/8 oz) when you contact fish. Tip: If you nick shell, youโ€™re in the laneโ€”re-tie often. Mangrove Edges: Pitch Pockets, Not the Wall Presentation: Short, accurate underhand pitches past the pocket; swim the bait with the tide out of the shadows. Live bait: Free-lined pilchards or cut bait placed up-tide so it settles naturally at the opening. Lures: Weedless jerk shad or paddletail on a 3/0 EWG hook; keep it quiet. Leader: Start 30โ€“40 lb on snook days; drop to 25โ€“30 lb if itโ€™s clear and the fish are wary. Docks & Seawalls: Shade + Angle = Snook Why they work: Predictable shade lines and pilings that funnel bait. Boat handling: Set up up-current and cast past the target; let the bait cross the shade seam under control. Live bait: Pilchards on 1/0โ€“3/0 circles; count it down for mid-water strikes. Lures: Walk-the-dog topwater at gray light; then a 1/4 oz jighead + 4โ€“5" paddletail to work pilings. Tip: Most misses come from bad anglesโ€”fix the line of travel, not the lure. Tackle & Settings (What Weโ€™re Running) Rods/Reels: Medium to med-heavy Shimano 3000โ€“4000. Line/Leader: 20โ€“30 lb braid to 30โ€“40 lb fluoro (snook around structure), lighter for open flats. Hooks/Jigs: 1/0โ€“3/0 circles; 1/8โ€“1/4 oz jigheads; spoons for search. Quiet boat = more bites: Soft feet, slow hatches, and keep the trolling motor a click lower than you think. Best Trips to Book (Inshore, This Week) 2-Hour Quick Trip โ€” $300: Sunrise structure hop (docks or an oyster line) with minimal running. 4-Hour Inshore โ€” $550 (most popular): Prime tide on two structuresโ€”mangrove edges then dock shade. Small Tweaks, Big Difference Leader check every fish or nickโ€”snook sandpaper will cost you. Cast past the spot so the bait travels naturally through the strike zone. Pause at the edge of an oyster bar or pocketโ€”let current finish the presentation. If you bump shell or dock and spook fish, stake out and let it restโ€”then return with a quieter angle. Where We Focused This Week Dock lines with early shade inside Clearwater Harbor. Mangrove points and pockets on the flood north toward St. Joseph Sound. Oyster bars with clean water and moderate flowโ€”especially where a grass flat meets shell. What We Provide All licenses, premium Shimano gear, bait/tackle, ice & water, and hands-on coaching for any experience level. Bring sun protection, snacks, and a small cooler for your car if you plan to take fish home (when allowed). Next Weekโ€™s Preview Sheepshead on docks and bridges. As we edge toward fall fronts, expect rising numbers on pilings and fenders. Weโ€™ll cover fiddler/crab and shrimp/sand flea rigs, how to feel the thump and set the hook, and which tide angles keep your bait in the bite zone.
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Clearwater Inshore Report: HOT Snook & R
Clearwater Inshore Report: HOT Snook & R
Sep 18, 2025 Clearwater
Snook season kicked off strong and this week the inshore mix of snook and redfish stayed reliable from Clearwater Harbor up through St. Joseph Sound. With bait thick on markers and windward edges at daylight, weโ€™re starting tight to structure and riding moving water along mangrove points, docks, seawalls, and bridge fenders. If youโ€™ve been waiting for the green light to book an inshore mission, this is it. Conditions Snapshot: - Bait: Easy whitebait/pilchards at first light; pinfish on grass edges; glass minnows in the troughs. - Water: Late-summer clarity; best windows on clean incoming or the first of the outgoing. - Tide/Timing: Sunrise and the first 90 minutes of moving water = prime. A second bump later with the stronger tide push. - Launch points: Seminole Street Boat Ramp (Clearwater) and Turtle Cove Marina (Tarpon Springs) for short runs. Snook: How Weโ€™re Getting Bit - Setup: Position up-tide of ambush spotsโ€”dock corners, seawall shade lines, and the up-current sides of bridge fenders. - Live bait: Free-line pilchards on 1/0โ€“3/0 circle hooks with 30โ€“40 lb fluoro; keep casts past the target and swim baits through the seam. - Artificial: Walk-the-dog topwaters at gray light, then 3โ€“5" paddletails or jerk shads on 1/8โ€“1/4 oz jigheads as the sun rises. - Boat handling: Short, quiet moves. Let current do the work; donโ€™t bomb long casts that spook the zone. Redfish: Where & What Theyโ€™re Eating - Edges that matter: Oyster bars, mangrove points, and shallow grass/sand transitions with a little flow. - Live bait: Pinfish or cut bait placed up-tide so it settles naturally on the edge. - Lures: Gold spoon for covering ground; switch to a paddletail or weedless jerk shad when you find a school. - Tide note: Reds love a creeping flood tide that slides them higher into the bushesโ€”plan accurate pitches into pockets and prop-wash eddies. Tackle Weโ€™re Running (Simple & Effective) - Rods/Reels: Medium to med-heavy Shimano 3000โ€“4000 class. - Line/Leader: 20โ€“30 lb braid, 30โ€“40 lb fluoro for snook around structure; drop to 25โ€“30 lb leader on flats for reds when itโ€™s clear. - Hooks/Jigs: 1/0โ€“3/0 circles; 1/8โ€“1/4 oz jigheads; a couple spoon sizes to match depth/wind. Best Trips to Book This Week (Inshore): 2-Hour Quick Trip โ€” $300: Sunrise snook/redfish sampler; minimal run, maximum lines-in. 4-Hour Inshore โ€” $550 (most popular): Work docks, mangroves, and bridge shade on the prime tide. 6-Hour Inshore โ€” $800: Add time to revisit a productive tide window or switch zones without rushing. 