New Orleans Winter Fishing - Trout, Reds, and More on the Marsh's Edge
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We’re riding a good winter pattern now. New Canal Station tide tables from Tides4Fishing show a **high tidal coefficient and multiple small tide swings today**, with water moving best around mid‑morning and again late afternoon. That moving water window is when you wanna be posted up on drains and cuts; slack’s been dead slow.
Weather-wise, the latest NOAA marine forecast calls for **light to moderate north to northeast winds**, cool morning temps in the 50s warming into the 60s, and mostly stable barometer. That’s a classic speck and redfish setup in the inside marsh, especially where wind stacks bait on the leeward banks. Sunrise is right around **7:05 a.m.** and sunset just after **6:20 p.m.** over the lake and marsh, so your prime bites have been that first hour after daylight and the last hour before dark.
In the last few days, local captains out of Shell Beach, Hopedale, and Delacroix have been boxing **solid speckled trout with plenty of 12–16 inch fish**, plus good numbers of **slot reds** and a sprinkling of **sheepshead and black drum** off the rigs and rock structure. Most boats doing it right have been finishing with **20–40 trout** and **half a dozen reds**, depending on how hard they grind and how picky they’re being.
Best producers:
- **Speckled trout:**
- 3–4 inch **paddle-tail plastics** on 1/4 oz jigheads in opening night, matrix shad, and glow/chartreuse under popping corks.
- Free-lined **live shrimp** or shrimp on a dropper loop when the bite gets finicky.
- **Redfish and drum:**
- **Dead shrimp or market shrimp** on the bottom around pilings, rock, and shell.
- Gold **weedless spoons**, 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads with white or chartreuse paddle tails, and black/chartreuse soft plastics dragged slow.
- Around the bridges and lakefront, a few anglers are doing well slow-rolling **swim baits** and working **suspending jerkbaits** when the water’s clear enough.
Two hot spots to circle:
1. **Hospital Wall and the New Orleans Lakefront** – From West End down toward Seabrook, the rocks and breaks have held specks and a few reds on days with cleaner water. Work popping corks just off the rocks and jerkbaits or soft plastics along the edge when the tide’s swinging.
2. **Hopedale / MRGO and the outer bays toward Lake Borgne** – Drains coming out the marsh on the falling tide have been stacked with school trout and rat reds, with nicer fish mixed in. Anchor or spot lock just off the current seam and fish your corks or Carolina rigs right down the edge.
For the night‑owls, Jefferson Parish just added **green LED fishing lights at Bonnabel Boat Launch in Metairie**, and they’ve already been pulling in school specks and white trout on small plastics and shrimp-tipped jigs under the glow.
Water’s cool, so slow your presentation down. Let that cork sit, give it a pop, and don’t be afraid to fish tight to structure. If you’re not bumping shell or rock every now and then, you’re probably a little too far off.
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