Sebastian Area Inshore / Nearshore Fishing Forecast – June 2013

Dr. Kim Graziano and husband Matt Jehs pose with a 24-pound kingfish that placed in the money during last year’s Blue Water Open Tournament. Photo credit: Capt. Gus Brugger.
Dr. Kim Graziano and husband Matt Jehs pose with a 24-pound kingfish that placed in the money during last year’s Blue Water Open Tournament. Photo credit: Capt. Gus Brugger.

Summer brings several things that improve the fishing in the central lagoon area, some of which include stable weather, light winds and increased variety and numbers of baitfish. The light winds open new territory to small boat anglers (i.e. the ocean). This allows anglers a chance to pursue species that are out of their reach the rest of the year, as well as having better conditions to fish the inshore waters. Being able to get outside the inlet is going to be more important this summer than in those of the recent past.

Near-Shore Atlantic

I personally look forward to getting outside in the summer. The techniques are simple and the fish average larger than the biggest inshore specimens I catch the rest of the year. The summer time near-shore fishery is our best chance of the year to catch fish weighing out in the double and sometime triple digits. Large migrating tarpon, smoker kings, hard fighting little tunny, barracuda, brawling cobia, dolphin and even sailfish are possible within small boat range of the inlet. The methods I most often imply include; slow trolling live greenies and mullet, trolling large plugs, casting baits and lures to breaking and cruising fish and bottom fishing the shallow reefs.

Capt. Gus came to the Sebastian area in the mid 1980s and has been a full-time guide since 1992. You can reach Capt. Gus at (772) 589-0008 or by email. To learn more visit the Pattern Setter website.