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Captain Rennie Clark Jr has been fishing the coastal waters of NC for thirty years. He has fished the entire coastline of North Carolina. His vast experience and knowledge of saltwater fishing has led him to test his skills against the best inshore fisherman from North Carolina to Louisiana. His experience fishing coastal waters all up and down the east coast has given him the ability to find fish under any conditions even in new waters. Captain Ren has fished as far north as Wells, Mainen to the Florida Keys. Whether it comes to catching striped bass, redfish, trout, or any of our other coastal game fish you can count on Captain Ren to put you on them. Tournament Trail Charters offer inshore/near shore charters from the Brunswick County Beaches to the New River and all areas in between. Rest assured whether you are a seasoned fly angler or a beginner you will have a great day on the water.

Thursday, November 14, 2013




This past weekend wrapped up the Tournament Season for the Tournament Trail Charters fishing team.  My wife, Capt Shannon Clark  and I were one of the 15 teams invited to compete in the Low Country Redfish Cup Championship out of Beaufort, SC.   You had to qualify for this tournament and only the top 15 from the season long tour were invited to the Championship based on points awarded from each tournament fished.  Some of the best Redfish Tournament Anglers in the Country were there.  
Ok, to day one: We battled harsh winds and my wife Shannon hung in there on those cold mornings for the long runs to our fishing grounds.  Day one was brutal and we managed to hook several fish and had a break off  to start the day at our first two spots.  The area we were fishing was on the windward bank with 2 footers rolling in.  We were casting Category 5 soft plastics on 1/16 and 1/8 once weighted hooks.  Was tough to feel the bite as we were having to run the trolling motor way off the bank and fire casts into less than a foot of water surrounded by structure where the fish were sitting.  We managed two slot reds on that flat and hit another spot on our way to our A spot.  When we arrived at our A spot we were more protected and were welcomed to fish slamming up to 10 inch mullets on top.  We approached the busting fish with stealth and hooked up right away and broke off an overslot red.  From there we pulled the hooks on another fish before upgrading with a fat pumpkin just under the SC slot of 23."  We popped a couple more fish and upgraded our other fish we caught earlier.  I switched to a spinnerbait as the tide rose and we hit a few deeper banks connecting water bodies. My wife had a red hit her gold spoon 3 times right down the middle of the creek in over 4 foot of water.  I told her it was probably a gar.  I reluctantly cast where she had just cast and slow rolled the spinnerbait to the boat and stopped it right before it was under the boat and thump, I was hooked up to a perfect slot red that was as fat as the biggest fish we had in the livewell.  We put that fish in the well and cast in the same area again and two more fish back to back almost the same size.  Pressure was off and we had found a pattern the fish were on that day in deeper water.  From there we went on to catch several more upper and over slot reds that were bright orange and fat.  We finished day one with over a one pound lead at 9lbs and 5 oz(our personal best in SC).  Sleeping on a day one lead was a little tough for both of us knowing a brand new 2014 Shallow Sport boat with Yamaha motor and trailer was on the line for the champion.   Day two was a little nicer due to the winds only being 10-12 mph vs 20-30 mph the day before.  We decided to hit a different spot first on Saturday.  I had found a few random pods of upper and just over slot reds two days earlier near some of our other spots.  I started the day off just as I did on day 1 with a pulled hook.  We worked a couple oyster bars on the low tide and we stuck two over slot reds.  Then we landed the biggest fish of the tourney-my personal best in a SC tourney.  I told Shannon when we measured the fish at just 22" that the fish would probably go 5 lbs.  With a solid fish in the livewell we needed another good fish to go with him to secure the tourney.  We hit the next oyster bar and Shannon got stuck in the grass and as it came loose her Category 5 Manic Minnow landed just on the outside edge of the oyster bar and thump-he was there.  Only problem was that her line had looped at the rod tip as the wind knotted it when the line went slack.  We tried to hand line the fish in, but it broke the line.  We probably could have done some things differently to land the fish but in the heat of the moment I didn't think about anything but trying to get the fish in.  This fish came up top and was definitely under the 23" slot.  That would have taken a lot of stress off.  We hit one more spot before returning to our A spot.  Shannon popped an under slot on a gold spoon on the way then we started to work some different areas from our day one spots due to the tide being a little lower than the day before.  We elected to use Category 5 soft plastics on 1/16 oz weighted hooks due to working shallower areas and the fact we blew out a few fish on spinnerbaits and gold spoons.  The bite was a little tougher but we finally stuck a 19" fish to complete our 2 fish limit and take a little pressure off.  That fish gave us chance to win but I knew we needed a better fish to win the Championship.  We stuck a few more slot and over slot fish, then we caught a solid 21" fish that had been working over a school of mullet minnows.  As soon as my Manic Minnow hit the water that fish slammed it and we upgraded our smallest fish.  We fished another 30 minutes and then Shannon wanted to make the run back to check in to give us plenty of time to get there.  We were battling a few motor issues but with some answered prayer we made it back to the dock 30 minutes early.  We were the second boat at the dock.  The anglers that were in second place: Reed Simmons and his partner Ashley were there waiting which meant they had two good ones.  These two were on a hot streak as they had just gone down to the IFA Championship and smoked the fatties and had the largest fish of the tourney down there and without a bumped fish on day 1 would have won the tournament.  The team in 3rd place: two of the best-Ronnie Pitts and Jamie Hough were also on a hot streak with several top finishes on the HT Series, IFA, and the Low Country Redfish Cup, they had just finished in the top 5 the week before in the national championship.  We were asked to weigh last because we were the day one leaders.  As I expected legendary Charleston guide and tournament angler: Reed Simmons weighed a heavy bag that tipped the scales at just over nine lbs and made us start sweating.  I thought Shannon was going to have a heart attack before our fish hit the scales.  We knew we had one heavy fish but were unsure what the 21" fish weighed.  We had to have 8 lbs to win.  After the tournament director weighed our smallest fish and it weighed almost 4 lbs I knew we had it.  Our second fish was the largest of the tournament at 5 lbs 8 oz, giving us the heaviest bag of the day at 9lbs 3 oz.  For our efforts we were rewarded with the Calcutta money for the largest fish and a 2014 18' Shallow Sport boat with a 90 hp Yamaha 4 stroke and trailer.  We finished the tournament with 18lbs 8 oz.  Wes Hudson president of Shallow Sport Boats, Brian Rose, tournament director of the Low Country Redfish Cup, and Chris Butler of Butler Marine presented us with the check and plaques.  This was a great finish to a tournament season that was average at best for us.

Thanks for reading and Tight lines,
Capt Rennie Clark



Here is a link to the tournament write up by outdoor journalist and photographer, Jeff Dennis:



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