Coastal Angler Magazine | April 2025 | Lowcountry Edition

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navigating peace of mind

THE IMPORTANCE OF BOAT INSURANCE

Embarking on the open water is an exhilarating experience, flled with the promise of adventure and relaxation. Whether you’re a seasoned sailor or a weekend cruiser, protecting your vessel with proper insurance is not just a choice—it’s a necessity. Explore the reasons why every boat owner should prioritize boat insurance for a worry-free voyage.

Unpredictable waters

The open water can be unpredictable, with unexpected storms, collisions, or other potential accidents. Boat insurance can give you fnancial protection if there is damage to your vessel, providing coverage for repairs or replacement.

Damage and injury

Accidents on the water can result in damage to other boats, docks, or even injuries to passengers. Boat insurance offers liability coverage, which can pay for damages or injuries you’re liable for while boating, up to specifed limits, and lawsuit costs if you’re sued. This includes damage you cause to another watercraft or if someone on or near your boat is injured and you’re found to be legally responsible.

Theft and vandalism

Unfortunately, boat theft and vandalism are realities that boat owners face. Boat insurance has comprehensive and collision coverage that can protect you against events outside of your control, including theft and vandalism.

Incurred medical payments

Accidents on the water may lead to injuries for you or your passengers. Boat insurance offers a range of optional medical payments coverage limits, helping to cover medical expenses if you are in an accident or someone is hurt on your boat, regardless of fault.

Peace of mind for fnancing

If you fnanced the purchase of your boat, most lenders require insurance coverage to protect their investment. Having boat insurance not only fulflls these requirements but also gives you peace of mind knowing that your fnancial interests are safeguarded.

Navigational fexibility

Some water municipalities and marinas may require proof of insurance for docking or accessing certain areas. Boat insurance allows you the fexibility to explore different destinations without worrying about entry restrictions.

Emergency towing and assistance

Progressive boat insurance can include optional Sign & Glide® On-Water Towing coverage. If your boat is disabled or breaks down on the water, Sign & Glide® pays for on-water towing, jump starts, soft un-groundings, and fuel delivery.

Wreckage removal

If your boat sinks, Progressive boat insurance will cover the cost of removing your boat from the water (if removal is legally required).

Investing in boat insurance is not just about protecting a valuable asset; it’s about safeguarding the memories, experiences, and joy that come with your on-water adventures. Don’t let unforeseen circumstances disrupt your journey—navigate with confdence, knowing that Progressive boat insurance has you covered. Ensure a smooth and worry-free voyage, because when it comes to your boat, peace of mind is the ultimate luxury.

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THE TIME HAS COME TO RAMP UP AMERICA’S FISH STOCKING PROGRAM

The non-pro!t Protect Our Waters reports that, “Fish stocking has been a vital tool for maintaining healthy !sh populations in America’s lakes, rivers, and reservoirs. However, in recent years, most of our waterways have su ered from declining !sh stocks due to habitat destruction, over!shing, pollution, and climate change. If we’re going to combat these challenges, we’re going to need to ramp up our !sh stocking e orts to ensure the sustainability of recreational !shing, and food security.”

Fishing is one of America’s most popular outdoor activities, with millions of anglers heading to the water each year. e recreational !shing industry contributes over $125 billion to the economy annually and supports nearly a million jobs. Unfortunately, declining !sh populations threaten our industry, leading to fewer opportunities for anglers and reduced economic bene!ts for communities that rely on !shing tourism.

but also sustains the businesses like as bait shops, tackle manufacturers, and guide services that depend on a thriving !shery. Additionally, if we’re going to

can lead to an imbalance in the food chain. Stocking e orts can help restore native species in waters where they have declined, preventing the dominance of invasive species that may outcompete them.

While recreational !shing is the primary focus of most stocking programs, increased stocking can also support food security. Stocked !sh provide a renewable source of protein for both commercial !sheries and subsistence anglers.

Enhanced !sh stocking e orts can help mitigate the negative impacts that we’re seeing by introducing hybrid climate-resilient strains of !sh, e technology is there, we just have to use it. Without proactive stocking and conservation e of our favorite species of dramatic declines in the coming decades.

