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Friday, October 11, 2024

Snook-Nook Fishing Report

 Inshore Fishing Report 

Our annual fall mullet run has brought along some great fishing inshore over the past few weeks. Snook, Tarpon, Jacks, Sharks and a variety of predators have been putting on a show feeding on the schools of bait. We have had very strong numbers of mullet schools pushing through our area and we should continue to see some schools continuing to push our way as we get into October as there have still been steady reports of schools north of us. Mullet schools have been prevalent throughout the day, but it seems the best of the action has been at night and early in the morning with the bite slowing down a bit as the sun gets higher. For those that are targeting Snook, the low light conditions will play to your advantage as the Snook will use the shadow lines from dock lights and bridges to ambush the mullet or whatever bait is pushing through. Making your bait stand out in the school is key to getting the bite when the bait is prevalent, many anglers will prefer artificials such as paddle tails, jerk baits and top waters depending on the situation that you are fishing. Don’t be afraid to use bigger profiles as well as surface baits that make commotion on the surface to make your presentation stand out. Fishing your lure on the edge of the bait pods can result in more bites as well. Some of the most popular artificials we have been selling this month have included; NLBNs, JYG Pro SWYMs, Hogy Pro Tail Paddle Tails, Yozuri Crystal Minnows, Fingerlings, Top Knocks & Hydro Pencils, Rapala Xraps & Skitterwalks. If you do prefer fishing a live mullet, adding a small cork to slow the bait down or trimming the tail fins will give your bait a more injured presentation making an easier snack for the fish. For those Snook fishing inshore during the day, there has still been action. Locating schools of bait in areas such as canals, on seawalls, along mangrove lines or near any ambush point or structure will be keys to your success. This is one of the best times of year to fish the sea walls even if you aren’t seeing any bait around. Larger mullet in the 6-10” range are one of the best bait choices if you’re hunting for big Snook. You will want to keep that mullet tight to the seawall for the Snook as when the bait comes off the wall a few feet you will start running into more Jacks.

There have been a lot of Tarpon around inshore with a lot of them being in the triple digit class! Look to find them up by the power plant, around the bridges, in the crossroads, in the inlet as well as up in the North Fork. Fishing larger live mullet, floating crabs around the bridges or using mullet heads on the bottom for some of the lazier fish are all effective options for those looking to use natural bait. Those targeting them with artificials have had success throwing larger swimbaits and straight tails such as the 8” NLBNs and larger Hogy Protails. The purple or black colors have been some of the hottest models for those Tarpon fishing. 

For those who want to catch a Redfish, we see them quite often around the Stuart Causeway in October. They can be caught with shrimp on a jig head, cut mullet and live Croakers. You may run into some Black Drum as well fishing shrimp on a jig head around the bridges this time of year as our Black Drum fishing starts to heat up. Those fishing the flats to the north have had success catching Snook, Trout, Redfish and Tarpon. Pitching lures like DOA Cals or Thumper Shrimp into the pockets of the mangroves is an effective strategy. You can also fan cast out on the flat with either top water plugs before the sun gets high or cover water with a DOA CAL. If you are heading to the north, stone crab season opens up in October and that means everyone will be putting out their traps. All those crab trap buoys are great areas to look for Triple Tail. We typically see better numbers of Triple Tail caught after stone crab season opens up. You can free line a shrimp or fish one on a jig head and pitch it to them if you see one. As we begin to get some cool fronts and north winds which we usually start seeing in late October, we will begin to start seeing some of our migratory fall/winter fish making an appearance such as Sheepshead, Black Drum, Croakers, Spanish Mackerel, Pompano and Bluefish. October always brings us a nice variety of opportunities inshore with the mullet run and early signs of some of our migratory fall/winter fish!

