Hi Joe
If you are planning to mainly fly fish, then the options are more limited than if you were fishing lures.
There are a couple of small jetties in front of the hotels at Sandy Point that lend themsleves to fly fishing. You can catch jacks and tarpon off the jetties if the baitfish are hanging around, which they were in May '07. Acccess is from the beach at the end of the runway and walk around to the right (looking out to sea) for a couple of hundred metres. You can't miss them as one has a palapa-roofed shelter on it. There is another a little further along.
Buccoo is a long beach and the water is mostly calm, so fly fishing is reletively easy, as long as you watch for the bushes on your back cast. It has turned up snook, bonefish and even a permit, although these are rare catches and I wouldn't bank on catching much, but if you put in the effort then you might get lucky.
Access to Peacock Mill flat is now difficult due to a gate across the track, but you can wade across from Canoe Bay resort at low water and fish the rising tide for a couple of hours. Bonefish come onto the flat here if you are lucky and barracuda and jack show occasionally. The bonefish are more likely to be found out on the edge of the flat, where the surf breaks and then they follow the gullies in between the turtle grass to access the muds nearer the shore as the tide floods.
Beware of stingrays!
The bay at Canoe Bay will turn up palometa, snapper, small cuda and small jacks and is really handy if you have the family with you or fancy a cold beer on hand.
Pigeon Point is often very busy, but if you walk past the windsurf sheds and around to where the glass-bottomed boats are moored, there are snapper, small tarpon, cuda and infrequently bonefish along this stretch.
Just a few of my top-secret places, so please treat in the utmost confidence
Cheers
Steve
Take only photos - leave only footprints. I like that concept.