By increasing !sh stocking e orts, states could easily replenish popular game !sh species like red!sh, $ounder bass, trout, walleye, and crappie, ensuring that anglers have plenty of !sh to catch. is not only keeps !shing enthusiasts engaged

encourage a younger generation of anglers to be passionate about this wonderful pastime, they’ve gotta be able to catch !sh.

Many ecosystems are under constant pressure from habitat degradation, invasive species, and pollution. In some cases, native !sh populations struggle to maintain healthy numbers, which

America’s !sh stocking programs could and should play a critical role in maintaining healthy !sh populations, supporting the economy, preserving ecosystems, and enhancing food security. With increasing environmental and economic pressures threatening it’s time for a signi!cant investment in stocking e orts. By expanding hatcheries, improving stocking strategies, and integrating habitat conservation e orts, America can ensure that its waters remain abundant with !sh for generations to come.

Protect Our Waters is an angler-sponsored, nonpro!t organization with it’s primary focus on the sustainability and enhancement of recreational !shing. Learn more at ProtectOurWaters.com.

Smooth Sailing

There are many reasons why the beautiful, deep-water queen snapper has made its way to the top of many anglers’ bucket lists. Not only is this !sh unique and stunning in appearance, but the quality of !llets it produces tops the scale of other snappers.

Most !sh that are harvested from the deeper, cooler waters, as with queen snapper, tend to yield higher quality table-fare. With the thick white meat on these !sh, that can grow over twenty pounds, targeting this species is a foodie’s delight.

Queen snapper can be found from 400 to 1,600 feet of water, spawning year round, with schools constantly on the move. Although they can be targeted over ledges and deep-sea coral beds within these depths, it’s not common to catch one as bycatch while not speci!cally intending to target them. As with most !sh with a penchant for these depths, research is scarce, with !shermen providing the majority of information on their observed behavior. at being said, targeting this species will be more productive with an experienced guide, rather than going it alone and winging it.

If you are a part of the DIY deep-dropping explorers club, and looking to add queen snapper to your hunt, you’re probably going to want to make a few di erent rigs for them.

An electric reel setup is recommended for this type of !shing. Not only due to the depths you are trying to reach, but you may only get short

dri%s over where you need to be before its time to reset.

e standard drop LEDs and lights should be used the same as with other deep-drop methods. Utilizing a heavy mono!lament leader line of approximately 300 pounds, a x your !ve drop lines at varying distances from each other. You may !nd you get bites higher up in the water column on certain days, making an extremely long leader more productive in !nding the !sh, especially on a !rst dri%. e drop lines should be decorated with your choice of glowing fandangles, whether it be glow wraps, rubber squids or the simple glow beads. Circle hooks ranging from 7/0 to 10/0 are e ective, and if you choose to put a variety of sizes on a single rig, the larger hooks should be at the bottom of the line.

this type of !shing is new to you, pepper in a few chunks of skin-on bonita in your presentation.

If you happen upon your queen snapper territory and !nd yourself in conditions without much current, you can also attempt to catch them with a heavy slow pitch jig. As long as you have light braid and a heavy jig to get to the bottom, and the energy and tenacity to retrieve it again, this is a productive method in extremely light current.

Once you start catching !sh, you may !nd they are consistently eating the bottom hook or the top hook, you can then play around with switching your rig to a longer or shorter leader.

e ideal go-to bait for queens is squid, but since this is a so%er bait, its easier to miss the bite. If

FISHING IS BETTER IN

Queen snapper can be found deep in the gulf, and in the Atlantic from North Carolina to Brazil. While they have hot spots in the Bahamas and deep within the Gulf, e Atlantic waters of e Florida Keys o ers the best opportunity to target these within the United States and with the most minimal travel time. With mahi season around the corner in the Florida Keys, this is a great time to start heading o shore for queen snapper, as it provides a chance to target mahi to and from the deep-drop spots. Give me a call to get out there!

Capt. Quinlyn Haddon guides with Sweet E’Nuf Charters out of Marathon, e Florida Keys. (504) 920-6342. www.captainquinlyn.com; IG: @captainquinlyn

MUD HOLE CUSTOM TACKLE ALL-IN-ONE ROD BUILDING KITS

For anyone looking to build the best rod you’ll ever !sh, All-In-One Rod Building Kits from Mud Hole Custom Tackle are the ideal starting point. All-In-One kits take all the guesswork out of building a !shing rod, making it easy and enjoyable. Whether casting, spinning, y, or even ice, Mud Hole has everything you need for the perfect performance !shing rod and to start a lifetime of custom building.