8-Hour Inshore โ€” $1,050: Full flexibility to fish both tide swings and multiple structures. Small Tweaks = More Bites - Leader checks: Snook will sandpaper youโ€”re-tie early, not after the heartbreak. - Angles > distance: Cast past the target and work with the flow; most takes happen when the bait crosses the seam. - Steady pressure: Circles do the workโ€”avoid the home-run hookset on live bait. - Quiet feet, quiet hatches: Especially on skinny water redfish. Where We Focused (This Weekโ€™s Pattern): - Clearwater Harbor seawalls and dock lines at first light for snook. - Oyster edges and mangrove points north toward St. Joseph Sound for reds as the tide creeps up. - Pass corners only when current speed alignsโ€”short windows but worth a look on the stronger moon. What We Provide - All licenses, premium Shimano gear, bait/tackle, ice, water, and coaching for every experience level. You bring sun protection, snacks, and a small cooler for your car if you plan to take fish home (when allowed).
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Snook Season is here! Big tides and big
Snook Season is here! Big tides and big
Sep 8, 2025 Clearwater
On our Inshore Fishing Charters this week we were focused on one thing . . . Snook! The calendar finally flipped, the first โ€œbait rainsโ€ are pouring off the causeways, and snook season is open. From the Seminole Street Boat Ramp south through Clearwater Pass and north into St. Joseph Sound, fish are pouring off the beaches and stacking on points, docks, bridges, and mangrove edges. If youโ€™ve been waiting for a sign to plan a Clearwater snook charter, this is it. Conditions snapshot Bait: Thick pilchards (whitebait), threadfins, and glass minnows on markers and edges early. Tides: Stronger moon tides = best ambush windows on points, seawalls, and passes. Water: Still summer-warm; snook are aggressive at first light and again when tide speed picks up. Where weโ€™re fishing: Clearwater Harbor edges, ICW points, dock lines with current, bridges, and the up-tide corners of passes. Why early fall is the best snook window Fish are fired up: Theyโ€™ve spent summer cruising the beaches; now they slide back inside to feed hard ahead of the first cool snaps. Bait is everywhere: Easy to net, easy to chumโ€”perfect for family trips and numbers days. Target variety: Weโ€™ll catch snook while picking at redfish, trout, mangrove snapper, and the nearshore mackerel bite can be a bonus on longer trips. Predictable setups: Tide + structure + shade lines around Clearwater make snook positioning more consistent than midsummer. Tackle & techniques (what we run on Tightlines) Gear: Shimano spinning rods and reels in the 3000โ€“4000 class with 20โ€“30 lb braid and 30โ€“40 lb fluorocarbon leaders. Live bait: Pilchards or pinfish free-lined to dock shadows, seawalls, and current seams. Artificial: Topwaters and walk-the-dog plugs at gray light; then paddle tails / jerk shads on 1/8โ€“3/8 oz jig heads when the sun rises. Boat handling: We set up up-tide and present baits back naturallyโ€”short accurate casts beat โ€œbombingโ€ long ones. Best trips to book for snook 4-Hour Inshore (most popular): Sunrise launch, fish the first tide window hard, and be back before the heat. Link this text to your 4-hour page. 6-Hour Split: Start with snook on structure, then slide nearshore for mackerel/snapper if conditions allow. Link to your 6-hour page. 2-Hour Quick Trip (families): Perfect for kidsโ€”short run, lots of action around bait schools. Link to your 2-hour page. 8-Hour Full Day: Chase the morning snook bite, break mid-day, and hit the afternoon tide swing. Link to your 8-hour page. Where weโ€™re finding them (this week) Dock lines & seawalls: Shade + moving water = ambush. Skip a bait under the catwalk and hang on. Bridge fenders: Fish the up-current side first; count your bait down and keep contact. Pass corners: Clearwater Pass edges on a moving tideโ€”short windows but big rewards. Mangrove points: Look for glass minnows being harassed; toss a pilchard or slow-roll a paddletail. Pro tips to convert bites: Leader check: After each fish or nick, shorten and re-tieโ€”snook sandpaper will cost you. Cast angles: Throw past the target and swim the bait through the zone; donโ€™t land right on their heads. Be patient: Let the snook load the rod on live bait; steady pressure beats a big โ€œhome-runโ€ hookset. Whatโ€™s included on our charters: All licenses, top-tier Shimano gear, bait, tackle, ice, and water. Up to 6 guests. Weโ€™ll coach newer anglers and still put advanced anglers on technical setups if you want to sight-fish or throw artificials only. Next Weekโ€™s Preview โ€œOpen Snook Season = Peak Booking Window.