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Fishing Report: Wrightsville Beach, NC Fishing Forecast-February 2021

 

February in Southeast NC is one of the tougher months to get out and fish, the weather windows are much smaller and the temp can be downright cold some days.  But it’s not all doom and gloom, fishing can be great during February especially when we have mild runs of weather.  Here are some of the species I target around Southeast NC during February.

Cape Fear River Striped Bass are one of my favorites for winter fishing in our area.   I look for the Stripers on drop offs, around pilings and creek mouths.  Working baits like Berkley Gulp five or six inch jerkshads and Berkley Powerbait grass pigs in five inch should get you a bite or two from a Striped Bass.  I prefer white and chart pepper neon for the jerkshad and swamp gas and chartreuse silver flake in the grass pig. I rig my jerkshad and grass pigs on swimbait 7/0 TroKar TK-170 hooks, in 1/4oz or 3/8oz weight.  Mid water crank baits work too, try lures that dive from three to eight feet deep for best results, Rapala X-raps work well. If the Stripers are sitting shallow a MirrOlure 17MR can get a bite or two as well.  If the crank bait starts to hit the bottom let it float up a bit or trust me you’ll lose it to structure! Water temps are cold this time of year in the river,  I prefer anything above 44 degrees but have caught them as low as 39*. Don’t forget that the Cape Fear River Striped Bass fishery is a closed fishery and is catch & release only; you must release all Striped Bass.  Keep your eyes out for tagged Stripers there are a lot of tagged fish out there.

There is one fish that can be caught very easily during the winter months; if you find them!  The Redfish bite can be some of the best of the year for catching numbers of fish; the deal breaker for this fishery is you have got to have good weather, calm seas and bright sunny skies for the ocean schools. I find the winter ocean Reds around the inlets, sand bars, up and down the beaches in the surf line.  I use Berkley Gulp swimming mullet in colors pearl white; also the Berkley Gulp three & four inch Shrimp work well too both rigged on 3/8oz jig heads.  A MirrOlure Catch 2000Jr or 2000 lures work well for winter Redfish in the ocean as well.

On warmer light wind days you can also find some nice schools of Reds in shallow water flats and oyster rocks.  The Reds will sun on these dark colored bottom areas for a little extra warm up; this is also where you’ll see some bait fish doing the same thing (warming up).  Work these baits slowly in front of the Redfish schools; not right through the school, all this will do is spook the Reds and will make it very hard to catch them.  If the Reds are hungry they break away from the school and eat your bait!

There is one fish that a lot of anglers over look during the winter months, the Black Drum.  What I love about these fish is you can catch them in good numbers this time of year and there pretty darn good to eat!  On top of all that they can be fairly easy to catch; all you need is a little fresh (as you can get) shrimp.  I use a light Carolina rig with an Eagle claw L42 #1 hook.  Light meaning using as light as you can get away with sinker wise to not spook the drum.  Fish around docks, oyster rocks and inlets for these Black Drum; often you’ll catch Redfish and Sheepshead (smaller) mixed in as well.

What a rollercoaster of weather this winter so far, like most winters in Southeast NC.  You can find a good winter Speckled trout bite, but it takes the right weather pattern for good results.   Here are some ways I like to target Speckled trout into later winter months. A lure that always comes to mind for winter Speckled trout is the MirrOlure in the 52M, 52MR and TT series.  MirrOlure color codes I prefer are: 11, 21, 26, 51, 704, CFPR, CH, EC, HP AND Capt. Jot Custom color #1 & #3 (only found at Tex’s Tackle shop).  Most any local tackle shop can help you with these color codes (a lot easier than spelling them all out here).  As far as colors go I try to use light colors in clearer waters and darker colors in stained/river or dirty waters.

Working MirrOlures slowly in deeper water breaks and drop offs can produces some very nice trout.  If the water gets a bit dirty due to winds or rain/ice/snow, give Berkley Gulp 3” shrimp, fire tail shrimp, Berkley Powerbait Pro Twitchtail minnow or a Cash Out a try.  Rig the Gulp shrimp or twitchtail on lighter jig heads, here too for the trout so you can work them just a bit slower due to the cooler water temps.  Don’t rule out a nice Gray trout mixed in during the winter while speckled trout fishing.  Look for the bigger trout to be sitting close to the current, but just off and out of it.  Remember these fish are not going to burn calories they don’t have too swimming against the current.