Mud Hole’s All-In-One Rod Building Kits make it simple. Each kit includes everything you need—rod blank, guides, reel seat, grips, thread, and even the tools and supplies for assembly. With everything already preselected and packaged together, beginners don’t have to worry about picking out matching components and determining which supplies and tools are needed—all the work has been done by their professional builders.

Plus, Mud Hole provides all of the instruction required to build your !rst !shing rod. Kits include an easy-to-follow instruction book, and Mud Hole is the world’s largest source of free online rod building education material and content. ere’s nothing like catching a !sh on a rod you built. And All-In-One Rod Building Kits from Mud Hole Custom Tackle are the perfect way to get started in this time-honored cra$.

Pluf f mud princess outdoors

Pluf f mud princess_outdoors

April Fools for Fishing

With Spring in full effect here in the Lowcountry, now is one of the best times to get outdoors and wet a line. Whether you choose to hit the lakes upstate for some Big Bass fishing or choose to keep things salty here in the Lowcountry for an inshore slam.

There is something just so special about spring fishing that so many folks truly enjoy. But when you get out this spring, you may find yourself dusting off your fishing rods and tackle boxes from last season and wondering what exactly you should use to target those Big Bass or Feisty Redfish?

And April Fools Day couldn’t be a better example of a holiday replicating Fishing! When you go to make that first cast this spring… I want to remind you that you are truly trying to fool the fish into thinking you have the bait they want. Whether it is a soft plastic, frozen option, or live bait straight from the cast net. You want to present that lure or bait in the most natural way possible. Which means work on your presentation when throwing artificial baits (sometimes they like it slow or a bit faster depending on the day or what they’re feeding on) or if using live/ frozen bait (downsize your tackle or line type for the most natural presentation possible).

Less is truly more with fishing, and you may find yourself trying different baits, colors or types of soft plastics to find what the fish want. But I guarantee if you fool just one fish into taking your bait, you’ll quickly find you can fool them all!

Best of Luck this Spring and Catch em’ up!

MAY 17 • JUNE 14 SEPTEMBER 13 • OCTOBER 11

PIER MAY 10 • JUNE 21 SEPTEMBER 20 • OCTOBER 25

Dogwood Days of Spring

If there were ever a sign that spring is here and summer is just around the corner it’s when the dogwood trees typically bloom. For me, that means the inshore bite will become more consistent, the cobia will start showing up on the nearshore reefs, and offshore trolling will be in full swing very very shortly.

The inconsistent weather patterns in February and March make fishing, especially inshore, relatively tough. One day you are a hero and the next trip makes you want to give up fishing! But with a more normal weather pattern in April fishing becomes top notch. The air and water temperatures continue to rise making for better fishing all around. I love starting off an early morning with a topwater plug such as a Heddon Super Spook Jr in silver mullet color or going to a Rapala Skitter V in all pink.

“Walking the dog” as they say provides explosive action along the grass and oyster bed edges. It’s a great way to find fish and new fishing spots because you are continuously on the move. As the sun rises I’d move over to float fishing, whether with bait or artificial lures. A live shrimp or minnow fished under a float is never a bad idea! And if you like a challenge, put a Vudu or Z-man Shrimp three feet under that float and “pop” it along the grass edge for guaranteed results!

Another favorite and extremely consistent thing to do in the spring is targeting sheepshead on the nearshore reefs. Typically finding more numbers of them, as well as quality of fish. The by-catch of bluefish, weakfish, and black seabass isn’t so bad either! Carolina rigs with short leader and a fiddler crab tend to do the trick for the tasty convicts of the sea! I’ve found using some lighter 28gram jigs work well for the “bycatch.”

