schedule
body_top
 

Article


  • Stand up Specks
  •  
  • Sunday, June 22, 2008
    By JEFF DUTE
  •  
  • New jig presentation has proven very effective on Mobile Bay specks, even during hot weather

    There was another boat sitting in the spot on the Mobile Bay rig where Yano Serra wanted to anchor at daylight Friday morning, so the local inshore guide decided to fish a different corner of the rig. 

    While the fishermen on the other boats could be seen hooking live shrimp at the terminal end of their slip-cork rigs, Serra didn't have any live bait on the boat on purpose.

    His plan was to work the rig with an artificial-bait fishing system bass fishermen have used successfully for the past five years or so, one he was refining for use on speckled trout.

    Before the morning was very old, no less than nine other boatloads of fishermen were on the same rig. While the post-full moon period had slowed down the bite, Serra used his hand-poured stand-up jig to outfish them all.

    Birth of an idea

    Serra, who lives in Coden and has fished the Dauphin Island area for nearly all of his 41 years, said he first got the idea for making the stand-up jig from his friend Robert Robinson, a professional bass fisherman from Mobile, who showed him a shaky-head jig about two years ago.

    "I thought it'd work for trout because it keeps the bait up off the bottom," Serra said.

    Serra said he realized keeping an artificial bait off the bottom might be a benefit after watching finger mullet feed in his wife's grandfather's saltwater aquarium.

    "When that finger mullet feeds, he's got his head down and he's moving along at about a 60-degree angle nosing along the bottom," he said. "I just thought if I could ever get a jig like that it would work well because trout wouldn't have to stick their nose in the mud to eat it."

    The idea was always in the back of his head and he even experimented with existing jigs to try to get what he wanted, but nothing satisfied him. He also has a full-time job as a crew-boat captain and the 14-days-on, 7-days-off schedule limited the time he could develop the jig.

    Serra said it wasn't until about four months ago, while reading a story about walleye fishing, that he saw a jig he thought would fit his needs.

    After several days of Internet research, Serra found a company that sold the lead molds to make the kind of jig he'd seen in the magazine.

    After that, it was just a matter of buying the right hooks, pouring a few jigs and going fishing.

    Testing for success

    "I swear the very first cast I made out at one of the rigs, I had a Deadly Dudley bay anchovy plastic on it and I caught a trout," Serra said. "I thought, 'Well, that could have been a fluke,' so I flipped it back in there and caught another one."

    I've been catching them on it ever since, and it hasn't slowed with the hot weather either."

    Serra said on many of his early testing trips he would fish a traditional jig in the same areas as the stand-up and the latter always produced more and bigger fish.

    He believes there are a couple of other reasons why it seems to out-catch standard jigs, other than the fact it keeps the bait off the bottom.

    "I can work this jig with a faster action that really gets that tail working in a side-to-side motion and I feel that's what entices a strike," he said. "With that flat bottom, it acts like a planner so this bait glides down more on the cast or when it's worked rather than just falling straight down.

    "I think that's why probably 90 percent of the strikes I get on it are on the fall."

    A salty shake

    Working the stand-up jig is different than working a standard jig, Serra said, with the idea being to shake it more than hop it to impart the life-like effect on the plastic.

    "I like to use the bigger 6- or 7-inch twitch baits like Sluggos or Deadly Dudleys because you can really get a good action with the longer, narrower tails," he said."I'm still experimenting with baits and which ones work best and catch the most fish."

    Another effective plastic Serra has used on his jig with success is a DOA. He removes the stock hook and simply slides it onto the jig head.

    After casting, Serra allows the jig to hit bottom, then reel up the slack to see if a fish has hit it on the fall. On starting the retrieve, he twitches his rod hard six or seven times, then lets the bait fall back to the bottom on a slack line. Reeling in the slack, he allows the jig to ease along the bottom with the current for a few seconds before working it again.

    "I'm used to it now, but when I first started fishing it I imagined what I wanted the bait to be doing, then working the rod to make it do it," he said. "The main thing is you want it to root the bottom."

    Serra said he prefers casting the bait across the current or slightly upcurrent.

    "A lot of times, I'll shake it on the way down and a fish will hit it before it reaches bottom," he said.

    Because current pulls the line faster than the bait, Serra contends the tension of the line pulling the jig downcurrent keeps it upright.

    "A lot of times, current will cause a standard jig to tumble as it drifts. With my jig, I believe that line tension keeps it upright, so it actually works better in current."

    He prefers to use a heavy-action rod because he believes he can get the bait farther off bottom and give more action to the bait with each rapid twitch of the rod.

    The jig heads can be dyed any color, but Serra said he has found the unpainted heads work best.

    The final tally

    Serra and his guest didn't slay the specks with his jig on Friday, but combined they landed more fish than were seen caught in two hours of fishing.

    Serra brought home four nice specks, including two weighing more than 5 pounds that couldn't be revived despite repeated efforts, and two solid 3-pounders.

    None of the other fish seen caught were anywhere close to that quality. Two smaller specks and a white trout were released. Serra said he has also caught several flounder on the jig.

    "These fish get pressured all year long out here and they get used to seeing the same old things thrown at them," he said. "Not everything that is different will work on them, but this has."

    The jigs are available at Jemison's at the Heron Bay Cutoff on the way to Dauphin Island or can be ordered at www.specktacklelure.com.

