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Article20070308
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Winter Bay Fishing
Patterns |
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So many of my customers
don’t realize just how good the fishing can be during the
Winter season, not to mention the great afternoon and night
fishing in the Spring time. The winter time can bring us
some very low tides that really concentrate fish, if you
know how to get to them without running aground or chopping
up Seagrass and the occasional high tides allow all sorts of
oversized predators into the flats.
It was on one of those
higher than normal winter tides days, 48 degrees and a
strong North wind that one of my regular customers wanted to
try his luck. Now it so happens this customer is from
Wyoming, so the chill and drizzle didn’t bother him and to
tell you the truth if you dress appropriately it can
actually be quite comfortable! We left the Cove Harbor
Marina at about 11:00am, like most of my Winter and Spring
trips to take advantage of the warmer weather and more
active bite. I decided we’d start the day throwing Shrimp
and popping corks because the activity will tend to keep you
warmer during a stiff North wind and if that failed we had
bait available to throw on the bottom.
Well our first drift
netted us 3 nice Reds and one solid Trout. I called my
guide buddies who were drinking coffee back at the bait
stand to let them know what they were missing, you see we
had just gone through 2 days of tough fishing with the
weather that the front brought in and their customers had
canceled on because of the slight drizzle coming down
occasionally. You can never tell what the fishing will be
like until you get on the water, January or any other month. |
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2007-1 Look at the scars
and barnacles on this War lord (The Fish), Released!
(Click Here for Video) |
Our 2nd drift
netted us our limit of reds and another couple of solid
Trout, all coming on Shrimp and popping corks. Now, I never
went over the same drift line, just the same kind of bottom,
muddy and grassy. I’m always concerned about fishing an
area too hard because there are a lot of out of state people
on the water this time of year and they seem to be attracted
to guide boats (LOL), when that happens no more fish for
them or my customers. They just haven’t figured out how not
to scatter fish and they will fish an area hard until
they've either all been scattered or spooked. It is a shame
when you start a drift with no boats around and in minutes
you are surrounded like a covered wagon crossing the
prairie!
Now during our 3rd
drift, in an area where some big Trout have been caught have
caught throughout the years, we hooked up a big fish. It
didn’t take long before the fighting style gave us a hint,
Large Redfish, very large. After going around the boat two
or three times we finally got it in the net, a 36” Red
caught in the flats! We noticed all sorts of battle wounds
on this fish, he even had barnacles and moss growing on one
of his sides and he was blind in one eye. We named him “The
Warlord”, How could you top that? |
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On our 4th
drift we released a few reds, boated a few more trout,
several Drum and to our surprise a flounder, now one of my
customers got his first Texas Bay Grand Slam, a treasured
occasion. This was really turning out to be a great fishing
trip for late January with a north wind! We were finding
fish everywhere we went, now if we could just find that big
trout. Well, a few casts later on the 4th drift,
27” Speckled Trout, who would have thought! |

2007-1 Same Cold January
day...Big Trout
released!
(Click Here for Video) |
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2007-1 If Bull Reds and a
Texas Slam wasn't enough, look at this 50-60 Drum from the flats!
Released!
(Click Here for Video) |
When we started our
fifth and last drift we really didn’t have anything special
planned, we were just trying an area that had held some
keeper Trout. A few casts later we had our keeper Trout
along with a couple of released Reds and another surprise!
With the line screaming off my customer’s reel we had to
put the boat in gear to chase this fish, what could it be?
We went all over the flats, the water was too off colored to
identify the fish because it just stayed too far away from
the boat – time will tell, if we didn’t break off! In about
15 minutes we knew what the fish was, a big Black Drum that
came from the Intercostal to feed in the flats with the
higher tide. Another 15 minutes and we had the fish in the
boat, this fish weighed over 50#, crazy day on the water!
Just remember this the next time you decide that it’s just
not nice enough to go fishing, that might be a mistake!
*disclaimer - none of
the fish were harmed in the shooting of these videos, no but
really I always release trophy size fish unless I get a
deposit for a fish mount. It would be ridiculous for
us to clean a 27" Trout when we could release it for our
kids to catch next year! |

2007-1 Same day with the
above releases! |
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Don't knock Shrimp and
Popping cork, you can actually make it as technical as a
lure and catch more fish 8 months out of the year!
The cork rig I use is a
Cajun Thunder in various colors, Fluorocarbon leader in
different lengths, various size and color of beads and
number #2 or #4 treble hooks, try to find the combination of
these that are working on any given day.
Hint #1– use a leader
size that will keep the shrimp right above the grass or
bottom and aim for the pot holes with your casts.
Hint #2 – Clear water
small shrimp, use the smaller hooks and beads, just the
opposite for off colored water. Also match up the cork to
the beads.
Hint #3 – Have the
people fishing with you use a different setup until you find
the pattern or if you are alone, rig up multiple rods with
different setups so you can change quickly depending on the
depth or fish in that area.
* I’ll write about
selecting areas to fish and presentation in my next article.
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Fish
More,
Live Longer!
Capt. Scott McCune
(USCG Master)
FISHNTEXAS.COM
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