By now offshore fishing is really getting going! Yes, we have already caught mahi mahi, sailfish, tuna, and wahoo in the beginning of the year. Now we are hopeful for that bigger push of mahi mahi to show up mid April and May. Typically fishing the ledge in 180 feet of water out to three hundred feet of water will yield mahi mahi, sails, tuna, and wahoo. Ballyhoo trolled on a skirted rig with a 7/0 or 8/0 Mustad 7732 hook is my go to. Present a variety of colors and shaped lure heads to better determine what they are keying in on for that particular day. Finding a temperature break, weedline, and even floating debris will increase your chances dramatically.

By now you missed our Offshore Trolling 101 class, but we are aiming to do a more hands on Offshore 202 class mid April so reach out to the shop for more details! As always, use our website for some helpful videos and please come in the shops and see us! We want to help and we want to see anglers thrive in the sport of fishing! We always learn something new every time we go fishing so we love to share what we know! Also, be sure to check out our Spring Kickoff Sale at both Haddrell’s locations at the end of April.

Capt Mike Able

Haddrell’s Point Tackle & Supply • Since 1983

843-881-3644(Mt Pleasant) • 843-573-3474(West Ashley)

Visit

HaddrellsPointTackle.com for dozens of instructional videos, seasonal fishing tips and all our upcoming seminars, your local guide to local fishing

EDISTO FISHING FORECAST

Capt. Ravenel's Report

It’s Shad season in the Lowcountry! Every Spring I like to dust off the ole Shad setup and head out to the circus. These fish are a whole lot of fun and anyone can do it.

I remember my first time going down to the Tailrace canal with my good friend Ed Howe. Ed tried to prepare me for what I was about to see. Ed knows I enjoy my solitude almost as much as the fishing itself so boy was I in for s surprise.

We were on the early side of the day and when we motored in and I was surprised to see six other boats dotted along both sides of the canal. Within an hour and a half we were joined by at least 10 others.

Despite the amount of anglers; we caught our fair share of shad. The water is beautiful and the way that nature clashes with steel and concrete really makes for interesting scenery. They don’t call these things “poor man’s tarpon” for nothing. The fight and the acrobatics are worth the trip! The tackle is very basic; chartreuse curly tails on little jig heads are the ticket. The only real challenge is matching the correct weight needed to get down in the fast moving current without the tackle being too

large for their little mouths to get around.

Being as how I have a fever and the only cure is more fly fishing I decided to try my luck. After much failure Ed decided to lighten the mood by telling me a story of his previous trip. “A guy that called himself (Jiggin Jerry) was here last time and he told me he caught some on the fly”. I had the advantage of a sinking tip but it was no real match for the current and I was having trouble getting the fly deep enough in the water column.

Captain Justin Ravenel

RavenelFishingCharters.com

843-864-5056

Facebook: ravenelfishingcharters.com

Instagram: @justin_ravenel

Not long after Ed’s story ended we noticed an incoming vessel with a trajectory that suggested we might have company. They pulled up about 10 foot down the bank and yelled out “How’s it goin there!” It was Jiggin Jerry and he was complimenting my fly casting. It wasn’t long before he offered up a micro jig he tied some feathers too. Not a fly but it worked nonetheless.

I landed one shad on fly for every 7 they caught on spin gear but I didn’t mind a bit. Some folks are into eating the row and others like to use the fish for crab or shark bait but I just enjoy catching them.

If you are interested in booking a charter for you are a loved one call me or book online:

AFORECAST

Mount Pleasant Pier

pril is a great month to give pier fishing a try and look for some species that we probably haven’t seen in a few months. The water temperature is typically in the 65-70-degree range which brings increasing activity to the flat. When you’re coming out you may want to rig up for flounder and plan on bringing or catching some live bait.

One of the best ways to target flounder is to use a basic Carolina Rig and “walk the dog” by raising and lowering your bait as you walk along the pier railing. Using live mullet or a mud minnow, drop your rig over the side and let it down slowly until the weight hits the bottom. Once you’re there you’ll want to reel in just a bit, so that you can walk with your rod over the side and ease it back to the bottom every few feet. Since flounder are ambush feeders, this trick works great and allows you to cover more ground. There’s no need to cast way out into the flat as most of the flounder we see are very close to the pier structure. Vudu shrimp, Zman DieZel MinnowZ, and other artificials can produce similar results when fished the same way as well.