Tackle run down: PENN Battle III DX & Clash II Spinning reels sizes 2500 & 3000 for the Redfish, Speckled trout and Striped Bass. Fenwick HMG Inshore 7’ medium rods 8 to 15 pound class and line Spiderwire Ultra-cast in ten or fifteen; Berkley Pro Spec Fluorocarbon leader for leaders; 20 pound for trout and 30 for all other species.  Tackle Bags and Organization, I prefer the new Plano Z-series and Guide Series tackle bags.  I use Plano Edge Stowaway boxes for organization of my tackle in these tackles bags.

Thanks for reading, stay warm or cool and good fishing to you!

Capt. Jot Owens
www.captainjot.com
910-233-4139

Posted in Fishing Reports on January 29th, 2021

Fishing Report: Wrightsville Beach, NC Fishing Forecast-November 2020

So far a pretty mild Fall, a few cooler days but overall mild.  Here we are in the first few days of November and just like that a strong cold front.  We really needed this cool air to get the fall fishing really going.  Especially the local Speckled trout bite, I’ve had a handful of nice trout during October but not the numbers I like to see.  November is going to be special this year for local trout fishing, you better be ready; it’s going to be good very soon!

In early to mid November I look for Speckled trout in the creeks and channels just off the ICW; any where water is moving with tide flow and bait.  Speckled trout like current; weather its hard current in a main channel or light current up a creek.  You need current flow to catch trout; rising and falling tide can be good for trout don’t let the tide keep you form going trout fishing!  Marsh grass lines, oyster rocks that run into a channel and drop-offs in channels are all good places to find Speckled trout in November.  Almost any grass lines with oysters will hold some trout.  Look for places where there is a slight current break and those trout will be close by.  Later in November all of the above places will still hold trout and the inlets will start to hold more trout as the month goes on.

One key point to trout I’ve found is that most days Specks will bite, but what are they hitting that day?  I’ve found that in early to mid November hard baits work well.  This is when you need to know where to start; what lures to try?  One of my favorites is the good’ole MirrOlure; it’s been around a long time and it is still catching lots of big fish.  The series I prefer are the 17MR & 22MR (Catch 2000jr) suspending, 18MR, 51M and 52MR sinking baits.

Colors; MirrOlure makes a lot of different colors but here are some of my go too colors around Southeast NC area waters.  MirrOlure color codes: 11, 21, 26, 51, 704,706, CFPR, CH, EC, HP and Capt. Jot Custom color #1, #2 and #3 color in 17MR, #1 in 22MR & 52MR (only found at Tex’s Tackle shop)  Any local tackle shop can help you with these color codes or at MirrOlure.com. Fishing Depths to use these lures; 17MR & 22MR use these lures in two to six feet of water. 18MR, 51M & 52MR use these lures in four to fifth-teen plus feet of water with current.  If your lure is hitting the bottom go to a shallower running lure.

If you have ever done any trout fishing at all you know that a grub (soft plastic) lures work very well for Speckled trout too!  Berkley Gulp three inch shrimp pattern is one of my go-to lures.  I prefer colors sugar spice glow, pearl white and the new color all chartreuse.  I also really like the Berkley Powerbait Pro Twitchtail minnow in three inch; colors Chartreuse Ice, Pink Ice and pearl white.  Berkley Powerbait Minnow in colors Chartreuse shad and Emerald shiner in three & four inch sizes.

I rig all of my trout grubs on 1/16oz, 1/8oz and 1/4oz jigs heads in colors red, gray or black; always use a fluorocarbon leader when trout fishing, I prefer Berkley Pro Spec twenty pound in clear, thirty pound if the blues show up in numbers.