Surf Fishing Report

Those who were looking for the mullet run action from the beach definitely had some shots at action! A lot of anglers were able to take advantage of some great Tarpon fishing from the beach both on artificials and live bait. There have been Snook, Jacks, Sharks and a variety of other predators feeding on the schools as well. We’ve had some Pompano action over the past few weeks from the beach with some keepers hitting the sand. Last month there were a lot of shorts caught and this month the short fish have all been pretty close to being keepers. It is still pretty early for the Pompano so the fishing will only improve as we get into the fall. If you are fishing multiple rods, it is a good idea to stagger your casting distances to locate where the fish are feeding. EZ Flea, Electric Chicken Crab and Pink/Flesh FishBites have been producing bites along with sand fleas. These fish are coming from the north so don’t be afraid to hit some of the beaches to the north even up towards Vero if you’re looking for some Pompano action. There has been some good Permit fishing from the beach too and they can be caught the same way as Pompano. While it is tough to specifically target them, they have definitely been around. The beaches around the power plant will typically give you a better shot at hooking one, but they can be caught all over Hutchinson Island.  There have also been some Whiting and Croakers mixed in for our surf anglers too



From Todd @ Juno Bait Crew-Juno Beach


 INSHORE-  Snook fishing was very good ahead of the storm.  The snook have been feeding on mullet during the day.  Seawalls, boat docks, and other prime ambush points will be the best places to target the snook.  At night the snook have been hanging around the bridges in good numbers.  Flair Hawk Jigs and bigger body swimbaits are the best bet lure wise for the snook.  Both incoming and outgoing tide should produce bites (It's unlikely that we will have a crystal clear incoming tide this week).  This is the time of year you expect to see a few redfish mixed in with the snook as well.  It's by no means a huge number of reds, but if you're going to catch one in Palm Beach County it is likely to be in the middle two weeks of October.  

SURF/PIER-  The Juno Beach Pier will remain closed through at least Friday with very heavy surf forecasted (See below).  If the forecast holds and the surf falls over the next few days, we could see the Juno Beach Pier really fire off.  The hope will be that the snapper push back in with the swell.  Early in the week the pompano made the first good showing of the season at the pier.  Most of the pomps were short; but a few keepers did come over the rail.  The pompano were biting Doc's Goofy Jigs, JYG Pro Micro Jigs, and Fishbites well.  Expect a nice push of pompano after this north swell.  Bluefish have started to show up as well.  Spanish Mackerel action has been a bit spotty, but still some around.  The bluefin showing up has not chased all the snook off the beach; but it won't take ling for that to happen.  The beach did have a lot of mullet (mostly scattered and not in big pods) as Hurricane Milton pushed offshore, with some big tarpon around.  As the swell comes down we should see some more mullet pushing down the beach.





Thursday, October 10, 2024

Beach Fishing With Paul Sperco Palm Beach/Martin County Area

 


"A few days old" 


Headed back up to the beach this morning hoping the pompano that did not make an appearance yesterday would show today . Unfortunately some blue runners, jacks, and ladyfish were the only species that decided to hit the EZ Flea and Electric Chicken Fishbites on my long rods . I was fishing the same beach access in Jensen Beach that we fished yesterday and decided to try Plan B and put some more of those nice whiting in the cooler like we did yesterday. Water color was still good, tide was incoming, and the surf was calm . Well guess what ? Nobody was home . After an hour and a half the catch consisted of 1 whiting and 1 croaker . I had a friend of the family with me so it was time to make a move and we headed just a bit north. It turned out to be the right move as we found the whiting and a few croakers and filled the cooler . The bite was actually better than yesterday and our bait choice was EZ Flea and Orange Clam Fishbites tipped with a small piece of shrimp. The beach we fished yesterday had a very pronounced first trough and the whiting stayed in the same general area of 10 to 15 yards from the beach, even on the falling tide . If you fish a beach that has a shallower drop off and is relatively flat, make sure you lengthen your casts and bait placement as the tide falls . We started catching in the near shore area but by the time we left the fish kept moving off and the 30 to 35 yard off area was where the fish ended up . Unfortunately the forecast is for that building swell starting Friday and it might be a bit dicey fishing the beach this weekend. The beach accesses from Normandy south to Stuart beach can all produce some great fall fishing for whiting, croaker, palometa, jacks, snook, ladyfish, and threadfins in that first trough . Keep in mind that stretch of accesses will produce great fishing around the high tide mark as they are not as deep as the beaches from Middle Cove to Ft Pierce Inlet . Even if you are going to target the fall pompano this year bring a light spinning rod to catch the “groceries” if the pompano don’t cooperate. Good luck and catch em up