    Article Written By Jeff Dute 
    Source: al.com
    © 2008 Press-Register
    © 2008 al.com All Rights Reserved.

  •  


  • Even in 'dead time' of March, inshore fishermen can keep getting bites with right approach
  •  
  • Sunday, February 27, 2011
    By JEFF DUTE
  •  
  • MOBILE, Alabama -- March can be -- and often is -- a tough month for inshore fishermen across the Gulf Coast.

    With weather and water transitioning from the dead of winter to spring, it's hard to develop any kind of consistent fishing patterns like those that should be in place once April arrives.

    Several veteran inshore anglers said, however, there are a couple of things going on to help skinny-water fishermen get over cabin fever if they just have to feel a tug at the end of the line.

    PERDIDO PASS JETTIES

    Johnny Fassbender has probably forgotten more in his 70 years of fishing around Mobile Bay than most folks will ever know.

    Just in the past couple of years, though, he's rediscovered the fine early season fishing that can be found around the Perdido Pass jetties at Orange Beach during what he considers an otherwise "dead time" for inshore fishing.

    "It's been so windy the past couple of years in March that my brother Donnie and I decided to go down there and see if we could catch a few sheepshead during a (fishing) club tournament," Fassbender said. "Besides sheepshead, we caught flounder and a few speckled trout. One of our specks even placed in the tournament last year."

    Fassbender and his brother caught sheepshead and specks along the west jetty by casting live shrimp on split-shot rigs on the channel side of the pass. Flounder were lining the bottom in shallower water close to the rocks on the beach side.

    "We tried using corks and floating a shrimp along the rock, but we actually caught more fish just using a small split shot and letting the shrimp swim around," he said.

    Fassbender believes the jetties are some of the first places fish get active because the sun heats up the rocks and that heat is transferred to the water.

    "Get a good lively shrimp and let him swim around the rocks, and there's no telling what you'll catch," he said.

    RIG MAGIC

    Fish also seem to gravitate to the rigs just off the coast and into lower Mobile Bay as spring approaches.

    Right now, Fassbender said many of them in water as deep as 50 feet in the Gulf of Mexico should be loading up with spawning sheepshead.

    "The rigs are the key for sheepshead at this time of year, but you can also catch ground mullet, white trout and redfish -- a lot of redfish," he said.

    Fassbender has had his best days in February and March while fishing the offshore rigs, but said the rigs in the lower part of the bay should also be holding a bunch of fish now that the water temperature is rising.

    "After the water temperature gets above 70 degrees, all kinds of fish are going to be coming into shallower water, but right now fishing in that deeper water is going to be more consistent," he said. "The deeper water takes longer to warm, but the temperature doesn't fluctuate as much between the warm days and cold nights, and the fish get used to it."

    Fassbender added, however, that even the deep-water bite can shut down overnight.

    "I've seen it, and a lot of guys talk about how you can catch them one after the other one day, then you don't catch nothing the next. With the fronts we still have coming through in March, you just never know from day to day," he said.

    GO WEST, YOUNG MAN

    Local guide Scott Jordan said if he has to go fishing in March, he heads west to the shallow bays on the Mississippi Sound's north shore.

    "Those bays are shallower, so they warm up earlier and they have major bayous or creeks feeding into them," he said. "Specks and redfish that have spent the winter in those creeks and bayous are transitioning out of those places and hitting the bays at about the same time bait is moving back into them. One of my favorite places to fish at this time of year is the mouth of Little River and all of the oyster beds out there."

    One of the biggest mistakes fishermen make while fishing shallow early is wasting too much time fishing unproductive water.

    "I see a lot of guys just anchored up on points and waiting on fish to swim by," Jordan said. "I like to get on the trolling motor and work real quickly. I try to cover as much water as I can, then when I get a bite, I go back and work the area. If you get a bite, you know you have fish there."

    Jordan said a live shrimp under a popping cork is hard to beat when worked through the water that averages 2 to 3 feet. In some places, he said the fish are knocking bait out of the water and onto the bank.

    Another factor Jordan looks for is a strong incoming tide.

    "Those big tides we'll start getting, especially toward the end of the month, push the bait up on the beach and those fish are right there," he said. "Even if we get a cold front and the water cools off a little, all it takes is two, three, maybe four days for that water to heat up again and those fish will bite."

    If the Mississippi Sound's northern banks are Jordan's favorite spots to fish shallow in March, oyster piles and reefs east of the mouth of West Fowl River are special spots for fellow inshore guide Yano Serra.

    "The reefs east of Coffee Island should be loading up with speckled trout right now," he said. "I also like to fish the islands -- Little Lady, Cat and Marsh islands. I like to fish those islands just as a high tide starts falling and concentrate anywhere there's a little creek coming out of the island. The bait is coming out of those creeks when the tide's falling. I've caught boatloads of specks, redfish and flounder, sometimes from the same creek mouth."

    Serra cautioned fishermen that the entire area he's talking about is very shallow, with some of the oyster mounds just under the surface depending on the tide.

    "I wouldn't recommend just running around out there wide open, especially in a big boat," he said. "You could tear something up if you don't watch it."

    Article Written By Jeff Dute 
    Source: al.com
    © 2008 Press-Register
    © 2008 al.com All Rights Reserved.

  •  


 

postbox