SUBSCRIBE NOW SUBSCRIBE NOW SUBSCRIBE NOW SUBSCRIBE NOW
Game & Fish
HUNTING | FISHING | STATE-BY-STATE | SPECIES | MARKETPLACE
 
advertisement
 
You Are Here:  Game & Fish >> Florida >> Fishing
 
RELATED STORIES
Sunshine State Snook Update
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission has recently enacted some new regulations for snook. Here's a look at why they are needed -- and some places to put them into practice this spring! (March 2008) ... [+] Full Article
>> Tactics for Deep- Water Ice-Fishing
>> Winter’s Best In The Sunshine State
>> Kissimmee Chain Christmas Bass
>> Targeting Late-Fall Reservoir Bass
>> Florida Game & Fish Home
 
 
OUR FAVORITES

Get A Grip On Frog-Lure Fishing!

[+] MORE
>> Top Fishing Lures For 2008
>> 5 Great Catfish Baits
>> Power Tactics For Papermouths
>> Flashers & Flies Fit For Kings
 
RELATED HUNTING
North American Whitetail
North American Whitetail
A magazine designed for the serious trophy-deer hunter. [+] See It
>> Petersen's Hunting
>> Petersen's Bowhunting
>> Wildfowl
>> Gun Dog
 
RELATED FISHING
Shallow Water Angler
Shallow Water Angler
The nation's only publication dedicated to inshore fishing, covering waters from Texas to Maine. [+] See It
>> In-Fisherman
>> Florida Sportsman
>> Fly Fisherman
>> Game & Fish
>> Walleye In-Sider
 
RELATED SHOOTING
Guns & Ammo
Guns & Ammo
The preeminent firearms magazine: Hunting, shooting, cowboy action, reviews, technical material and more. [+] See It
>> Shooting Times
>> RifleShooter
>> Handguns
>> Shotgun News
Florida Game & Fish
A Full Year of Florida Angling
From Pensacola to Jacksonville and south to Miami, the Sunshine State is loaded with great fishing destinations. Here's a look at 36 of the best for this year.

By Rod Hunter

There isn't another state in the country (or even another country, for that matter) that offers the year-round mix of angling that Floridians enjoy, but tapping into the various species at their peak times and locations does call for a bit of planning. The Sunshine State doesn't really have "fishing seasons," but there is no doubt that some species respond best at certain times of the year, and this is doubly true of the numerous saltwater species that migrate up and down the coast. Check out the Florida Game & Fish picks for this year and you won't have to hear "You should have been here last week."

JANUARY
Kissimmee Chain
Largemouth Bass
After a false alarm last winter, the eagerly anticipated drawdown of the Kissimmee Chain is scheduled for this year. By the time January rolls around, the water levels should be within a few feet of the low pool, and bass will be in a strong pre-spawn mode. Low water concentrates those fish and gives anglers their best chance of finding them

Water will still be dropping during the spawn, which pushes bass to the deeper edges of hydrilla beds in 3 to 5 feet of water. Some spawn there and others feed there, but the hydrilla edges hosts much of the bass activity January offers.


continue article
 
 

Weedless soft-plastic baits, such as Texas-rigged plastic worms, tube lures and soft-plastic jerkbaits, account for the majority of bass, but anglers shouldn't overlook spinnerbaits and small topwater lures during dim-light periods.

Alternatives
Suwannee River fishermen find big trout stacked up in the deeper holes, especially on the outside bends, and along rock ledges. Plastic-bodied jigs and suspending hard-plastic jerkbaits are favorites with local anglers.

Tarpon are feeding in Key West Harbor. Find the mullet schools and you find the silver kings. Live mullet and large plastic-bodied swimming jigs can be deadly.

Photo by Ron Sinfelt

FEBRUARY
Rodman Reservoir
Largemouth Bass
The spawn should be in full swing by midmonth, and after last year's drawdown, which dried out many areas of shoreline muck, anglers may need to seek bedding fish shallower than in years past.

Look for concentrations of both spawning and pre-spawn bass along the southern shoreline from the dam to Blue Springs; along with the Orange Springs area; and on the eastern side of the Deep Creek flats.

Weedless tube jigs are ideal for enticing bedding fish, while plastic worms, lipless crankbaits, small spinnerbaits and jerkbaits can be deadly early and late in the day as fish move to and from the spawning sites.

Alternatives
Lake Woodruff should be producing a bumper crop of speckled perch this month. Pint-sized tube jigs and Beetle Spin-type lures worked around deeper lily pad beds will find the specks.

