Red Fishing
Moderators: bman, Tom Keels, Chalk
Red Fishing
Hi all. I'm new to the forum and pretty new to flats fishing too. My friend and I have been going out of the St. Mark's light house for the last few weeks and have caught blues, spanish mack, trout, etc. Now we've been thinking about trying to land some redfish but neither of us have caught them before (My friend and I never went flats fishing before we started going out of St. Marks.....offshore fishing only). So what advice/recommendations/fish stories can you drop on us? 
There are many reports in the Inshore Fishing section. You might want to read some of them.
Use a topwater bait (Rop Dog, Skitterwalk), a gold spoon, a spinnerbait, and a jig and grob. Start hitting the creeks. If you work the creeks you'll see the reds. About the only other thing I can suggest is to keep your line wet. You'll catch reds.
Use a topwater bait (Rop Dog, Skitterwalk), a gold spoon, a spinnerbait, and a jig and grob. Start hitting the creeks. If you work the creeks you'll see the reds. About the only other thing I can suggest is to keep your line wet. You'll catch reds.
What was I supposed to do today?
Do a search for redfish on the Forum. There is a lot of good info already on this site. 2nd get as shallow as your boat will allow, chunk a bait that will allow you to cover as much water as quickly as possible, and keep moving. I prefer a gold spoon in the summer and a spinnerbait in the winter. Once you find them you can slow down and work the area more thoroughly with other baits.
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Jumptrout51
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- Joined: December 12th, 2001, 7:00 pm
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Keep an eye out for schools of mullet in fairly shallow water, the bigger the school, the better. I like to throw MirrOlures, 52M series if the water's deep enough. Shallower I'll go to a Catch2000 or 7M series. Topwaters work too, like the MirrOlure TopDog series, Rapala SkitterWalk, etc. Topwater prop baits also work well, MirrOlure 5M series, Smithwick Devil's Horse, Cotton-Cordell Boy Howdy, etc.
Reds love hard structure, rocks, oyster bars, etc.
Big trout like these conditions, too. Which is why I lean toward lures favored by both trout and reds.
Reds love hard structure, rocks, oyster bars, etc.
Big trout like these conditions, too. Which is why I lean toward lures favored by both trout and reds.
- Big Bend Brian
- Posts: 344
- Joined: May 15th, 2002, 8:00 pm
- Location: Ponte Vedra/Cedar Key
You could learn a lot by buying a Woods n’ Water magazine (monthly mullet wrapper) and reading about your local water body that you fish.
Here’s a link to see what the current issue looks like: http://www.woodsnwater.net/
I think it’s a pretty good place to start learning local waters. Good luck.
Brian
Here’s a link to see what the current issue looks like: http://www.woodsnwater.net/
I think it’s a pretty good place to start learning local waters. Good luck.
Brian

