Saltwater Sportsman

GET INSIDE!

SWITCH UP YOUR SUMMER REDFISH STRATEGY FOR FALL CONDITIONS

- BY SID DOBRIN

“Right here.” My buddy’s words were laden with frustratio­n and confusion. He gestured with his rod in one hand and his empty other hand to the flats surroundin­g us.

“Right here. I’m telling you that for the last three months we’ve found reds right here, and now, nothing.”

For several hours of a day that was no longer summer and not yet fall, we had worked the same flats that had produced so many redfish the previous few months. Now the single bulls and small schools we were accustomed to seeing patrol the skinny water were noticeably absent.

Clearly, fall was headed our way, and those late-summer reds were already taking up early autumn patterns. We’d need to adjust. I cranked the motor and pointed the bow toward the shore. “Where we going?” my buddy asked. “We’re going inside,” I replied.

COOLER WATER

Every place where redfish prowl, when autumn temperatur­es push water temperatur­es down to the mid- to low 70s, redfish push off the flats where they’d spent warmer days to find deeper, protected water, often adjacent to river and creek mouths, channels, deep cuts and points.

Generally, during the warmer summer months, reds will take to the flats to forage as big loners, in pairs or triples, or in schools of smaller fish. But when they move inside as the water cools, they congregate in more confined areas in anticipati­on of impending spawning, looking for warmer water in deeper holes.

With more fish in a smaller area, you can anticipate patterns in their behavior. Reds congregate around inshore cuts and ledges, letting the tidal flow bring food to them rather than having to search for it.

Shorelines and ledges of channels and bars work to funnel forage, like shrimp, crabs, mullet and mud minnows, into confined feeding areas that draw redfish.

Fall fish will be more apt to be on the inside of structure, unwilling to venture into shallower, colder water.

Tidal flow through cuts and channels often washes out deeper holes along the contours of ledges and shorelines. These deeper depression­s provide reds with warmer waters rather than the cooling waters of the surroundin­g flats. Thus, locating holes and basins will regularly turn up congregati­ng reds.

Strategica­lly, target your fall redfishing as close to shore as necessary. As water temperatur­es drop, push inside even farther, tracking reds into the creeks, rivers and channels that push into the backcountr­y.

Redfish diets change as the water cools. Lower temperatur­es slow their metabolism. Fish hiding in warmer holes burn more energy than those in colder water, thus they need to eat more than fish in shallower, colder water. So, when looking for reds, locating warm currents and deeper holes increases the likelihood of finding fish and finding those fish with healthy appetites.

AUTUMN JITTERS

When redfish school up as they do in the cooler months, they can also be much more easily spooked than warmwater reds. For whatever reason, larger schools of reds tend to be jittery.

When you locate fall schools, cast around the perimeter of the school. Casts that splash the center of the school or pull lures and baits through the middle of the school tend to spook them.

A hooked red that crashes through a school also spooks the rest before you get a chance for additional hookups. Working the edges of the school increases the odds of leading a hooked fish away from the school.

SWITCH BAITS

As redfish move inshore, the baits they feed on may also change. Learning which baits move on the fall tides helps you match the lure

to the natural forage.

You can also make assumption­s about baits relative to the proximity to shore. It is likely that redfish will feed more frequently on mud crabs during the fall because mud crabs reside on oyster bars. Similarly, mud minnows will be more plentiful in fall waters than on the summer flats. Shrimp too congregate along estuarine edges during winter months before spring migrations.

Ultimately, when reds take up occupancy in inshore holes, the best bet is ladyfish chunks, with cut mullet coming in second. While ladyfish are abundant along the flats in the summer, like the redfish, when things cool off, they leave the flats for warmer climes. Finding a ladyfish can be tough in the fall. In anticipati­on, save a few ladies and chunk and freeze them when they are plentiful. A few dozen cut ladyfish baits from the freezer can really push a fall redfish trip to amazing success.

Because reds will be holed up in deeper water, add a split shot to your baits to get them to the fish.

ARTIE TIME

Fall reds also hit artificial­s. Pitching search baits helps you locate reds in holes. Slow-sinking and deeper suspending baits are excellent for locating fish. Lures like Unfair Lures’ Arrowhead, Mirrolure’s Mirrodine, Yo-zuri’s 3D Inshore Twitchbait, and Bagley’s Rattlin’ B make great fall search baits.

While paddle tails rigged with jig heads are going to be your best bet, rigging with hybrid jig heads, like Tti-blakemore’s Road Runner heads, adds a spinner blade to the jig head for greater visibility.

Darker colors, like root beer, gold, blacks and blues, will be effective in the fall. D.O.A. shad tails offer dozens of color possibilit­ies and great action, as do Unfair Lures’ Smack softbaits and Egret Baits’ Vudu Vixen bodies and Bayou Chubs. I’m also a fan of Bass Assassin’s Salty Snack, rigged with a weighted wide-gap hook.

The benefit of fishing soft bodies is that you can adjust the weight of the jig heads to reach the depths you’ll need for redfish while also having a near-endless array of colors and styles to choose from. Likewise, the soft plastic tends to make less of a splash on the cast, reducing the risk of spooking skittish fish. For anglers devoted to artificial­s, fall reds demand soft plastics.

RIGHT HERE

I steered the boat into the oyster-bar-encrusted mouth of a small creek and set the anchor as the tide swung around, pushing water into the creek. A few casts later, we had the first of a dozen reds we’d catch over the next hour, including a 27-incher with three spots on the tail and a deep ambercolor­ed back.

“Right here,” my buddy proclaimed, gesturing with his arms at the shoreline around us. “Right here. I’m not leaving right here until it’s too cold to fish.”

SLOW-SINKING AND DEEPER SUSPENDING BAITS ARE EXCELLENT FOR LOCATING FISH.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? WINTER RETREAT: When the weather cools, redfish move into sheltered inshore waters.
WINTER RETREAT: When the weather cools, redfish move into sheltered inshore waters.
 ??  ?? The Egret Baits Bayou Chub maintains great action when fished slowly in deep and shallow water. HIGH AND LOW: Deeper basins offer warmer waters and aggregate big redfish when the weather turns chilly.
The Egret Baits Bayou Chub maintains great action when fished slowly in deep and shallow water. HIGH AND LOW: Deeper basins offer warmer waters and aggregate big redfish when the weather turns chilly.
 ??  ?? WINTER LIGHT: Fewer hours of daylight and lower temperatur­es keep anglers nearshore, where reds congregate.
WINTER LIGHT: Fewer hours of daylight and lower temperatur­es keep anglers nearshore, where reds congregate.

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