Stay natural in off-colored or dirty water. There are some great secrets to catching redfish in dirty and muddy water. Just because you can’t see them doesn’t mean they’re not there! Bring the redfish to you. Conventional wisdom says, when the water is dirty, use brightly colored baits like chartreuse, orange or something disco neon, right? How many times have you seen a baitfish, shrimp, crab or anything else for that matter that a redfish eats in these colors? Stay with the most natural colored bait possible. I prefer olive green and natural amber. When water color changes, redfish food doesn’t so neither should you. In the Panhandle, water color changes are notorious after heavy rains. Instead of throwing on a chartreuse plastic or pink hard bait, stay natural but make adjustments. Here are a few secrets we use at Redfish University. We focus on the three S’s; Shake, Sound and Scent. Shake in the form of a small inline gold spinner. This will produce flash and vibration that can be seen and heard from a good distance. Sound in the form of plastic or glass worm rattle inserts. Even in the dirtiest water, these rattles can be used with the most natural shrimp, crab or plastic baits. Also, the use of a popping cork will provide sound and shake in muddy water conditions. I prefer the quality of Marsh Works Buzz Pop corks and have they are proven deadly. Lastly, scent in the form of Berkley Gulp! and other scented plastics. Once a redfish is attracted to your bait in dirty water with the used of sound and shake, the natural scent of the bait will usually close the deal. These are techniques that are tested and tweeked constantly at Redfish University. They will increase your catch rate in dirty water by an average of 35% in 2009 tests. While my clients use these tricks on trips, I often throw the “wrong” baits and I am out fished every single time. Try these tricks the next time the water is muddy or off-colored and you’ll be pleasantly surprised by the...
Read MorePretty grim day at Redfish University-November 5, 2009
Guided my friend John this morning over in Blackwater and East Bay. John is an accomplished billfish angler and quite an inshore angler as well. Well, I guess it’s bound to happen every once in a while. Today was the second worst Redfish University trip on the year. On trips, I like to fish as well to demonstrate retrieval techniques and to help locate fish. This was the first trip ever where I didn’t catch a single redfish!! We covered some normally very productive areas and started out with two quality trout. John, who caught all the redfish, followed with two very small redfish. From there, it was all downhill. Ended up traveling way south where John scratched up a few more small redfish and an undersized trout. Then he completed his Grand Slam with a decent flounder. Headed back north to cover some areas at dead-low tide and saw some average-sized redfish on muddy bottom where we had already thrown at five or six times. John stuck the biggest redfish of the day(around 23-24″) and it spit the hook at the boat. That is the way the morning went! The highlights of the day were: 1. A pretty pathetic Grand Slam. 2. Seeing a bald eagle grabbing mullet. 3. John being an absolute pleasure to fish with. All fish caught on Gulp! 5″ Jerkshads in camo rigged with Marsh Works 1/4 Bull Red jigheads with rattle inserts. Although John and I caught some fish as guaranteed, it really was a disappointing day. I invited John on a make-up, prefishing trip with me next week in either Panama City or here locally. Please pick Panama City, John!! Look for the next report to be off the hook! I remembered my camera this time but nothing exciting to photograph except the bald...
Read MoreQuick trip after cancellation-October 29, 2009
Had an emergency cancellation this morning at Redfish University, so I decided since I was already there, I’d might as well go fishing. My clients didn’t miss much and will be pleased that the fishing will be much better next week. Covered some water for a few hours and caught some decent fish but I really had to work for them. The fish were there(I know this because I could see them, smell them and see the puffs) but perhaps the neap tide had some influence on them although I never worry about fishing on neap tides. As demonstrated today, they will bite, you just have to make them bite. Ended up with 4 Redfish, some trout and another small striper all released and caught in a two hour period. All caught on Gulp! 3″ Shrimp rigged weedless with a rattle insert. Very, very, very, very slow taps, then almost...
Read MoreThe Redfish University Difference-October 26, 2009
Another way Redfish University separates itself and rises above the rest is through extensive preparation. Redfish University makes a huge effort to provide it’s clients with the best possible chance of catching excellent numbers of redfish. This means prefishing, and this Sunday and Monday were no exception. Weekly, these two days are designated to allow Redfish University to locate the largest numbers of redfish possible to insure its clients receive the highest quality experience possible. Redfish University is an instructional guide service and, for the most part, it’s curriculum will remain seasonally constant and will provide its clients with the absolute best knowledge and techniques available. The one variable that continues to change and, will forever be unpredictable, are wind, weather, tides, temperatures, etc. This is where Redfish University rises above the rest and places its clients on the most fish, everytime. The last few days of prefishing proved that there are decent concentrations of fish in very few places. Last week, I am very confident that the areas we covered were the most populated areas with the most cooperative fish. We know where we will be this week and we also know where we won’t be. These were productive days. See everyone soon. Eric...
Read MoreWindy and dirty but success at Redfish U.-October 22, 2009
Guided Mr. and Mrs. Barry James this morning and we were met with EXTREMELY windy and dirty water conditions. Rattle inserts and boat positioning were the name of the game in these very difficult, but not impossible, conditions. Started out with some nice legal trout(12-15) on some dropoffs and then targeted some redfish on some shallow water flats. Since we were fishing in whitecap conditions, the Power-Pole really came in handy as we methodically covered water that is known to hold redfish in any situation. Ended up sticking 10-12 small fish and kept one nice fish for the grill. All fish caught on Gulp! Jerkshads in camo with rattle inserts rigged with 1/4oz. Marsh Works Bull Red jigheads. 10# Ultracast InvisiBraid performs incredibly, especially in these conditions. Sensitivity and zero wind-knots!! Please click on photos to...
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