Scott’s Fishing Report — February 6, 2012

Inshore:

Can anyone else believe that here we are in the first week of Feb and we have water temps pushing the upper 50′s in the afternoons right now? Crazy, but welcomed! Though the redfish are probably a little confused as to what time of the year it actually ia right now, it has not slowed down their feeding habits at all. Have had several reports in this week of anglers finding schools of reds numbering in the hundreds, and the fish were feeding as well. Some anglers were producing 25-35 nice reds in only a couple hours. The larger schools are still being found around low tide on the shallow mud flats, and when working these mud flats look for areas of the flat that have a few oyster points mixed in…this is typically where the reds will stage up. Throw live minnows, shrimp, or a chunk of blue crab if you like to fish natural baits.If you like to throw artificials, throw a ZMAN ultra shrimp or Gulp swimming mullet. I know this sounds like a broken record lately, but the sheepshead bite is still going well on fiddler crabs and live shrimp fished around heavy structure in 8-15ft of water as well as the Charleston Harbor jetties. Have also heard several encouraging reports this week of anglers finding a fair number of trout here and there in 6-12ft of water Try free-lining a DOA shrimp with a rattle in it, hard to beat this technique and bait when the trout get a little sluggish during the cooler months.

 

Offshore:

While most of the offshore anglers are spending most of their free time getting all their equipment ready for spring right now, a handful of boats have slipped out in the last week during some good weather. Reports of good numbers of blackfin were coming in from the south (southern edisto banks, deli, etc), with many of these tuna being caught jigging butterfly jigs after marking the fish down deep along the ledge. Even had a gentleman in yesterday that was saying he got into a fantastic topwater blackfin blitz during the late afternoon just a few days ago around the northern end of the Deli. Did not hear of any real consistent wahoo bite, though there were a few caught from 140-300ft of water, most of which were in 30-45 pound range Sheepshead reports from the nearshore reefs seemingly slowed the past week and half, with most of the anglers who ventured out to the reefs saying they could not get a bait past the black sea bass long enough for a sheepshead to be able to take it. My recommendation if looking to fish one of our many artificial reefs would be to target the shallower reefs right now until we get a little closer to March, meaning the reefs in 25-35ft of water. You should be less likely to get over-run by sea bass on these shallower reefs, and there should be good numbers of black drum and sheepshead ready to take a fiddler or live shrimp at these type reefs.

Scott Hammond
Manager – Haddrell’s Point
843-573-3474

Scott’s Fishing Report — January 24, 2012

Inshore:

Definately not trying to jinx us here in the lowcountry, but I just don’t think we could ask for much prettier weather for January than what we have been experiecing! Best part is that the fishing has matched the great weather. Large schools of reds have been all over the shallow water flats, and with water clarity extremely good right now, the sight fishing just could not get a much better for redfish. Smokey Shad ZMAN PaddlerZ and the GULP jerkshad in black bass color have been the hottest baits going right now for us. Not into throwing artificials? Set up with some cut mullet on the same type shallow flat near a good oyster point and hang on. Sheepshead fishing still continues to produce a LOT of double digit fish, with almost all of the larger ones coming from our inshore waters. Heavy structure in 8-20ft of water should be your best bet for tangling into some convicts, and fiddler crabs are still the bait of choice. As a little bit of a side note, I did get a solid report from the jetties the other day where one of our good customers was catching good numbers of black drum on cut shrimp at the end of the jetties where the rocks become submerged leading into the ocean. A falling tide is going to be your best time to target these drum at the points of the jetties, and take a few mud minnows with you as well as there are still some medium sized redfish hanging around in this area as well.

michael johnson reds 01 e1327441069392 Scotts Fishing Report    January 24, 2012

HPTWA employee Michael Johnson slipped out late one evening by himself and got into a nice school of reds before the sun went down. Well done Mikey!

Offshore:

A couple of boats slipped out last week and did a little winter trolling for wahoo, and while there were no big numbers of fish to report, there were a few very nice sized wahoo caught in the 40-60lb range. Just outside the ledge in 200-350ft of water is where they were holding last week. Though not officially an “offshore” report, our closer artificial reefs (lowcountry angler reef, north edisto nearshore,charleston nearshore, etc) have been producing a lot of small to medium sized sheepshead and some black drum in the 14-24″ range. Fiddlers again are the bait of choice, but don’t hesitate to drop some live shrimp down as well on a standard type carolina rig.

Scott Hammond
Manager – Haddrell’s Point
843-573-3474