Don’t count out live bait if you enjoy fishing with it.  Try live smaller mullets, mud minnows and live shrimp.  In shallow waters of two to five feet I like to float these live baits with a cork and a small treble hook.  In deeper waters of six to ten plus I rig them on light Carolina rigs with a small number one J-hook Eagle claw L42.  Just wait until you feel that trout take off with the bait and lightly set the hook, remember trout have very soft mouths fast hooks sets but with light power work best!

Here is one of my best tips I can give you for Speckled trout fishing around the Southeast NC area in November.  The water gets clear, sometimes very clear around here in November.  I always use Fluorocarbon leaders for Speckled trout fishing; for artificial as well as live bait fishing!  You will catch more trout using fluorocarbon leader; trust me!  I use Berkley Pro Spec fluorocarbon leader material in twenty and thirty pound test.  Give it a try; you’ll be happy you did!

*PS: Also keep your eyes peeled for trout with yellow or red belly tags, I’ve tag a fair amount from south Topsail to Carolina beach inlet this year and last.  Yellow tags are worth $5 and Red tags are worth $100!

The bigger Reds start to show up in the ocean on hard bottoms and around the inlets during September and run until later November; this year has been a good early fall Bull Red bite.  You never know when you might hook one of these hard fighting fish.  When I fish for bigger Reds, I use fresh cut or live menhaden and mullet.  I use fish finder rigs with a TroKar TK5 AP 8/0 or 9/0 circle hook and eighty pound Berkley Big game mono leaders. Don’t forget to keep your drag tight when using circle hook so they will do their job.  One tip I can give you when fishing for Bull Reds, is don’t use to light of tackle for these bigger Reds.  If you fight them to long, there is a chance you can tire them out to much and kill them.  Try a med/heavy rod and a reel with at least thirty pound mono or braid, this will help you get the fish in quicker; with a better chance of a good release.  Check to see if the Red has a yellow tag in its back; there are a fair amount of tagged Big Reds out there.

If you like to catch Bluefish and False Albacore there are just about as many as you like around during November.  Fishing around and just outside of the inlets you should be able to find them.  Casting metal jigging spoons like BigNic Spanish Candy’s or diamond jigs is a no brainer for getting some Bluefish.  Just look for the birds working and cast in that area.  Watch those teethe Blues they do bite hard!

Tackle run down: PENN Fierce III & Clash II Spinning reels sizes 2000, 2500 & 3000 for the Speckled trout.  Rods PENN Battalion II or Fenwick HMG Inshore series rods  in 7’ & 7’6” med/light and medium action; line Spiderwire Ultra-cast in eight, ten and fifth-teen pound.  Bull Reds PENN Fathom 20LW and PENN Rampage Jigging Rods with 30 pound Pro Spec chrome mono.  Tackle Storage system I prefer Plano Guide series in 3700 and 3700XL Tackle Bags with Plano EDGE stowaway Boxes inside.

*Keep your eyes on my FaceBook page for I’ll be releasing the two dates of my inshore fishing schools later this month.  I’ll have one school day on a March Saturday and one on an April Saturday.  This school is limited to 32 anglers each date and it will sell out within two days of release date.

Thanks for reading, good luck fishing and have a Happy Thanksgiving!

Capt. Jot Owens
www.captainjot.com
910-233-4139

Posted in Fishing Reports on November 2nd, 2020

Fishing Report: Wrightsville Beach, NC Fishing Forecast-September 2020

September is the month of change, summer starts to wind down and fall starts to show it’s self. I personally really like to fish in September, warm days, a little less humidity, much less boat traffic and best of all; great fishing! Here are some of the “goto” fish I like to target during September. PS: the mullet run has started; Bait moving equals fish feeding!!!

September this year is a little different because it’s Flounder season, here is how I target flounder in September. Working live or artificial lures slower so the flounder have time to see and react to the target (bait) is my favorite way to fish for flounder. Live bait is good for catching higher numbers of Flounder, but not always as many bigger size flounder come to the boat on live bait in my opinion. Mud minnows (larger) and smaller finger mullet will be the best live baits for Flounder in September, both are hardy baitfish in hot weather. Small menhaden work too but die very easy especially in the warm waters of early September, but may work better later in the month with a bit cooler waters.

