St. Marks area?
Moderators: bman, Chalk, Tom Keels
St. Marks area?
Trying to learn the St. Marks area with no luck so far! Not asking anyone to give up a honey hole, but any suggestions would be great. Rocky or dangerous areas to avoid would be great also.
Thanks
Thanks
- Gulf Coast
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Re: St. Marks area?
IMO the rocky or danerous areas are where you need to target;proceed with caution. And I like clearer water
Re: St. Marks area?
Gulf Coast wrote:IMO the rocky or danerous areas are where you need to target;proceed with caution. And I like clearer water
ahhh, the Catch 22. I totally agree though. As the water warms throughout the summer there will be more trout in the deeper water. For now, a little rock damage is the cost of operation for productive catching.
In the end we will conserve only what we love. We will love only what we understand. And we will understand only what we are taught.
Re: St. Marks area?
Try the 3' depth areas off the east side of Live Oak Island... Due west of the lighthouse.
We did well there about two weeks ago.
There are a lot of good fish between Live Oak and the lighthouse and only few oyster bars!
We did well there about two weeks ago.
There are a lot of good fish between Live Oak and the lighthouse and only few oyster bars!
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- Gulf Coast
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Re: St. Marks area?
They are both good, to me east is better this time of year west is as good when the weather get hotter, youjust got to make notes til you get it.



Re: St. Marks area?
It'a all good, east or west.
I think fishing is better to the east, but that's where you hit hard things.
If you want to go east, go out the mouth and turn left at the birdrack and head east for a few miles staying outside the white buoys.
Then turn north an idle towards shore. Better yet, let the south wind push you to the hill.
Fish until you get in the trout. Then stay at that depth.
Fishing the oyster bars at the mouth of the river will produce too.
Go to the end of the bar and fish in the down-tide swirls as the tide passes.
Good rule of thumb is to fish big tides where the water is moving.
I think fishing is better to the east, but that's where you hit hard things.
If you want to go east, go out the mouth and turn left at the birdrack and head east for a few miles staying outside the white buoys.
Then turn north an idle towards shore. Better yet, let the south wind push you to the hill.
Fish until you get in the trout. Then stay at that depth.
Fishing the oyster bars at the mouth of the river will produce too.
Go to the end of the bar and fish in the down-tide swirls as the tide passes.
Good rule of thumb is to fish big tides where the water is moving.
- fishinfool
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Re: St. Marks area?
Head East to Palmetto Island. Fish the 3'-5' water in front of it where there is patchy bottom(bald spots in the grass). Try a suspending mirrolure or gulp shrimp under a Cajun thunder. That should get you started.
Don't forget to rinse your reels with fresh water when you get home.
FF
Don't forget to rinse your reels with fresh water when you get home.
FF
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Re: St. Marks area?
I agree with Woopty about going around the birdrack and following the stakelines before you cut north. Some people will cut across 2 buoys short of the birdrack and run wide open. In my limited experience, this is OK at high tide, but why take the chance to save 5 minutes.
Re: St. Marks area?
Hey, you get to run right through the middle of the fleet that way.guthooked wrote:Some people will cut across 2 buoys short of the birdrack and run wide open. In my limited experience, this is OK at high tide, but why take the chance to save 5 minutes.


To fish, or not to fish, . . . those are the answers.