Florida SportsmanSUBSCRIBE NOWSUBSCRIBE NOW
Home Regions Sportfish Gear Boating How-To Forum FS Store SUBSCRIBE NOW
 
advertisement
 
 SEARCH 
 You are Here:  Home >> Regions >> Southeast >> A Pair of Aces
 
ONLINE RESOURCES
 
RELATED FISHING
Shallow Water Angler
Shallow Water Angler
The nation's only publication dedicated to inshore fishing, covering waters from Texas to Maine. [+] See It
> In-Fisherman
> Florida Sportsman
> Fly Fisherman
> Game & Fish
> Walleye In-Sider
 
 
RELATED HUNTING
North American Whitetail
North American Whitetail
A magazine designed for the serious trophy-deer hunter. [+] See It
> Petersen's Hunting
> Petersen's Bowhunting
> Wildfowl
> Gun Dog
 
 
RELATED SHOOTING
Guns & Ammo
Guns & Ammo
The preeminent firearms magazine: Hunting, shooting, cowboy action, reviews, technical material and more. [+] See It
> Shooting Times
> RifleShooter
> Handguns
> Shotgun News
 
A Pair of Aces

The bite's on a Sebastian inlet's noth jetty.

Sebastian marks the southern limit of the serious run of southern flounder, the big “doormats” that head to Florida from the Carolinas each fall. In October and November, these hunks, 5 to 15 pounds, scuttle along the bottom of the inlet ready to gulp down any finger mullet or other baitfish that comes near.

Most locals anchor and still-fish mullet or killifish on bottom west of the bridge, but a tactic I’ve done well with is drifting with the tide, with the bait lip-hooked and with enough weight to keep the rig ticking bottom now and then. Using a live killifish on a yellow bucktail also does the job. The flatfish don’t move around a lot, but they keep their eyes out for baitfish moving in and out with the tide. If you slide your bait across their nose, they’ll nail it every time. Sometimes the inlet gets too crowded for this tactic, though, because a lot of anglers know about the flounder run, and if you’re trying to drift when everybody else is anchored, it can cause problems. Drifting is best the first and last hour of the tidal flows; you go too fast during peak flows.

Running Sebastian, by the way, can be a bit tricky, with strong currents and a dogleg to the south, plus plenty of bars on the inside of the bridge. It’s no sweat for most fishing size boats to 25 feet, but if you own a big inboard sportfish you’ll need to be careful, even after you’re well inside the bridge, because there’s shoaling in the middle and on both sides of the channel.


continue article
 
 

Pass through either inlet and you’re in cobia land in May, as the brown bombers follow the manta rays and the baitfish pods in the northward migration. The trick to finding them is to wait for a west wind and a high sun. Anglers with tower boats have the advantage when it comes to spotting the moving shadows that mark the rays or the baitfish, though sometimes the rays come right up on top and make themselves as obvious as an island. Cobia from 30 to 80 pounds trail them like puppy dogs. Best lures are a noisy topwater or a 1-ounce bucktail trimmed with a long, black plastic worm. (Make sure you don’t hook the 2,000-pound manta, not even if you brought your lunch.) Cobia also attack all kinds of baitfish—add a big popping cork about three feet above the bait and pop it hard to make sure they look your way.

The offshore waters here are also noted for producing some of the largest dolphin taken anywhere in the state, with 50-pounders caught each spring. The usual tactic of working east until you see the color change is a good start; it’s usually somewhere between the 80- and 200-foot contours. Work on out to 400 feet if the inshore weedlines are crowded. Trolling rigged baits is the quick way to find the prettiest flotsam, but once you get in what looks like dolphin territory it’s a good idea to shut down and drift live sardines or threads. Chances are good for a sailfish now and then, and you might even land a big wahoo if you go to a short length of wire rather than mono leader. It’s not impossible to connect with a blue marlin on his way toward Hatteras. Drift a 3-pound live bonito on a 10/0 if you’re an optimist.