โ€ Weโ€™ll lean even harder into sunrise snook missions with stronger moon tides, more bait on the flats, and fish repositioning deeper inside Clearwater Harbor. If snook is your target, lock in a sunrise 4-hour while we have prime datesโ€”this is the stretch we circle on the calendar every year for consistent numbers and shots at slot fish.
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Sep 4th - Clearwater Beach Report: Bait
Sep 4th - Clearwater Beach Report: Bait
Sep 5, 2025 Clearwater
Early September is here and the Nearshore Fishing Trips out of Clearwater are HOT! The โ€œbait rainsโ€ are pouring off the bridges and markers, and the Gulf just outside Clearwater Pass is alive. Expect Spanish mackerel and bonito blitzes outside on moving water, while beach snook chew at first light along Clearwater Beach. If youโ€™ve been waiting for that window where you can do a little of bothโ€”inshore edges at sunrise and nearshore action once the sun climbsโ€”this is the week. ** Don't forget to check out last weeks Blog ** Conditions Snapshot Bait: Big waves of pilchards (whitebait), threadfins, and glass minnows. Look on range markers, shadow lines, and windward shorelines at dawn. Water/Weather: Late-summer temps; clarity fluctuates with wind direction. Light east or southeast morning breeze = best surface feeds. Tides: Stronger moon tides amplify ambush points at the passes, docks, and seawalls; nearshore feeds fire on the first couple of hours of moving water. Launch: Seminole Street Boat Ramp puts us minutes from the beach and a quick hop through Clearwater Pass to the nearshore reefs and bait stacks. Beach Snook at First Light (Clearwater Beach) Snook have been haunting the troughs and the first barโ€”especially around dawn and again when that first decent tide starts to tug. Weโ€™re pitching live pilchards tight to the sand line, then walking baits parallel to the beach. When bait flips in the foam or birds start picking, make a cast immediatelyโ€”youโ€™ve got a short window. Go-to setup (what we run): Shimano 5000 class spinning on med-heavy rods 20 lb braid โ†’ 40 lb fluoro leader Live pinfish on a 3/0 circle; or a for artificials we use NLBN paddletails and shrimp on 1/4 oz jig heads Presentation: Cast up-current/along the bar, keep your bait moving naturally, and let the snook load the rod before you lean. Pro tip: If the surf is too glassy, slide to dock shade or bridge fenders as the sun creeps up. Those edges stay productive longer than the open beach. Nearshore Blitzes: Spanish Mackerel & Bonito Once the sun is up and the beach window fades, weโ€™re easing just outside the pass to run the nearshore edges (2โ€“6 miles, conditions-dependent). Youโ€™re looking for birds, bait dimpling, and surface rips. When the screen lights up or the birds pinwheel, itโ€™s game on. Tactics that produce: Chum slick + live pilchards free-lined behind the boat for non-stop mack bites. Casting spoons/jigs (ยฝโ€“1 oz) on 20โ€“30 lb fluoro; add a short, light wire if cutoffs are frequent. High-speed burns for bonitoโ€”keep the jig moving and hang on. Trolling small spoons behind planers when the surface gets quiet helps you cover ground and find the next feed. Bonus targets: On 6โ€“8 hr trips with stable conditions, weโ€™ll also check nearby structure for mangrove snapper and the occasional grouper. Itโ€™s a fun combo day: bend rods outside, then put a few for the table in the box when the blitz settles. Best Trips to Book This Week 4-Hour Inshore: Hit first light snook along Clearwater Beach, then pivot to docks/bridges once the sunโ€™s up. 6-Hour Nearshore Combo: Start inside for snook, then slide outside for mackerel/bonito and a shot at snapper on structure. 2-Hour Quick Trip: Short runs, lots of action with bait everywhereโ€”perfect for kids and first-timers. 8-Hour Full Day: Max flexibility to chase blitzes, reset on tides, and work multiple zones. What We Provide (So You Can Just Fish) All licenses, premium Shimano spinning gear, bait, tackle, ice, and water. Up to 6 guests. We coach newer anglers, and weโ€™re happy to run artificial-only programs for those who want to sharpen that game. Quick Tips to Convert Bites Leaders: Check for nicks every fish or two; replace before it costs you. Cast angles: Present with the tide whenever possible. Macks/bonito: Keep that retrieve movingโ€”if you think youโ€™re reeling fast, reel a little faster. Snook: Keep pressure steady; avoid the โ€œhome-runโ€ hooksetโ€”circles do the work. Next Weekโ€™s Preview Snook Season = Prime Booking Window. As we slide deeper into September, snook push harder inside Clearwater Harbor with predictable setups on points, docks, and bridges. Bait remains thick, tide speed increases, and the early bite gets even better. If snook is on your list, sunrise 4-hour charters are the ticketโ€”this is the stretch we circle each year for consistent numbers and shots at slot fish.
