Early Winter Saltwater Slam - Specks, Reds and More Along the SE Louisiana Coast
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We’re sliding into that classic early-winter pattern. According to NOAA’s New Canal Station tide predictions, we’ve got a solid morning high followed by a steady fall through midday, which is perfect for feeding redfish and trout along drains and bayou mouths. Tides4Fishing’s Paris Road Bridge chart shows moving water most of the day, so you’ll have current to work with from the ICW out toward Lake Borgne.
Weather-wise, the National Weather Service marine forecast for Lake Borgne and Mississippi Sound calls for cool temps, light to moderate north to northeast winds and relatively low seas – chilly at the dock, but once that sun pops up it’s comfortable layering weather, prime for specks on the inside waters. Sunrise around the south shore is just before 7 a.m., with sunset a little after 5 p.m., giving you tight prime-time windows at first and last light.
Bite’s been good. Louisiana Sportsman’s recent coastal reports say speckled trout are stacked on the bridges and reef edges in Pontchartrain and along current-swept shell in Borgne and Black Bay. Limits have been coming on 12–18 inch schoolies with some 20-plus inch fish mixed in. In a typical trip right now you can expect a couple dozen keeper specks if you stay on clean water and moving tide. Reds are thick in the marsh: plenty of 16–24 inch slot fish with the odd bull roaming outside passes and along shorelines when the water’s clear.
Best baits: under a popping cork, it’s hard to beat live shrimp or a cocaho minnow on a 1/4-ounce jighead. For artificials, local guides have been leaning on Matrix Shad and similar paddle tails in opening night, green hornet and shrimp imitations. New shrimp imitations like the Vudu-style Mambo Shrimp that Louisiana Sportsman has been featuring are getting inhaled when worked slow along the bottom. Early, throw topwaters like a She Dog or Spook Jr. over shell and along shorelines for trout and bonus reds; once the sun gets up, switch to plastics or live bait under a cork. Gold spoons and spinnerbaits are money for sight-feeding reds on the flats.
A couple hotspots to circle today:
• Paris Road Bridge and the ICW cuts toward Lake Borgne – good moving water, trout on the drops, reds in the nearby marsh ponds and drains.
• Shell Beach out toward the MRGO rocks and Hopedale marsh – consistent reports of mixed boxes of specks, reds and a few drum when the water’s got some green to it.
Fish your drains two hours on either side of the falling tide. Set up downcurrent, let that cork or jig swing naturally, and don’t be scared to bump to lighter leader if the water’s clear. It’s a “grind and move” kind of day, but if you hop around and trust the tide, you’ll bend the rod plenty.
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