We’re often asked if fishermen are allowed to throw a cast net or use a minnow trap to catch live bait. The pier does allow both; however, the trap or net should not interfere with another fisherman’s activity. Also, we recommend anglers checking the area around the pier at low tide before throwing an expensive cast net. There’s

rebar and concrete from the old bridge in some spots and a cast in the wrong location will send you shopping for new equipment.

We hope everyone that comes out to the pier has a good time and can help us be good stewards of our natural resources. You can’t control what bites and there are plenty of species that show up in April that aren’t exactly “trophy” fish. If you hook something that you’re not going to keep, or something you can’t keep because of legal limits, please return it to the water as soon as possible.

NOTE: There will be NO FISHING from the pier April 27, 2025 due to the Blessing of the Fleet Festival at Mount Pleasant Memorial Waterfront Park.

For any additional information about the pier or what’s biting this week feel free to call the River Watch Cafe & Gift Shop on the pier at 843-762-9946

Chris Pounder, CPRP Manager

Mount Pleasant Pier

Nathaniel and Lisa with an 18" trout
Vince with a 15" sheepshead

National Pediatric Cancer Foundation

“Fishing

Funds the Cure” Tournaments Raise Awareness

and Funds for Crucial Research

The National Pediatric Cancer Foundation (NPCF) created “Fishing Funds the Cure” to raise awareness and funds for crucial research. Each year, they unite corporate partners, passionate anglers, and dedicated supporters for Fishing Funds the Cure Tournaments through an activity that everyone loves. ese exciting inshore and freshwater shing tournaments are held in beautiful locations like St. Pete Beach and Sarasota, Florida, San Juan, Puerto Rico, and more. Each event, thoughtfully designed to engage supporters, features a kick-o celebration, angler swag bags, an awards dinner and a silent auction, all dedicated to making a meaningful impact.

NPCF organizes these events to blend the universal love for shing with an important cause. eir mission is to conduct research leading to less toxic and more therapeutic treatments for children with cancer, and are committed to making a di erence in a system that o$en neglects our children. Despite their bright futures, only 4% of government funding for cancer research supports pediatric initiatives, highlighting the urgent need for advocacy.

NPCF has made remarkable progress and is recognized as the nation’s leading solution, delivering rapid, innovative, and e%cient science

through a collaborative network of 40 hospitals. Operating independently of pharmaceutical and government funding, with eight institutions noted in the “Top 20” by US News, they have invested over $40 million in translational studies and clinical trials. NPCF currently have 30 studies and 11 active trials:

• A new drug compound – which could be the 11th drug utilized to treat children

• Blood bio-marker study – which could be a prevention indicator for relapse patients

• A rare disease trial addressing “rhabdomyosarcoma”

• Multiple combined immunotherapy trials to include a potential vaccine

• NPCF has also authorized the “ rst-ever” education toolkit – provided to pediatric cancer families

• ey are also developing treatment guidelines for relapse patients

If shing is your passion, NPCF invites you to channel that enthusiasm toward a worthy cause. Join them at one of their tournaments, organize your own fundraising event, or take on their “43 Challenge” to honor the 43 children diagnosed

with cancer every day. You can easily start by using NPCF’s online fundraising tool, challenging 43 friends to sh, and encouraging them to donate $43.

e National Pediatric Cancer Foundation is proud to be a top-rated charity, with 89% of every dollar donated directly supporting research. To learn more, visit NationalPCF.org.

THE SABIKI: MVP OF THE TACKLE BOX

The month of April is when the real change comes around. For a number of reasons, April can be a game changer. Just for starters, we have made it out of the month of March and the “Gales of March.” !e temperatures will rise, the daylight hours will be longer, and the urge to spawn will get stronger for a lot of species.

!e pelagics will be on the march up the coast headed north, and I have taken a much di erent approach to shing in general, but especially for the pelagics. Sure, we may troll for a short period in the morning to mark some bait and/or productive bottom holding sh like African pompano, big snapper and grouper, but trolling will quickly stop and dri$ing and/ or %ying the kite will begin as the sun rises in the sky. As the title of the article suggests, we have either stopped on the way out or will start to work with the Sabiki right away.