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AUG 28th โ€“ Schooling Redfish on the Clea
AUG 28th โ€“ Schooling Redfish on the Clea
Aug 28, 2025 Clearwater
Last weekโ€™s preview called for schooling reds on the Clearwater and Dunedin flatsโ€”and they showed. On our Fishing Charters this week we focused on low-water pushes along grassโ€“sand transitions from Clearwater Beach up through the Dunedin Causeway corridor, keying on skinny troughs, pothole chains, and the first dark edges off the bars. The play was patience: find bait flicks, watch for nervous water, and set up ahead of the school instead of chasing it. Conditions Recap Mornings started on low tide and light breeze, laying the flats down just enough to see pushes at 80โ€“100 feet. Water clarity was good with a green tint; sun helped us read potholes and ray craters where reds staged before sliding up-current. Our best windows were the last hour of the outgoing and the first 90 minutes of incomingโ€”classic โ€œfish have to moveโ€ periods. Where We Fished & Why We hopscotched grass/sand mosaics behind the barrier islands, then worked closer to the Causeway as water filled. On the bottom of the tide, reds grouped tight on the white plates (potholes) and on bar tips where current pinched. As the tide turned, schools pushed along edges parallel to the shoreline; we set up 40โ€“60 yards off their lane and let the fish come to us. If wakes got jittery, we backed off and drifted with the wind to keep pressure low. Lures, Flies & Presentations Paddletails (3โ€ NLBN) on 1/8 oz jig heads: steady medium retrieve, then pause as the school passesโ€”most eats came right after that stall. Gold spoons (ยผ oz) for covering water; tick them just above the grass and keep them moving. Jerk shads (soft plastic) on weighted hooks for ultra-skinny drifts; twitchโ€“twitchโ€“glide. White Leaders: 20โ€“25 lb fluoro; if you must go lighter for a bite, check fray every fish. Results Snapshot Reds: Consistent school encounters with a handful of upper-slot fish mixed in. Best numbers came when we refused to chase and let lanes reload. Trout: Bonus bites on pothole edges during the brighter part of the morning. Snook: A couple surprise edge fish on paddletails near creek mouths as the water climbed. What Worked (Keep/Repeat) Set the trap, donโ€™t chase: Schools settle down when they arenโ€™t being herded. Lead farther than you think: 8โ€“12 feet in front, not at their noses. Small, natural baits: Downsizing sealed the deal in skinny water. Quiet feet, quiet deck: One cooler slam = one departing school. What Didnโ€™t (Skip Next Time): Topwater all morning: Fun at dawn, but they wanted subsurface once the sun hit the flats. Heavy jig heads: Dredged grass and killed the glide; 1/8 oz was the sweet spot. Charging wakes: Even one push toward the school cut our shot count in half. Family & First-Timer Notes We ran short casting clinics on the flatsโ€”pick a pothole target, lob it past, then slide the lure in. Kids loved โ€œcalling the eatโ€ as wakes crossed the line. We rotate anglers on the bow so everybody gets clean looks and keep the deck free and clear. Captainโ€™s Tip When a school refuses, park and wait. Reds often circle a flat on the first of the incoming; that same school may pass your lane again in 10โ€“15 minutes. Change angle before you change lureโ€”quartering presentations out-fished straight intercepts all week. Gear Corner (Quick Hits) 10lb Sufix 832 braid, 25 lb Yo-Zuri fluoro leader, loop knot to keep action lively. Paddletails: new penny, pearl, or greenback; gold ยผ oz spoon as a search bait. Booking & Best Windows Weโ€™re riding a late-August pattern that rewards early launches, good low tides, and quiet drifts. If you want in on the schooling action, target the last-of-outgoing / first-of-incoming and plan for stealth. Flexible? Weโ€™ll align your day to the best lane and light. Ready to go fishing? Tap BOOK MY TRIP on the site or call/text **hidden content** to lock your morning. Weโ€™ll bring the game plan, the bait, and the coachingโ€”you bring sunglasses and excitement.
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Customer reviews