Rigging the live bait on carolina rigs with Eagle Claw L42 1/0 or 2/0 hooks is a good choice of rigs for Flounder. If you prefer to use artificial baits which I do and I tend to see bigger size flounders more often on artificial lures. Scented and none scented grubs like the Berkley Grass pig (5”) or Champ swimmer (4.6”) are good choices in colors, chartreuse, green back and swamp gas (new penny). Berkley Gulp Jerkshad in five and six inch in colors of fire tiger, pearl white and chart pepper neon are all good colors. Darker colors like new penny in heavy stained/dirty waters work better to get more bites. I rig these lures on jig heads in 1/4oz, 3/8oz and 1/2oz weights in colors red, gray or white with forty pound fluorocarbon leader material for inshore flounder fishing.

When I’m ocean fishing for flounder I setup the weight and size of my lures a bit. Berkley Gulp six inch jerk shad and five inch Gulp grubs in colors fire tiger, chart pepper neon, pearl white and salmon red. I rig these on larger jig heads or Bucktails these are my goto’s for ocean flounder fishing. I prefer ¾ oz to 1.5oz jig heads or 1.5oz to 2oz Berkley Fusion Bucktail’s when targeting ocean flounder. Using forty or fifty pound Berkley Pro spec fluorocarbon leader material for ocean flounder fishing. The Fluorocarbon leaders help with all the sharp bottom structures and getting those nice flounder to the boat!

Look for the bigger flounder around deeper water docks with good current, bait fish and lots of structure inshore. The inlets, offshore reef and ledges are all good places to find hot weather flounder. What do all these places have in common; deeper water, current and structure. Don’t forget look for the clearest water possible and when fishing very stained/dirty water slow down your presentation of the bait. And don’t forget NC keeper Flounder season is August 16th to September 30th 2020!

When the water starts to cool down (a little) the Redfishing (Red Drum) will heat up. I look for the Reds to be in the creeks, along the ICW docks and oyster rocks. Carolina rigs with live bait or fresh cut bait is a good bet to catch a Redfish. If you want to go the artificial root, try Berkley Gulp three or four inch shrimp in color sugar spice glow or molting rigged on a 1/8oz or 1/4oz Berkley Fusion jig head should get’em to bite. Early mornings or late afternoons the top water bite should be good; cast MirrOlure Top Dog Jr’s and Top Pup’s for the best bite. Look for the top-water reds to be along marsh grass lines and shallow oyster rocks. You can also use rattling or popping corks in the same areas you use top-water plugs, just rig them with eight to fourteen inches of forty pound fluorocarbon, 1/0 hook L42 Eagle Claw and a live figure mullet.

The bigger Reds are starting to show up in the ocean on hard bottoms and around the inlets. You never know when you might hook one of these hard fighting fish. When I fish for bigger Reds, I use fresh cut or live menhaden and mullet. I use carolina rigs with TroKar TK5 8/0 or 9/0 AP circle hooks and eighty pound clear Berkley Big game mono leaders. Don’t forget to keep your drag tight when using circle hook so the hook will do its job. One tip I can give you when fishing for Bull (Old) Reds, is don’t use to light of tackle for these bigger Reds. If you fight them to long, there is a chance you can tire them out to much and kill them. Try a med/heavy rod and a reel with at least thirty pound mono or braid, this will help you get the fish in quicker; with a better chance of a good release. Check to see if the Red has a yellow tag in its back; there are a fair amount of tagged Big Reds out there.

Spanish mackerel and false albacore fishing can be great during September. The Spanish run the biggest (in size) all year during the fall. You can cast or troll for them and the fly fishing can be great as well. The Spanish/albacore will be around the inlets, up & down the beaches and near shore artificial reefs. Look for jumping Spanish and diving birds; that is where you will find the Spanish mackerel. Casting small spoons or jigs like Big Nic’s Spanish Candy on light spinning tackle will put some Spanish in the boat for you. If you would rather troll, give a Blue Water Candy Daisy Chain a try on top and a #1 planner down deep with a Clark spoon. If you would like to give fly fishing a try, use a five to eight weight set up with floating line with a small minnow pattern fly or epoxy minnow pattern; my favorite!

