Fishing Tips and Techniques
This section of the Florida Guides Association website is devoted to increasing our readers knowledge base for fishing. Whether you target snook, redfish, trout, tarpon or any other species - freshwater or salt - you will be able to pick up some useful techniques from our Florida Guides Association member guides who contribute to the knowledge base.
| 31 July 2011
The heat is on, as fishing opportunities kick in along the Indian River Lagoon Coast of Florida. So far, the summer squalls have stayed away, and as long as they do, fishing along the beaches and in the inlets will remain equally as hot.
Along the beach, look for the silver kings (tarpon), smoker kings, blacktip
sharks, jumbo jack crevalle, and redfish to be shadowing pods of Atlantic
menhaden (pogies), threadfin herring (greenies), Spanish sardines, and bay
anchovy (glass minnows) in close to the beach. Also look for snook
fishing in the surf to improve as we get closer to the commencement of the fall
bait run. Remember snook are out of season, so if you target them, please
handle and release them with extreme care. In and around the inlets, look for
Spanish mackerel, tarpon, jack cervalle, and bonita to be working schools of
glass minnows on the outside, and snook, redfish, mangrove snapper, and
flounder in the area of jetties and other structure. If snook are of
interest, Sebastian Inlet is the place to be.
Angling on the in-shore lagoons will continue to show improvement, with fishing in the predawn and late evening hours being most productive. Look for small groups of redfish in the skinny water holding in the vicinity of bait concentration, and target them utilizing smaller top-water plugs like the Storm Chug Bug. Once the sun starts to grow hot and the top-water bite will slows down, bait becomes your better option. For larger trout, fish live pigfish in close to docks and other structure adjacent to deeper water. In deeper water, look for large schools of ladyfish, small trout, and tarpon pushing schools of glass minnows near the surface. When these schools move in, they are easy to locate by watching for concentrations of birds, terns and cormorants joining in on the frenzy, and they are perfect for fly anglers who are interested in the continuous fast and furious action provided by these speedsters. Last but not least, look for pompano schools holding in the shadows of the causeway bridges. Fish jigs tipped with shrimp or sand fleas (mole crabs) along the deeper edges and drop-offs.
As always, if you have any questions or need help, please contact me.
Good luck and good fishing,
Captain Tom Van Horn Mosquito Coast Fishing Charters
(407) 416-1187 on the water