Look for big trout to be leaving the Cocoa Beach canals to soak up some sun on the shallow grass flats near the mouths of the canals. Warm, overcast afternoons are excellent times to find the fish around white holes and mangrove shorelines, where jigs, jerkbaits and live bait can produce.

MARCH
St. Johns River
Largemouth Bass
Lake George gets a lot of publicity. But during March, better bassin' often happens on the St. Johns River to the north of the big lake, in the area from Fruitland to Buffalo Bluff.

On an outgoing tide, look for feeding bass on the outside edges of eelgrass beds along the main-river channel, especially early and late in the day. Plastic worms, spinnerbaits, weedless spoons and jerkbaits are very effective. On a rising tide, check the inside edges of the grass patches for bass beds and pay particular attention to any downed wood along the shoreline in low-current areas.

Should that fail to produce, don't overlook any canals. Bass use them heavily for spawning in this section of the river.

Alternatives
Striped bass invade the Oklawaha River below Rodman Dam this month, and trolling chrome minnow lures with a blue or black back is a highly effective technique for catching them.

This month will see the heaviest bonefish of the year in Biscayne Bay. Check the flats on a rising tide.

APRIL
Banana River
Redfish
Warming waters send schools of oversized redfish to the shallow grass flats to feed, and they remain there much of the day in April. Local experts idle along the edges of the channels watching for the characteristic "push" made by a school of moving reds and then move ahead to intercept them.

Spoons, plastic grubs on jigs, and jerkbaits can prove effective, but if angling pressure is heavy and the reds don't respond to artificials, drop a live finger mullet or half a blue crab in front of them, and hang on. Fish in the 20- to 40-pound range are common.

Alternatives
Shellcrackers start to bed on Lake George in April. Look for the first spawning fish around the west-shore spring mouths.

Big trout are stirring in the Jacksonville area. Check the mouths of tidal creeks on the falling tide.

MAY
St. Augustine Inlet
Trout
Some of the biggest trout in northeast Florida are found in the Intracoastal Waterway (ICW) within two miles of the St. Augustine Inlet this month as they follow the annual pogy migration.

On a rising tide, look for the trout around rock jetties and spartina grass lines close to deeper water. In the ebb, check deeper dock pilings and any spot where an oyster edge abuts a deep-water drop. Live mullet are deadly if you can find them, but plastic jigs, big topwater plugs and hard-plastic jerkbaits also produce trout over 7 pounds.

Alternatives
Port Charlotte anglers find big trout along mangrove shorelines near deeper channel dropoffs. Tossing topwater plugs during the morning hours is an exiting and productive tactic.

Lake Seminole bass are stacked up on the outside edges of hydrilla beds and can provide exciting topwater action during the morning hours.

JUNE
Lake Istokpoga
Largemouth Bass
Bass on this lake are fully finished with the post-spawn and have dropped back to deeper water where they concentrate near offshore hydrilla beds. Get out early, find the weedbeds hosting bass activity (you can see the fish feed), and stay in that area throughout the day.

Lipless crankbaits and topwater plugs are deadly early, while plastic worms and live shiners pull additional fish from the vegetation during the midday hours. Savvy anglers also keep a stout flipping rod handy and probe any small patches of surface-crowned hydrilla along the deepwater edge. Big bass are often lazing underneath this surface vegetation.

Alternatives
Tarpon are cruising the edges of the ocean-side flats in the Middle Keys. They can be taken on flies or soft-plastic jigs, with those having some orange in the color scheme the most effective.

Flounder are flooding the St. Augustine Inlet this month. Docks are prime hangouts, but don't overlook the edges of exposed oyster beds on the dead low tide.


page: 1 | 2
 
QUICK NAVIGATION
 
 


 

OUTDOOR OFFERS

 
OUR NETWORK: IMOUTDOORS WEBSITES
[Featured Title]
Shallow Water Angler  
Shallow Water Angler
The nation's only publication devoted to inshore fishing, covering waters from Texas to Maine.
 *See the Site
*Subscribe to the magazine
[Features From Shallow Water Angler]
>> Complete the Illusion
>> Make It a Mondo Mullet
>> Solitude & Shallows - Chandeleur Island
>> South Carolina Creates Second Inshore Reef
* Subscribe to the Shallow Water Angler
[All Titles]
 >> CONTACT>> ADVERTISE>> MEDIA KIT>> JOBS>> SUBSCRIBER SERVICES>> GIVE A GIFT