!is is the key: when you have the live bait, you get the bites. Don’t hesitate to bring bait from the dock like pin sh, menhaden, etc. to use as light-line kite bait or bottom bait. Sometimes it’s just easier to pull up beside the bait barge and exchange some green for sardines, cigar minnows, goggle eyes, etc., so you can just get on with getting to where

you’re going and start shing right o the bat. When you nd a good mark of bait, and hopefully bottom structure, the stage is set. Put the kite %oats, tackle or freelines out and start sending the jigs to the mid or lower water

column, and even to the bottom. Of course, I like a natural looking squid jig you can cast to breaking sh that’s heavy enough to sh in the mid to lower water column or a few hundred feet deep when needed on the bottom. the

entire time you were harvesting sh on the jig pay attention to the free line or %oat baits and keep some chum going if possible. !is is a great way to bring the sh to you. !ey will de nitely come to the chum.

As always, I would pay attention to the amount of noise you make. Don’t let cooler lids slam down or hard objects hit the deck; this will send a soundwave hundreds of yards away from the boat telling the sh something isn’t right. If you’re dri$ing quietly with a chum slick out and beautiful live baits, you have a recipe for success!

!is is a great time of year to catch that African pompano of a lifetime in 150- to 250foot range as they are ready to break up into smaller schools for spawning. Again, I like a squid-type jig because it is the primary food source for the African pompano. It is the bulk of their diet according to the experts. And it’s not just African pompano; everything out there, without exception, eats a squid. !is is a great way to catch big snappers as well. Pull up to where the marks are, make a dri$ and repeat as o$en as needed. A trolling motor upfront can slow the dri$ nicely, keeping your boat forward in the wind with the kite bait or %oat, and baits behind the boat very manageable.

And be sure to keep an eye on the recorder to know where to keep the jig in front of sh.

For more info on the squid jig and dri ing, check out Tim Barefoot’s YouTube channel and website, barefootcatsandtackle.com.

1920s Style for a 1920s Price

It was a warm summer afternoon and my wife and I were mingling with the best of them. The occasion was a 1920s-themed party, and everyone was dressed to the nines. Parked on the manse’s circular driveway was a beautiful classic convertible. It was here that I got the idea for our new 1920s Retrograde Watch.

Never ones to miss an opportunity, we carefully steadied our glasses of bubbly and climbed into the car’s long front seat. Among the many opulent features on display was a series of dashboard dials that accentuated the car’s lavish aura. One of those dials inspired our 1920s Retrograde Watch, a genuinely unique timepiece that marries timeless style with modern technology.

With its remarkable retrograde hour and minute indicators, sunburst guilloche face and precision movement, this design is truly one of a kind. What does retrograde mean? Instead of displaying the hands rotating on an axis like most watches, the hands sweep in a semicircle, then return to their starting point and begin all over again.

Retrograde watches by the big brands can set you back thousands; one recent offering from a big French fashion house is selling for more than $150,000! But because we’ve designed the 1920s Retrograde Watch in-house, we can offer it to you for just $99!

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FISHING THE BLUEGILL CAPITAL OF THE WORLD

Most anglers think of Lake Okeechobee, Florida, and many other great shing lakes as a destination for largemouth bass. And they truly are. But for those in the know, “Lake O” boasts some of the greatest bluegill shing you’ll nd anywhere in the country.

!is is the time of the year—April and May—that bluegill anglers look forward to all year long. !is is when the feisty, hard- ghting pan sh begin their annual spawn. !eir popularity is unmatched with young and experienced anglers looking to test their light line and tackle.

While bluegill is a single species (Lepomis macrochirus), it is sometimes categorized into three subspecies: the northern bluegill, the coppernose

bluegill, and the southwestern bluegill.

To add to the confusion, redear sun sh and bluegills, both belonging to the sun sh family, are easily confused, but can be distinguished by the red or orange coloration around the redear’s operculum (gill %ap), while bluegills have a dark blue to black operculum. Redear sun sh typically grow larger than bluegills, but are o$en caught in the same area, as are coppernose bluegill.

Bluegills are so plentiful that many anglers come to Lake Okeechobee every year just for them and go home with coolers full of their tasty lets. !e daily limit is $y pan sh per angler, and that’s not a hard number to reach when the season is in full swing.