Rating summary
Excellent
4.7 / 5
out of 5 stars from 14 reviews
Boat
Excellent
4.8 / 5
Crew
Excellent
4.7 / 5
Experience
Excellent
4.5 / 5
Photos & videos by reviewers (10)
October fishing trip
October fishing trip
October fishing trip
+7
Angler rating
11
1
1
0
0
Anglers claimed
Good experience
87%
Friendly captain
100%
Recommend this charter
79%
Appropriate for children
93%
Satisfied with the boat
100%
Caught fish
76%
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5 of 14 reviews
Patrick B.
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Overall

Excellent Captain, outstanding experience

VERIFIED   INSHORE 1/2 DAY TRIP - Reds & Snook on June 19, 2025
Great outing, very knowledgeable Captain,ย  and the entire trip was just one Breathtaking Landscape.ย  Didnโ€™t know if I should...
Patrick B. recommends TIGHTLINES CHARTER Family Friendly to Expert!
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Doug H.
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Overall

September fishing trip

VERIFIED   Inshore Quick Trip on September 27, 2025
Doug H. recommends TIGHTLINES CHARTER Family Friendly to Expert!
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Kevin J.
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Overall

Great guide and great day on the water

VERIFIED   Inshore Quick Trip on April 17, 2025
Paul is a great captain with fantastic boat and equipmentโ€ฆ felt completely safe and he was knowledgeable of the area.
Kevin J. recommends TIGHTLINES CHARTER Family Friendly to Expert!
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Timothy H.
Excellent
4.7 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Crew
Very good
4.0 / 5
Overall

October fishing trip

VERIFIED   INSHORE 1/2 DAY TRIP - Reds & Snook on October 27, 2025
Timothy H. recommends TIGHTLINES CHARTER Family Friendly to Expert!
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Jason P.
Very good
3.7 / 5
Experience:
Excellent
5.0 / 5
Boat
Good
3.0 / 5
Crew
Good
3.0 / 5
Overall

Maybe just an off dayโ€ฆ

VERIFIED   INSHORE 1/2 DAY TRIP - Reds & Snook - 7:00 AM on October 8, 2025
We have been on several chartered trips. This was by far the least productive.ย  Captain Paul seemed like a nice enough guy....
Jason P. does not recommend TIGHTLINES CHARTER Family Friendly to Expert!
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