Another interesting bite here in spring is the blackfin action around the shrimp boats, which usually anchor northeast of Sebastian in about 150 feet of water after a night of pulling their trawls. As they cull, they chum up the tuna, which range from 15 to 25 pounds. (They also chum up thousands of bonito; the challenge is getting your bait through the boneheads to the blackfins.) Chunks of cut fish are the natural attractant, but you can sometimes get them by towing a big diving plug behind the shrimpers, too.

This action usually ends by 9 a.m., but by then you might have your week’s supply of tuna steaks in the cooler.

Want smoker kings? There are plenty of them around the outflows of both inlets on an outgoing tide. A few years back I watched an angler standing on the jetty at Sebastian deck a 37-pounder by drifting out half a ladyfish under a balloon on an outgoing tide. He used an 8/0 rig, and needed every muscle to handle the fish while standing in one spot on the rocks. From a boat, it’s easier; fish the falling-tide color break, where the black inshore water meets the green offshore water, with big livies like footlong ladyfish, bluefish or mullet. The pros usually put out chumbags and menhaden oil drips, too.

For numbers of kings, troll the offshore reefs in 30 to 80 feet of water; some of the best-known areas are Bethel Shoal, southeast of Sebastian, Capron Shoal, east southeast of Fort Pierce Inlet, Pierce Shoal, due south of Capron, and St. Lucie Shoal, about halfway between Fort Pierce and St. Lucie inlets. All but Pierce have buoys on their perimeter, making them easy to find once you get in the vicinity via chart and GPS. There’s also a mile-long artificial reef just north of Fort Pierce Inlet, and a scatter of shoals spreading over about 5 miles just off Vero Beach. A 5-inch chrome spoon on a No. 2 or 3 planer or downrigger is the sure way to connect on any of these areas, particularly when bait and birds indicate fish below.

Pompano are another good target, though May is a little late for them. The best action is November through late March, with the water temperature below 70 degrees. They’re found in the deep troughs along the beach, and the water between Sebastian and Fort Pierce has some of the best of this contour on the east coast; the rocky area around Wabasso is a noted pompano hole. Ideal pompano weather is a light wind out of the west, calm surf and clear water; you can catch them on small jigs including the hairless and strange-looking Doc’s Goofy Jig as well as on sand fleas and clams fished on bottom. When the water is rough, the naturals do better, and you may need 3 to 6 ounces of weight to hold bottom, so a big surf rig may be needed for casting.

In short, whether you discover Fort Pierce and Sebastian inlets on purpose or by accident, you’ll be glad you did.

FS


>>Previous  1 | 2
 
 


 
Online Casts
Outdoor Offers
 
 
OUR NETWORK: IMOUTDOORS WEBSITES
[Featured Title]
Shallow Water Angler Shallow Water Angler Magazine Online. Covering inshore saltwater fishing from
Texas to New England.

* Go to the Site
* Subscribe to the magazine

[Features From Shallow Water Angler]
>> Which Flat Trout?
>> Where The Reds Meet The Sand
>> Supersize That Soft Bait
*Subscribe to Shallow Water Angler
 
[All Titles]
  Bowhunter Bowhunter  
  DU Great Outdoors Festival Ducks Unlimited Great Outdoors Festival  
  Florida Sportsman Florida Sportsman  
  Fly Fisherman Fly Fisherman  
  Game and Fish Game and Fish  
  Guns and Ammo Guns and Ammo  
  Gun Dog Gun Dog  
  Handguns Handguns  
  In-Fisherman In-Fisherman  
  North American Whitetail North American Whitetail  
  Petersen's Bowhunting Petersen's Bowhunting  
  Petersen's Hunting Petersen's Hunting  
  Rifle Shooter Rifle Shooter  
  Shallow Water Angler Shallow Water Angler  
  Shooting Times Shooting Times  
  Shotgun News Shotgun News  
  Walleye In-Sider Walleye In-Sider  
  Wildfowl Wildfowl  
 >> PRIVACY POLICY >> CONTACT US>> ADVERTISE>> MEDIA KIT>> JOBS>> SUBSCRIBER SERVICES