In Florida and the tropics The Grand Slam is a bonefish, permit and tarpon on the same session.
In north Essex/Suffolk, it's a fly caught mullet, bass and a sea trout. Well, it is as far as I'm concerned.
Bully wanted a mullet on the fly, although he started bass fishing, whilst I had a wander, looking for fish. It didn't take long, I found a couple of dozen mullet patrolling the shoreline a foot or two out.
I whistled to him and beckoned him over. He gingerly made his way across the mud and cast the fly in the right spot. After what seemed an age he had a take, struck and lost a fish. Shit happens.
I set up further long. There were a few fish about, but not many. However, from my slightly elevated position I could see exactly where they were swimming. Several fish passed over the flies without interest, then out of the blue, the indicator was pulled off the mud ( I was ultra close in ) and across the water.
I struck and pulled into a nice mullet that plodded about a bit, but came in fairly easily. A good start.
We moved to different mark, further upriver, Bully on the fly and me after a bass on the lures. A surface stick bait to be precise.
Second cast I was in. A cracking fish of 3.5lb or so.
The tide continued to push in and we were forced off the mudflats, just making it, across two creeks which were filling up quickly.
As the flow increased, the water coloured up. A change from a surface lure to a tiny shallow diver resulted in a savage take under the rod tip.
An absolutely beautiful sea trout of about 3lb.
We moved a short distance and watched as a couple of sea trout repeatedly hit bait fish in the three to four inch range. We tried for ages, changing lures and retrieves, but failed to hook one.
I did have another nice bass on the little sub surface plug though. It hit the lure with such ferocity I was sure it was another sea trout, but not so.
A brilliant session.