Bluegills can be caught year-round, but when they come into the shallows to spawn, they become a much easier target. Many anglers will test their skills with a %yrod and small popper, while others will use live bait, light line, and tackle—and even bamboo cane poles!

On average, bluegill typically range from six to eight inches in length, although some can grow up to 10 to 15 inches. Nine inches is considered a decent keeper in the “Big O.”

To rig for bluegill, use a small hook (size 8-10) with a light line, a small split shot a few inches above the hook, and a bobber set to suspend your bait near the bottom; commonly used live baits include small worms, waxworms, or crickets, and you can also try small jigs or tiny so$ plastic baits depending on the situation and water depth.

When it comes to the time of day that produces the best bluegill shing, many anglers recommend early evening. As the sun begins to set, waters tend to calm down and %ying insects quickly become a big part of the menu.

But during the spawn, bluegills can be caught all day long.

Finding the beds is relatively easy. Just look in shallow water, 5-foot deep or less for small circular divots in the sandy bottom. !ese “beds” will o$en be close together and will sometimes number in the hundreds.

!e world record bluegill—a sh weighing 4 pounds, 12 ounces— was caught in 1950 in Ketona Lake, Alabama with a cane pole and common worms.

Don Norton is Co-Publisher of Coastal Angler Magazine’s Okeechobee edition. Contact him at (863) 273-4998 or don@theanglermagazine.com.

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OTIPS FROM A PRO FROG FISHING FOR SPRINGTIME GIANTS

ne of my all time favorite times of year to fish with one of the most fun ways to catch a bass. The spawn and post spawn feed is here for most of us in the south and it won’t be long for many others in the other parts of the country. There is a plethora of ways to catch these bass, but my all time favorite for getting bit and drawing in a big one is a hollow body popping frog.

A popping frog can be used as an incredible search bait, duplicating many different baitfish depending on where you throw it and what color you tie on. There are many different options out there, but I try to duplicate the baitfish forage in the particular lake I am fishing on. Sometimes I will stick to a frog that may imitate a bluegill, and sometimes I throw a color that would imitate a shad. Finding a frog that pops well, has good colors, and a big hook is a few things that need to check the boxes for me. The Gambler popping frog is good and so is the Spro.

When I throw a frog as a search bait, I like to work it faster than most. Cover as much water as possible until you put a pattern together on what exactly the fish are focusing on. That’s the magic of a frog; you can literally throw it around everything! Docks, lay downs, grass and down banks are just a few of the targets I would look for. Once you locate a group of fish or find that right area that they are using you can slow down and pick them off a little slower. I have noticed sometimes there isn’t a “too fast” while working a popping frog.

A couple things that I look for this time of year are areas with active fish spawning, fry guarding bass, and also fish roaming the banks feeding on bluegill. This is something that is very predictable and an awesome way to catch big ones when you get around it. Typically, if you know of a few areas that the fish had previously spawned, these patterns will be occurring in the same areas. I throw a bluegill pattern popping frog because the bluegill will typically be a fish that chase their fry and a fish that drives them crazy this time of year.

Another pattern that you might want to keep your eyes out for is a shad spawn. This usually occurs in the mornings and in the evenings and can be a way to catch a bunch of fish in a hurry. We typically look for birds feeding on banks while running down the lake; you find the birds, you find the bait! A white popping frog or a baitfish color is typically my choice in this situation as a lot of times these fish are so keyed in on the baitfish that you’ll want to match the hatch.

A popping frog can work all year long, but this time of year I think it excels the greatest. It’s an incredible search bait that really drives these fish crazy, and who doesn’t like catching fish on a topwater with heavy line and a heavy rod? Grab a popping frog and go catch some big bass! Frog Fishing Gear: Typically when throwing a popping frog you will be around some heavy cover and need to have some big hooks to get through the fish’s mouth. This calls for a heavy rod, some big line and a fast-geared reel. I like to throw a 13 Fishing 7’4H Myth rod paired with a Concept A 8.3 reel spooled up with Sufix 832 50 lb. braid. This setup will allow you to get the fish out of the heavy cover and into the boat.

Tyler Woolcott is a professional tournament angler and guide. Check out his website at www.tylerwoolcottfishing.com.

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