『Spring Transition Heat: Specks and Reds Firing on the Barataria and Empire Lines』のカバーアート

Spring Transition Heat: Specks and Reds Firing on the Barataria and Empire Lines

Spring Transition Heat: Specks and Reds Firing on the Barataria and Empire Lines

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

概要

You’re tuned in with Artificial Lure, checking in from the edge of the Gulf, thinking about that stretch from Barataria Bay down toward the rigs off the river.

Tide-wise, we’ve got a good spring push around the outer coast today. Grand Isle tide tables on Tides4Fishing show solid movement through the day with about a foot and a half of swing, enough current to stack bait along the passes and marsh drains. Sunrise is right around 6:20–6:30 on the southeast Louisiana coast, with sunset close to 6:00–6:10, so your best shot is that first light push and the last two hours of daylight bracketing the stronger tide.

Weather along the southeast Louisiana coast is early-spring mild: morning temps in the upper 50s to low 60s, warming into the low 70s by afternoon, light north to northeast breeze laying down to 5–10 knots, Gulf side a light chop with some lingering swell. That’s classic transitional speck and redfish weather in the marsh and along the islands.

According to recent New Orleans Gulf of Mexico Fishing Report Today episodes on Spreaker, the spring transition is already rolling: speckled trout, redfish, and sheepshead have been biting steadily on the outside edges, with steady boxes of keeper specks and mixed-slot reds coming from the rigs, shell pads, and current-swept points. Louisiana Sportsman’s early-spring inshore coverage backs that up, noting improving action as water warms across coastal systems.

Fish activity is best mid-morning when that water gets a few degrees of warmth, and again late afternoon when tide and light line up. Expect trout to be scattered, not ganged up yet, but you can pick 20–40 fish if you stay mobile. Reds are cruising shorelines and cuts; figure 5–10 solid fish per boat if you work the clean water and bait.

Best lures right now:
- For trout:
- 3–4 inch soft plastics on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads, in glow, opening night, and chartreuse-tail on a light jig under a popping cork.
- MirrOlure or Rapala suspending hard baits over shell in 3–5 feet when the wind is low.
- For reds and sheepshead in and around structure:
- Gold spoons and spinnerbaits slow-rolled along grass and shorelines.
- Matrix Shad or similar paddletails in shrimp or purple/chartreuse colors.

Best bait:
- Live shrimp is still king under a popping cork around rigs, bridge pilings, and islands.
- Dead shrimp or fiddler crabs on a Carolina or drop-shot rig for sheepshead on rock and rig legs.
- Cut mullet or cracked crab on the bottom for bull reds along the passes and on the edge of the Gulf.

Couple of hot spots to key on:
- **Barataria Pass and the Grand Isle/Grand Terre area**: Work the falling tide along the rocks and cuts with live shrimp under corks and light plastics; trout and sheepshead on the rocks, reds in the drains and behind the islands.
- **Empire Jetty and the outer bays off the Mississippi River**: Fish current seams and eddies with live shrimp and soft plastics; good mix of reds, drum, and specks when the water cleans up.

Inside the marsh closer to Lafitte and Myrtle Grove, look for cleaner water and bait flipping on leeward shorelines and along trenasses. A cork, 18–24 inches of leader, and a shrimp-tipped jighead will take anything that swims this week.

That’s your Gulf of Mexico, New Orleans coastal check-in from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next run of reports.

This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
まだレビューはありません