17th Annual Fishing for Kids Tournament

Saturday, April 30th, 2022

Sea Hag Marina Steinhatchee, FL

$2500 in Prizes!

$100 Entry fee per boat. Includes Registration, Entry in the Big Trout & Red Fish most spots red fish and Fish Fry to be held after the event (hosted by UF Health Shands engineers).

Register and pay online at www.giving.UFHealth.org/fishingforkids

Guaranteed payout

Five fish aggregate weight

1st Place: $1,000

2nd Place: $400

3rd Place: $200

4th Place: $100

Big Red Fish: $300

Most Spots Red Fish: $250

Big Trout: $250

Kids category: trophies and prizes will be awarded for first, second and third-place finishers.

2022 Fiddler Crab Festival February 18th-20th

2022 Fiddler Crab Festival February 18th-20th

It’s that time of the year again. The Steinhatchee Fiddler Crab Festival is going on February 18th-20th.

The Fiddler Crab festival is the biggest event of the year in Steinhatchee. There are lots of things to do on the weekend of the Festival. There is a fishing tournament, Live music, vendors of all kinds selling anything you can think of and lot’s of food vendors. There is a taste of Steinhatchee Swamp Water Cookoff contest, a beer and wine garden, a parade, poker run and a car show. The list goes on and on.

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Great result on opening day of Scallop Season

Congratulations Nick Chesser, Evan Dodd, Mathew Valentine and Baxton Wicker for their great opening day haul.

Scallop season opens today!

From Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission:

Bay scallop season opens June 15 between the Fenholloway and Suwannee rivers

The 2021 recreational bay scallop season from the Fenholloway River through the Suwannee River opens June 15 and will remain open through Labor Day (Sept. 6, 2021). This includes all state waters in Dixie County and a portion of Taylor County and includes the towns of Keaton Beach and Steinhatchee.

The daily bag limit from June 15-30 in this area is one gallon of whole bay scallops in the shell or one cup shucked per person with a maximum of five gallons whole or two pints (four cups) shucked bay scallop meat per vessel.

From July 1 through Labor Day in this area, and for the duration of the open season in other areas, regular bag and vessel limits apply. Regular season limits are two gallons of whole bay scallops in the shell or 1 pint of bay scallop meat per person, with a maximum of 10 gallons of whole bay scallops in the shell or 1/2 gallon (four pints) shucked bay scallop meat per vessel. Throughout the season and region-wide, vessel limits do not allow an individual to exceed their personal bag limit.

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Other regulations

Scallops may be collected by hand or with a landing or dip net.

There is no commercial harvest allowed for bay scallops in Florida.

Direct and continuous transit of legally harvested bay scallops is allowed through closed areas. Boaters may not stop their vessels in waters that are closed to harvest and must proceed directly to the dock or ramp to land scallops in a closed area.

For information on bay scallop regulations, visit MyFWC.com/Marine and click on “Recreational Regulations” and “Bay Scallops” under the “Crabs, Lobster and other Shellfish” tab.

Boater and scalloper safety

Be safe when diving for scallops. Wear a life jacket when underway and do not drink and boat. When scalloping in open water, divers should stay within 300 feet of a properly displayed divers-down flag or device, and within 100 feet of a properly displayed divers-down flag or device if on a river, inlet or navigation channel. Boat operators traveling within 300 feet of a divers-down flag or device in open water or within 100 feet of one on a river, inlet or navigational channel must slow to idle speed. For more information, visit MyFWC.com/Boating/Regulations and click on “Divers-down Warning Devices.”

Stow it, don’t throw it

Don’t forget to stow your trash securely on your vessel so that it doesn’t blow out and do not discard empty scallop shells in the Homosassa or Crystal rivers. Scallop shells may be discarded in a trash receptacle or in larger bodies of water where they are more likely to disperse.

Citizen science

Done for the day? Help FWC’s scallop researchers by completing an online survey at svy.mk/bayscallops. Harvesters can indicate where they harvested scallops, how many they collected and how long it took to harvest them. Participants can email BayScallops@MyFWC.com to ask questions or send additional information.

Learn more about how FWC scientists monitor Florida’s scallops by visiting MyFWC.com/Research and clicking on “Saltwater,” “Bay Scallops” and “Bay Scallop Season and Abundance Survey.”

FWC Scallops & Scalloping