Shark fishing will be good until late September. I see lots of different kinds of Sharks in September; Black tip, black nose, Spinner, Hammerhead and Tiger. Best baits for the near shore sharks are fresh/live Bluefish, Mullet and Menhaden. I use spinning or conventional reels for Shark fishing with 300+ yards of fifty and sixty-five pound Spider wire Ultra-cast braid. Rigging the baits; eight feet of 80 pound mono leader; some of this leader will wind on to the reel. Connected to the 80 pound mono with a fifty pound plus swivel, then Two to three foot of #9 SS wire and a TroKar 8/0 or 9/0 AP circle hook. (I push down the barb for easy release) If you prefer Fly fishing, I like Striped bass flies in Menhaden patterns with 4/0 and 5/0 hook sizes. We use ten to twelve plus weight set ups; have lots of extra flies with you!

Fishing Tackle I use: PENN Clash II or Spinfisher VI series reels 2500, 3000 or 3500 puppy drum and casting to Spanish mackerel. Big Drum and Sharks PENN Slammer III or Spinfisher VI 5500 or 6500 series spinning reels or conventional Fathom II 20LW reels. Rods PENN Battalion II or Fenwick HMG Inshore sereis 8 to 15 pound 7’ class for puppy drum and Spanish mackerel. Big Drum and Sharks PENN Rampage jigging spinning or casting 30 to 80 pound class. Lines Light tackle Redfish (puppy drum) and Spanish/albacore Spiderwire Ultra-cast 10 to 15 pound, Big Drum and Sharks 30 pound Berkley Pro Spec Chrome mono on conventional reels or Spiderwire braid 50 to 65 pound on spinning reels. Tackle Storage I prefer to use are Plano Guide series tackle bags in 3600 or 3700 with Plano EDGE Tackle Tray/boxes inside for waterproof protection.

Good September fishing to you and thanks for reading!

Capt. Jot Owens
www.captainjot.com
910-233-4139

Posted in Fishing Reports on September 2nd, 2020

Fishing Report: Wrightsville Beach, NC Fishing Forecast-August 2020

Look for the bigger flounder around deeper water docks with good current, bait fish and lots of structure inshore.  The inlets, offshore reef and ledges are all good places to find hot weather flounder.  What do all these places have in common; deeper water, current and structure.  Don’t forget look for the clearest water possible and when fishing very stained/dirty water slow down your presentation of the bait.  And don’t forget NC keeper Flounder season is August 16th to September 30th 2020!

One fish that is always on my hot weather list is the Sheephead.  The Sheephead is a good challenge to catch and they fight hard and they are also good to eat!  All you need is some fiddler crabs or sand fleas for bait.  A medium/heavy action spinning or casting rod with Spiderwire twenty or thirty pound braid for line will help you bring in that big Sheephead in.  Tie on a short carolina rig with forty or fifty pound fluorocarbon leader and a small live bait J hook (sharp/strong)!  Drop that fiddler crab down beside a piling on the carolina rig and when you feel that little bump; set the hook and hold on!  PS: they are great eating in the two to six pound range; after six pounds the meat get tougher in texture.

North Carolina is not really known for Tarpon fishing but I do see them pushing just off Masonboro inlet and the lower Cape Fear River form time to time.  If you want a good challenge, give Carolina Tarpon fishing a try this August.  The best times are very early morning or late afternoon and in to the night. I fish for Tarpon on the bottom or free lining, using live and fresh dead baits like; spots, mullet and menhaden.  I rig these baits on fish finder rigs, with three to five feet of 80 to 100 pound fluorocarbon leaders.  Circle hooks are the best bet for good hook ups and landings for Tarpon in hook sizes 7/0 to 9/0 depending what hook series you like.  I prefer TroKar AP TK5 9/0 circle hooks, super sharp and super strong!  It not easy to catch a NC Tarpon, but I promise if you do or even just jump one off its still really cool to see!

