Castnetting finger mullet near St. Marks?
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- Squall Line
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Castnetting finger mullet near St. Marks?
Any suggestion on a good place to try? I picked up an 8' net last week, and had decent luck getting some pin fish in the creeks, but was really interested in finding some good sized finger mullet. Any tips would be much appreciated. I had a 4' net when I was a kid; it feels good to be throwing one again. I am hoping I can start making it cost effective v. fishing store bought live bait, and those horrid gulps .
Eric
Eric
I can tell you when more than where. Low tide. The fish need to be out of the grass to be caught with any consistency. When the tide is low, they are hugging the bare shoreline and the exposed bars in 2-6" of water
In other words, put the 8' net up and go buy a 4 footer for casting the shoreline and bars.
edit. You will catch more mud minnow than finger mullet but they're basically the same bait except the mud minnows live longer.
In other words, put the 8' net up and go buy a 4 footer for casting the shoreline and bars.
edit. You will catch more mud minnow than finger mullet but they're basically the same bait except the mud minnows live longer.
I agree with everything bbb said. This time of year they are all over the oyster bars at low tide. I do have one additional piece of advice; use a cheap net, 4 footer is perfect. The oyster bars will give you a much higher mullet to other stuf ratio, but they move pretty quick. I walk out to water almost knee deep and stand perfectly still with the net in my mouth ready to throw.
Try to find em swimming and throw it a little forward of them; they will scatter but a 180 is the hardest thing for em to do, so I try the land the rear center of the circle about where they are when I chuck it. To catch them effectively on the bars, you'll need to be prepared to throw before you see them, and that means no checking for sharp stuff. I cut up my nets all the time, but I just buy the $20 ones from walmart for that stuff, and keep 2 or 3 in my arsenal. When I get free time at home I repair them with leader wire or re-tie etc...
Try to find em swimming and throw it a little forward of them; they will scatter but a 180 is the hardest thing for em to do, so I try the land the rear center of the circle about where they are when I chuck it. To catch them effectively on the bars, you'll need to be prepared to throw before you see them, and that means no checking for sharp stuff. I cut up my nets all the time, but I just buy the $20 ones from walmart for that stuff, and keep 2 or 3 in my arsenal. When I get free time at home I repair them with leader wire or re-tie etc...
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