
Whitebait is still around and works like magic, and a freelined live shrimp is a go-to bait. Cut bait like threadfins, pinfish and ladyfish will catch all of the inshore species except for the sheepshead. If you’re targeting sheepshead and snapper around the docks, rockpiles or bridges, live shrimp is a safe bet. Cut shrimp has its days, so always have a few dozen fresh dead on board–even if you don’t bring live. For the lure fisherman, it’s the peak time of year. They all will work–topwaters, jigs and spoons, subsurface, all of them.
As the tide comes in and scatters the fish, it’s a good time to check the inshore and near-shore rockpiles that are scattered throughout the Bay.
Gray snapper, mangroves, sheepshead and gags are stacked up on the structure, the shipping channel, and around most of the towers. Live pinfish and whitebait are best bets, as is cut threadfins and live or frozen shrimp.
Cobia are a welcome addition to the party and tripletail will be around the markers and buoys, too. The mackerel, both king and Spanish, will be around the bait schools. Look for the birds and the macks will be there. For Spanish, live whitebait and shrimp are a safe bet. Small silver spoons or Gotcha lures will provide steady action, too.
If targeting kingfish, slow trolling a live blue runner, sardine or ladyfish on a stinger rig is a proven technique. A spoon or diving plug trolled on a planer is also a tried and true method for the hard bait crowd. The areas around the skyway are top mackerel and kingfish grounds. Pocket Change Inshore Fishing Charters now has two boats to take you guys out to the fishing grounds. Call to book your trip and ask about the Coastal Angler Special