I also enjoy shark fishing later in the summer (late July to early September).  Sharks on light tackle are always a good pull and boy the kids love to catch’em!  Sharks don’t really seem to care if the water is dirty either or hot.  I drift live and fresh dead bluefish, Spanish mackerel, mullet or menhaden in twenty to forty feet of water offshore.  I rig these baits with a 7/0 to 9/0 TroKar circle hook TK5 with one foot of ninety pound plus wire and six to eight feet of eighty pound mono leader.  You can free line the bait and /or put a small egg sinker on to keep the bait close to the bottom.  You’ll know when you get a bite!   Most sharks are in the ten to one hundred pound range.

Last but certainly not lest is Bull Redfish (big Red Drum).  The Bull Reds will start showing up in good numbers around inlets and hard/live bottoms just off the beach to about ten miles out in early/mid August.  Live or fresh dead bait is the key to catching these brutes.  Most fish will be twenty-eight to over forty inches in length, very fun to catch size!  It’s not hard to rig for the Bull reds; short carolina rigs with a 7/0 to 9/0 TroKar circle hook will do the trick.  Remember if your catching larger Drum, please use heavier tackle; these Drum will work so hard when the water is hot and it is easy to kill them using to light of tackle (fighting them to long).  *Please take the time to revive Red drum especially bigger fish during warmer water months; it may take upwards of fifteen minutes to do so.

Tackle run down, Reels: PENN Clash II & Spinfisher VI reels 2500, 3000, 3500 sizes for the Sheephead and Flounder.  Tarpon/Sharks/Bull Drum PENN SlammerIII 6500 & 7500 and PENN 20 Fathom II LW casting reels.  Rods: PENN Battalion II or Fenwick HMG Inshore series 7’ medium and med/heavy for the Sheephead and Flounder.  Tarpon/Shark/Bull Drum Rods: PENN Rampage Jigging series.  Line: Spiderwire Ultra-cast in fifth-teen, twenty or thirty pound (flounder, Sheephead) and Berkley Pro Spec Chrome mono in thirty pound for the Tarpon ,sharks ,Bull Reds.  Tackle Storage/bags I use: Plano Guide series 3600 & 3700 with Drop Zone (lure holder) Plano EDGE tackle trays inside; (water & rust proof)

Have a good August, stay cool & dry; watch those hurricanes and thanks for reading!

Capt. Jot Owens
www.captainjot.com
910-233-4139

Posted in Fishing Reports on July 31st, 2020

Fishing Report: Wrightsville Beach, NC Fishing Forecast-June 2020

 

One of the better fishing months in Southeast NC is June; lighter winds (hopefully), warm days and so many different kinds of fish to target.  Here are some of the fish I like to target during June around Southeast NC.

Redfish are in their summer trend by June and the trick to summer Reds is to go early before the sun is high and hot in the sky.  Top water lures and rattling corks in the shallow waters earlier mornings and afternoons will produce Redfish. I prefer MirrOlure Top dog Jr and Top Pup’s for great ‘walk the dog action’, fishing these along marsh grass edges.   Working grubs like Berkley Gulp later in the day will also produce Reds for you, fishing deeper holes and docks.  Slow rolling swimbaits like a Berkley Powerbait Champ swimmer or Grass pig’s rig on TroKar 7/0 1/4oz swimbait hooks in two to five foot of water has produced some nice Reds when the water heats up.  Sometimes it can be just like colder mouths, slow down your presentation a little when the water gets hot.  Give the Redfish a little more time to catch up with your bait when the water temp is over eighty degrees.

Everybody loves to catch and eat Flounder; they are really getting their act together by June.  Keep in mind you can fish for Flounder but the season is closed in NC; you must release all flounder. (Keeper season August 16th to September 30th)  You can find Flounder just about anywhere when June rolls in.   In southeast NC, I look for bigger Flounder around deeper channel drop-offs; in waters of five to fifth-teen feet plus deep.  The local inlets and cuts; south Topsail, Rich’s, Mason’s, masonboro, Carolina Beach and snow’s cut are always a good place to find some bigger size Flounders.  Last but certainly not least, are the artificial reefs, ledges and hard/live bottoms from one to ten miles off the beach, these areas always hold very nice Flounder in June.

