Jan 13, 2009

January 13th, 2009

Winter is finally here! Despite the cold weather fishing has been good! Fish are cold blooded. As water warms anticipate the bite to be stronger. Cold rainy overcast days are least fun to fish and the least productive. Prior to this cold wave water temperature ranged from the upper 50′s to the low 60′s. Mild days with lots of sun brought fish up to shallows. The sea trout bite was good, mostly on artificials.. Live lining a mud minnow is another favorite winter technique. Don Adams, Adams Bait House, is finding shrimp south of Savannah. Don reports the bait he is finding is in one location and small. Most of shrimp fishermen associate with winter fishing are large shrimp coming from deep holes. The shrimp Don is finding is about 3 inches. This is a prefect size for school size fish. Miss Judy and I have mentioned several times this year how useful fishing a dead shrimp or “bugged out” can be. A piece of dead shrimp can add scent to the water, perhaps mimicking a fiddler crab. Regardless of exactly why it works it is safe to say fishing a piece of dead shrimp can be very effective for red drum, sea trout, sheepshead and black drum. A mud minnow while a great bait wont produce sheepshead and black drum bite like a piece of fresh dead shrimp.

Sheepshead

Sheepshead can be tricky to catch. The technique is simply vertical fishing around structure such as fallen trees, dock pilings, rip raps, rocks, bridge abutments to name some likely structure. In short any structure that has at least 4 or more at low water and plenty of barnacles and oyster growth is a candidate to be fished. Where shells are individually broken off this can indicate sheepshead activity. The sheepshead bite per Capt. “Wild Bill” can be hot one day and off the next. It’s likely there are fish there but for whatever reason just not biting. When sheepshead fishing I look for immediate gratification. To start don’t be so concerned what the bites feel like as long you’re getting bites. The presence of small fish can mean some larger fish are present. As fishermen begin to focus on the bite the percentage of fish caught will pick up. If you feel a bump and your bait is gone. The shore answer is change what you’re doing. With super braids massive hook sets aren’t needed just firm and deliberate. Generally fishing with a low rod tip works best. Sheepshead are fast but obliging. Feeling the bottom is critical. After your egg sinker touches the bottom ever so slowly start jigging the bottom with pauses. After a minuet or so reel in and check your bait

Some Sheepshead Rigging Tips

Fish as light as possible! Sounds pretty straight forward but lets look a little closer. As the tide diminishes not as much weight is required to sink your bait to the bottom. Downsizing your egg sinker to a 1/4 ounce can provide sensitivity that the standard 1 ½ ounce egg sinker can’t match. Leader material can vary. You can not go wrong with fluorocarbon. A short leader generally works best. A 12 inch leader would be a long leader. I’m fishing leaders from 7 to 9 inches of mostly 20 pound leader material. Its hard for me to get away from 25 pound fluorocarbon simply because I’ve seen so many fish (in the 10 pound range) safely landed with that test of leader material. There are several types on the market. For the specifics you will have to attend Miss Judy Inshore seminar. I will say a characteristics of a quality leader material is that it is smooth. Bumpy leader material feels like the line is inconsistent. An inconsistent line could mean stronger in one spot and weaker in another. All leader materials are not created equal. If a 10 pound fish is breaking a 25 pound leader there’s a problem. Typical you should be able to put a lot of pressure on a fish without a break off. Granted your drag must not be locked down. Typically a few pound of pressure on a fish is enormous!

We’ve talked about leaders now lets talk briefly about hooks. There a lots of specialty hooks. All will do a fine job. Smaller hook are more appropriate for fishing fiddler crabs. Khale hooks while awkward looking are very suitable. My preference is a compromise hook not a specialty hook not a khale hook. A compromise hook can catch a little of everything from red fish and seatrout to black drum and sheepshead to whiting and small sharks. What is this wonderful hook? A standard hook that can catch a varity of fish is Eagle Claw’s 085 1/0. This is a useful little hook. While likely not the best in any one application likely one of the most useful.

Tides this week will be subsiding by Wednesday to less than 8 feet. Smaller tides could mean good fishing for red drum, black drum and sheepshead of course weather depending. When the winds kick up fish structure in protected water. If wind and seas lay could a good time to fish near shore structures. When the water is very clear fluorocarbon leaders can make a difference as well fishing lighter leaders and bleeding bait hooks. Best bet when buying bait this time is to call ahead to check if the shop is open and bait is available. Adams is always the last to close for the season so call ahead to save yourself a busted trip. Adams Bait Shop number is 912.898.1550. Larry of Larry’s Bait & Tackle has been open for during the winter has stocked a wide array of live baits. Best bet call ahead. Larry’s number is 912.272.7339.

Hope this of help! Good fishing!

Capt. Jack McGowan


Jan 02, 2009

January 2nd, 2009

Hard to believe 2009 is already here! The weather has been see sawing: cold fronts followed by unseasonably mild weather. On the whole not bad. Mild temperatures mean no fish kills and bait, shrimp, is available (at Adams). The bite in recent days has been primarily in the sounds, beach fronts creeks and sloughs. Storms that crossed northern Georgia dumped large amounts of rain which in turn flowed to the coast. The Savannah River system normally offers a strong winter fishery is off while rain water dissipates. Fishing will heat up in the Savannah River system as salinity rises. For now the best fishing has been in near the sounds. Inshore sheepshead and black drum bite is still on! Many fisherman have said and are saying this appears to be one of the strongest year for black drum. When the seatrout and redfish bite is slow sheepshead and black drum can provide plenty of bites and some quality fish!

Despite challenging conditions during winter it is possible to catch some nice fish! One fisherman today reported catching lots of redfish and seatrout. These fish can be waded up! A big catch one day can produce little or nothing the next. The best fishing has been towards the sounds. Those trolling plastics are doing well in the intra coastal. Nonetheless, fishing is fishing, one fisherman said he caught twenty nice seatrout while his fishing companion caught only two. That’s just the peculiarity of any given day. The short of this report is there are good fish to be found! Even fishing an ideal drop on an ideal tide could produce a bunch or a bust. When seatrout and redfish can’t be located fishing for sheepshead and black drum is an alternative that can likely provide lots of bites as well as quality fish. When fishing for sheepshead around heavy structure a drop shot can work well. Likely hot spots for sheepshead are close to rocks, fallen trees, dock and bridge pilings . Check your bait often. This is not the type of fishing where your bait will have to soak for half an hour. Typically the bite is within a matter of seconds. During the winter one day can perfectly suited for pitching artificials or a fly on the flats for redfish. While another day could provide a good seatrout bite. Yet another day is more aptly suited for sheepshead and black drum. The sounds are filling with mergansers, a migratory sea duck. Cormorants can be seen swimming in the rivers in search of bait fish. Egrets can be seen standing along marshy bank waiting for an unsuspecting minnow. Porpoises are in search of red drum; the main stay of their winter time diet. There are fewer boats are on the water. Most are fishing for sheepshead. Some are just taking winter jaunt. Winter fishing while mercurial can still fun and rewarding. Anticipate the best bite on mild sunny days.

Hope this of help! Hope to see you out there! Be sure to catch at least one of Miss Judy’s two Inshore Seminars this winter!

Good Fishing!

Capt. Jack McGowan