『Winter Inshore Trout and Reds: Slow Presentation Pays Off in Louisiana Marshes』のカバーアート

Winter Inshore Trout and Reds: Slow Presentation Pays Off in Louisiana Marshes

Winter Inshore Trout and Reds: Slow Presentation Pays Off in Louisiana Marshes

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

このコンテンツについて

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in from down here around New Orleans and the east side of the Gulf.

We’re in a classic winter pattern: cool, mostly stable weather, light north to northeast breeze, and water temps hanging in the mid‑50s along the marsh and inside bays. The National Weather Service marine forecast out of New Orleans has the coastal winds laid back and seas running low, which makes it a perfect day to tuck into the inside marsh or slide out into the sounds.

According to the NOAA tide station at New Canal, we’ve got a modest tide today with about a foot of movement, high late morning around mid‑day and falling through the afternoon. That gives you a good bite window on the last of the incoming and the first of the fall. Tides4Fishing’s solunar chart for the New Canal and Shell Beach area shows better activity lining up from late morning into early afternoon, with a secondary push around sunset. Sun’s coming up right around 7 a.m. and setting just after 5 p.m., so you’ve got a tight, winter‑short feeding window to work with.

Inshore, the bite’s been solid if you slow down. Local captains out of Shell Beach and Hopedale have been bringing in good boxes of speckled trout and slot reds, with a few bonus sheepshead and drum off the deeper points and bridges. Most crews are reporting 15–30 keeper trout on a decent trip, plus a handful of reds when they commit to working the shorelines. Louisiana Sportsman has been talking up winter trout in dead‑end canals like Myrtle Grove and the same pattern is holding over on our side: deep bends, shell, and clean moving water are the ticket.

Best producers right now are **soft plastics on light jigheads** and **live shrimp or minnows**. Think 3"–4" paddle tails and straight tails in opening night, avocado, and anything with chartreuse, pinned to 1/8–1/4 oz jigs depending on current. Fish ’em slow and low, almost dragging. Under birds or when the tide’s ripping, a popping cork with live shrimp is still money. For reds, gold spoons, small spinnerbaits, and Gulp shrimp on a jig pitched tight to grass, cane, or broken shell have been putting fish in the boat. If you’re soaking bait, fresh cut mullet or shrimp on a Carolina rig will handle reds, drum, and sheepshead.

Couple of hot spots for you:

- **Shell Beach and the Biloxi Marsh edge** – Work the deeper bayou mouths and the inside ledges of Bay Eloi and the outer ponds off the MRGO. That incoming around late morning should push shrimp and minnows up and stack trout on the ledges.
- **Myrtle Grove / Barataria dead‑end canals** – Those deeper winter holes Louisiana Sportsman highlights are holding good trout and reds. Idle in, find 8–12 feet with bait on the screen, and fan‑cast plastics or slowly drag a jig.

Fish are not everywhere, but when you find clean, moving water with bait, they’re chewing. Keep your presentation slow, pay attention to that late‑morning tide swing, and you ought to scratch out a nice mess for the table.

Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Gulf report, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next one. 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