Once you have found some Flounder you need to know how to catch’em.  If you want to go the artificial root, try bigger baits; this will greatly help you catch bigger size Flounder.  I prefer Berkley Gulp five and six inch Jerkshad in colors pearl white, chart pepper neon and new penny.  Also Berkley Powerbait Grass pig lures in colors Chartreuse silver fleck, green back or crazy chrome violet.  Rigging both the jerkshad and grass pig lures on 3/4oz to 1oz jig heads or Berkley Fusion bucktails in 1oz or 1.5oz for ocean fishing.  Another great Flounder lure is the Berkley Gulp four inch shrimp pattern; this bait is great for cast up and down inshore drop-offs in creek channels.  I rig these baits on jig heads in sizes 1/4oz to 3/8oz for inshore; in colors red, gray and white.

If you would like to go with live bait for the Flounders, try mud minnows, small mullets or small menhaden as live bait.  Rig these live baits on Carolina rigs with an Eagle Claw L42 1/0 hook, eight to fourteen inches of thirty to forty pound fluorocarbon as leader.  I prefer egg sinkers as my weight, the secret to how much weight you use is ‘as much as you need to stay on the bottom but as least as you can get away with.’  You need to be on the bottom for Flounder but going lighter will always get you more bites!

Last but never least; Cobia fishing is in full swing by early June and should be good until early July; so far this year it’s been hit or miss for me.  I look for Cobia around inlets, shoals and bait schools; near shore/offshore reefs and ledges are also a good place to look too.  With the water being clear most of the time in June it should easier to see those brown logs in the water. I like to throw big jigs, swim baits and live bait to the Cobia.  Color really does not seem to matter, but (go bright); Berkley Fusion Bucktails in 1.5oz to 3oz, but I always add a Berkley Gulp 5 inch grub.  When I’m not sight casting for them, we are fishing around inlets, shoals and near shore artificial reefs.  I float fish, bottom fish and kite fish in these areas with live menhaden, spots and mullet as bait.  You can chum if you like, but the sharks and Rays will come in numbers!

One fish that is always on my hot weather list is the Sheephead.  The Sheephead is a good challenge to catch and they fight hard, but they are also good to eat!  Another great thing about Sheephead fishing when it’s hot outside is that you can hide under a bridge out of the sun to catch them.  Just think; fishing somewhere out of the sun and you’re catching great eating fish!  All you need is some fiddler crabs or sand fleas for bait.  A medium/heavy action spinning or casting rod with Spiderwire twenty or thirty pound braid for line will help you bring in that big Sheephead in.  Tie on a short carolina rig with forty or fifty pound fluorocarbon leader and a small live bait J hook (sharp/strong)!  Drop that fiddler crab down beside a piling on the carolina rig and when you feel that little bump; set the hook and hold on!  PS: they are great eating in the two to six pound range!

Tackle run down: PENN Spinfisher VI or the new Clash II series spinning reels 2500, 3000, 3500 sizes for the Redfish, sheephead and Flounder.  Cobia: PENN Spinfisher VI 5500 & 6500 spinning reels or PENN 20LW, 25LW, 25NLD Fathom casting reels.  Rods PENN Battalion or the New Fenwick HMG Inshore series; 7’ medium and med/heavy for the Redfish, sheephead and Flounder.  Cobia Rods: PENN Rampage or Carnage II Jigging series 50 to 100 class casting and spinning.  Line Spiderwire Ultra-cast in ten and fifth-teen pound braid and Berkley Pro Spec Chrome mono in twenty and thirty pound for the Cobia; it is great line!  Leader material Berkley Pro Spec Fluorocarbon 30 to 40 pound for inshore and 80 pound Cobia fishing.  Tackle storage Plano Z-series or Guide series tackle bags with Plano Edge stowaway boxes.

Stay cool and enjoy your summer fishing! Thanks for reading!

Capt. Jot Owens
www.captainjot.com
910-233-4139

Posted in Fishing Reports on June 3rd, 2020