Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Snook Week #3

Catching Snook 101

Each of the pages we’ve created about how to catch snook cover specific factors and skills that will help you understand the basics about catching this challenging warm-water species. They are the favorite target of many professional anglers, and as long as we protect the species, harvest only fish we intend to eat, and carefully release the ones we don’t want to put on our tables, they’ll be around forever.
When to Find Snook
You will find snook in different places at different times of the year. They move – or actually migrate – within a very small region. Some fish stay in one place all year. These places include rivers and deep water nearshore.
In the wintertime, the fish are either deep inside residential canals, estuary systems, rivers, or on nearshore structures in twenty or more feet of water. In the early springtime, the fish begin to move out of the residential canals, rivers and estuaries and onto the flats – but they remain close enough to retreat in the event of common late-season cold fronts.
As the water warms, the fish move out onto the beaches and into the passes as the spring develops. In late spring and early summer they’re in the passes and on those beaches spawning. Once the summer wanes, they move back to the edges of those flats, eventually onto the flats themselves, then to the mouths, and eventually to the inside again. Some move out into deep nearshore structures and can be caught at either man-made or natural nearshore structures.
Experts such as Captain Mike Cole can catch snook almost anywhere.

Where to Find Snook

The “When to Catch Snook” tells you where they’re going to be at different times of the year. But with the sole exception of the spawning balls that appear in open and structure-less water, they are aggressive predators that hide behind things and wait for baits to come past their mouths. When the bait does, they expand their gill plates rapidly and suck the water – and the live or dead bait – into their gullets.
That means that in the springtime, even though they’re mating, they’re likely to be mating near structures. For example, near the big bridges or near anything sticking off the beaches. Structure on the beach includes the common trough that runs through the beach a short distance from where you’re able to stand. The drop-off – and it is almost always there – can be as little as one foot or so. But the fish will be moving in that slightly deeper ‘channel’ in a parallel line about 10-to-30 feet from the edge of the surf.                                                          
In the wintertime when the fish move deep into the backwaters, you will often find them near and under large residential docks. They are also comfortable deep inside mangrove islands and structure, and in rivers alongside banks and near the bottom, lurking near everything from old cars to shopping carts. Natural limestone ridges that are exposed on the bottom of deep channels also hold fish.
In the spring and summer, fish the beaches and the passes. In the summer, fish the flats and the edges, and the beaches and passes. In the wintertime and starting in the late fall, fish the residential canals, rivers, and if it warms up, fish the mouths.

Tackle for Snook

Generally speaking, a seven or a seven-and-a-half foot fast-action spinning rod, and a matching reel with great and smooth drag is the best all-around rod and reel combination for catching snook. In the wintertime – or near the deep fish in the nearshore water – heavier tackle will catch more fish.

Spinning Tackle

Spinning rod-and-reel combos will meet just about every condition, but certain times bring very large fish and very difficult structure. Fishing with large live baits, for example, underneath wintertime docks, or fishing in deep nearshore water over invisible (except on a bottom finder) structure can call for heavier equipment, and can benefit from using “Casting” equipment.
The Ohero Gold Series of Fishing Rods.

Casting rods for Snook

A typical casting rod is seven to eight feet long, can easily handle 30 or 40 pound line and equivalent leader, and most importantly provide an incredible level of lift, or leverage. Many serious pros fish with these ‘trigger’ rods almost exclusively all winter.

Using Flyrods to catch snook.

Anglers use them to present tiny and light weights simulating baitfish, shrimp, and even crabs. Flyrods of eight, nine, or even ten weight are perfect, with heavier rods – as big as the 12-weight tarpon and billfish rods used for really big fish – are suited for snook fishing under many circumstances.
Line weights range from a normal 20-pound braided line used on those fast-action spinning rods, to fluorocarbon used for both line and leader on heavier (and not so heavy) casting are great. Each condition could use different rods, but again, that seven foot or seven-and-a-half foot spinning rod with fast or extra-fast action is the best all around rod for catching snook.

Baits for Snook

The best bait for snook are called grunts. Caught on grassy flats, the noise that the small fish make are dinner bells for hungry snook, and if you can find and catch them they will catch snook when nothing else will.

                 
The sound a grunt emits says, "
Come here snooky-snook."
That said, shrimp are easier and almost as effective to use as any live bait. Our personal favorite bait – scaled sardines – are not always available, and are not necessarily the best bait for catching snook when they’re under docks (sardines escape quickly and easily from underneath those docks). Scaled sardines and almost any other bait fish – and dead things like squid strips and mullet fillets – will catch snook, too. It’s all in the presentation.

Top-water poppers make noises
that attract snook.

Lures for Snook

Lures for snook range from topwaters that bubble, spin, pop, splash, and generally disturb the surface. Called “Floating” lures, they sit on the surface, and when you retrieve them, make noise that attract the fish.
The second kind of lure to consider is called a “Suspension” lure. They sink – or float – to a predetermined depth in the water column. Snook are “superior” fish, and look up in most situations to find bait (up and to the side, but not as often to the bottom below them). That means that suspension baits – which require some skills to properly present and successfully fool a predator like a snook – will work better if they’re worked at or sitting higher in the water columns. Lures with lips that dive when you retrieve them are better if they’re the kind that float when you slow down or stop them.
The third kind of lure is lures that sink, and they certainly work on snook. Many large fish are caught in cold (or hot) weather when the fish are low in the water column because of temperatures. Jigs with lead (or new environmentally friendly metals) heads are very popular, and if you attach any one of many available soft and hard baits where the body of a bait or crab or shrimp would be, they can produce incredible results. Fish will even hit them with no tail, but the additional component can add much greater action and available smells dramatically improve their effectiveness.

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