When the Weather Cooperates
This month will by trying but the days that the
wind is no howling you be able to fill the box. The water temperature has
dropped down in the 60's and most everything except the redfish in the
creeks are feeding pretty aggressively. The last of the mullets are schooled
up and heading toward the ocean and when you can find areas that are holding
these mullet, you can find big schools of trout and a few reds. If you throw
a cast net, a live finger mullet or a small fillet from a fresh mullet will
generate big bites. If you do not have a net, don't worry, you can still get
a good bite from your favorite soft plastic of slow moving crank bait. A
favorite soft plastic is a Gotcha 4 inch curl tail attached to a 1/4 ounce
lead head jig. Fish your soft plastics SLOOOOOW. Toss the soft plastic up
near the edge and slowly drag it back off into deeper water. The bite is
going to be a slight tap or more often it will just feel heavy. Lift up on
the rod tip and start turning the reel handle. You should then feel a fish
pulling back. I rarely set the hook this time of the year because I want the
fish to suck the bait down and if you rare back and bust them, you will more
often miss the fish.
For the crank baits try to find one that looks
like a mullet or small minnow. I like one that sinks slowly or
suspends. Great lures this time of the year are:
Mirro Lure Morrodine
Bomber Long A Blue Back
Bomber Long A Black Back
Rattle Trap Blue
Rattle Trap Chrome
With this arsenal of lures in your box, you
should be able to find and land a box of trout if you are working them
correctly and are in the right place. If you work them slow, you will
generally get more strikes and if you really want to increase your hook up
ratio, take the factory hooks off and replace them with Daiichi Death Trap
trebles.
When the tide falls out and you are in very
shallow water and see some cruising by, you can chunk a Rattle Trap GOLD
floating lure at them and possibly get a few to react with a positive
outcome for you and not so positive for the fish. The floating Rattle Trap
has some real small hooks so be sure your drag is backed way off or change
them out with a little stouter one. Do not put hooks on them that are any
more than one size larger or the lure will not work properly.
The seabass have turned on and you should have
not problem finding all you can keep. As of this writing (12-3-09) the
regulations on myfwc.com, state you can have 15 seabass per person and they
have to be at least 12 inches long, on the Atlantic side. On the Gulf side
they have to be 10 inches long with 15 per person.
The grouper and snapper are still biting real
good with limits on most trips. A live bait like a cigar minnow has to be
best but almost any gut bait or frozen minnow type bait will work.
By the time this hits the press, it will be about
time for the winter Wahoo bite in the stream. I like a fast trolled bait,
say 6 to 8 knots. Deep divers usually work best for these hard pulling
bad boys. Try the Sea Striker Chute Rigs in bright blue and white or red and
white. Get the heaviest you can find 4 to 6 ounces as they will swim deeper
than the lighter ones. If you take a cutting wheel on your Dremel tool and
cut off the top half of the lip, it will dive do about 15 feet or so, just
like a diving plug.
Another real good wahoo lure is the Cedar Plug in
red and black. You can purchase these unrigged or rigged. I like the
unrigged ones so I can use a small piece of wire as these fish are real
toothy and can bite right through the heaviest mono.
The jetties are producing good numbers of
sheepshead with some flounder, drum and big reds mixed in.
James Howard and Phil Baker with some nice winter
time trout.
Good Fishin
Capt Jim Hammond