Redfish Slot Limit Louisiana

Posted By admin On 03/08/22
  1. Redfish Slot Limit Louisiana
  2. Redfish Slot Limit Louisiana City
  3. Redfish Slot Limit Louisiana Rules
  4. Redfish Slot Limit Louisiana Fishing

Most people don’t believe it until they see it and once they see it, their first words are usually, “Unbelievable!”

Redfish slot limit louisiana casino

I’m talking about the huge fishing areas of South Louisiana. From the east side of the Mississippi River around Hopedale to Calcasieu Lake south of Lake Charles Louisiana, there are literally thousands and thousands of saltwater lakes, creeks, ponds and canals and most hold fish the year round. Louisiana has the most liberal daily limits in the country – 5 Redfish and 25 Trout per person per day. The slot limit for Redfish is 16 to 26 inches and you can keep one over 26 inches for a trophy. Speckled trout have to be at least 12 inches and have no upper size limit.

Because the area is so big, I recommend that on your first trip to the marsh you use a local guide. The average water depth across the marsh is 4 feet, with some lakes as shallow as 2 feet. It’s easy to get lost, stuck or damage your boat, so choose someone with local knowledge to help you get started. Your friends at Mark’s Outdoors can help you with the rods, reels and tackle that you will need to have a successful trip.

Size Limit: Bag & Possession Limit: Cobia (Ling or Lemonfish) 33” min fork length. 2 daily per person. 16” min total length. 27” max total length. Black Drum: 5 daily per person – bag. No more than one over 27” max total length. Red Drum (Redfish)1: 5 daily per person – bag2. No more than one over 27” max. Redfish - slot limit 16”-27” and bag limit 5 / Speckled Trout - minimum length 12” and bag limit 25 / Flounder - no size limit, bag limit 10 / Black Drum - slot limit 16”-27” and bag limit 5.

Redfish have four very distinct feeding and migration patterns; trout have two. The very best time of year for both fish is April through June. That’s the time of year that the water in the Gulf of Mexico warms and the brown shrimp start to move into the shallow waters to spawn. The trout and the redfish follow them in and it’s an absolute feeding frenzy! You can see trout and redfish chasing the shrimp to the surface and smashing into them! Any topwater bait will work that splashes or rattles, and the bigger the lure, the bigger the fish! If you have a passion for fly fishing, this is also your best time of year.
The second pattern is mid-to-late summer (June to August) for redfish, and to me is the most exciting. As the south winds from the Gulf blow stronger, the water temperature and the water level rise. The redfish move into the shallow water “duck ponds” and you can see them “tailing” and sight cast to them. The best baits at this time of year are a 1/4-ounce Johnson gold spoon, 1/4 jig heads with purple or white cocahoe minnows or a white Zara Spook. To me, there is nothing more exciting than to see a 4- to 6-pound redfish cruising along the bank where you can throw a gold spoon out in front of him and then watch him explode when you set the hook! People ask me all the time what the main difference is between fishing for reds and bass fishing. “Well I tell ya! I love my bass fishing, but the main difference is, these redfish pull back!”

The third pattern, early and late fall (September to November) for both redfish and trout is unique because both fish tend to “school up” in open water. Much like striper fishing, it is not uncommon at this time of year to catch 75 to l00 trout and never move your boat! The redfish will also school up, but tend to travel, popping up to feed, then moving a half a mile away from where you saw them. This time of year we “fish the birds.” When sea gulls spot shrimp close to the surface, they start diving. Then it’s usually not long before the trout and reds move in. For the trout we use a 1/4 ounce jig head and split tail sparkle beetle tied under a popping cork. The popping cork imitates the noise that a shrimp makes when scoots across the surface. For schooling reds we almost always use gold spoons, primarily because of the distance that they can be thrown.

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I said almost, because for those of you that love the thrill of a topwater explosion, this is your time of year! Throw any top-water bait into schooling reds and they will fight each other to get it. It is not uncommon to see a fish with a topwater lure in its mouth and another trying to get it out as you reel it closer to the boat. This is not for the weak of heart!
The fourth pattern, winter (December to March) redfishing is one of the hardest, but can be one of the most rewarding, too. Leave all the lures at home, break out the Carolina rigs, Texas rigs and the popping corks. Don’t leave the dock with out several pounds of dead shrimp or live minnows. I know how some people feel about bait fishing, but when nothing else works, I want to catch fish! As the water cools, the fish on the Louisiana coast bunch up and find deep-water canals or deep holes.
When I say deep I’m only talking about 6- to 8-feet of water. That’s deep considering that all year these fish stay in less than 4 feet of water. At this time of year we fish “slooooww.” Once you find them, reds or specks, they will usually stay in that area all winter.
We are blessed with one of the most healthy estuaries in the world. We have an abundance of fish and other wildlife. You don’t have to be an expert or always have just the right conditions to catch fish. That’s why in south Louisiana we say, “we don’t go fishin’, we go catchin!” There is one last thing that I have not talked about and that’s the beauty of a south Louisiana marsh, when the sun is breaking over the horizon and the clean fresh smell of the saltwater fills the air.

There is endless marsh grass and always the anticipation of what’s around the next bend. Some people say it’s unbelievable, I guess you’ll just have to come see it for yourself.

Literature Cited

Redfish Slot Limit Louisiana

ASMFC. 2002. Amendment 2 to the interstate fishery management plan for red drum. Fishery Management Report No. 38, Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission, Washington D.C. 142 pp.

Fischer W. 1978. FAO identification sheets for fisheries purposes: western central Atlantic (fishing area 31) volume 1 – 7. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome.

Goldstein RJ. 2000. Coastal fishing in the Carolinas: from surf, pier, and jetty. John F. Blair Publisher, Winston-Salem, NC. 243 pp.

Mercer LP. 1984. A biological and fisheries profile of red drum, Sciaenops ocellatus. Department of Natural Resources and Community Development, Division of Marine Fisheries, Morehead City, NC. 89 pp.

Moore CJ. 1996. A field guide to the identification of marine species regulated in South Carolina coastal waters. Office of Fisheries Management, Marine Resources Division, South Carolina Wildlife and Marine Resources Department, Charleston, SC. 105 pp.

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Redfish Slot Limit Louisiana City

Moore CJ, M Barkley. 2005. South Carolina's guide to saltwater fishes. South Carolina Department of Natural Resources, Special Publication. Columbia, SC. 132 pp.

Redfish Slot Limit Louisiana Rules

Reagan RE. 1985. Species profiles: life histories and environmental requirements of coastal fishes and invertebrates (Gulf of Mexico) – red drum. U.S. Fish Wildl. Serv. Biol. Rep. 82(11.36). U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, TR EL-82-4. 16 pp. Access: August, 2009.

Wenner CA, WA Roumillat, JE Moran Jr, MB Maddox, LB Daniel III, JW Smith. 1990. Investigations on the life history and population dynamics of marine recreational fishes in South Carolina: part 1. Marine Resources Research Institute, South Carolina Wildlife and Marine Resources Department, Charleston, SC. 177 pp.

Redfish Slot Limit Louisiana Fishing

Wenner C. 1999. Red Drum: natural history and fishing techniques in South Carolina. Marine Resources Research Institute, Marine Resources Division, SC Department of Natural Resources, Charleston, SC. 40 pp.