Captain Judy Helmey

Miss Judy Charters

"Kicking Fish Tail Since 1956!"

124 Palmetto Drive

Savannah, Georgia 31410

912 897 4921 or 912 897 3460 fax

www.missjudycharters.com

August 25, 2008

Happy Fish Day!

Saltwater inshore, offshore, blue water fishing report, Freshies Suggestions, and "Little Miss Judy's story! Thanks for reading! Captain Judy

Send your fishing questions directly to Captain Judy fishjudy2@aol.com

Captain Jack McGowan Inshore Report Straight from the Helm!

Aug 18, 2008

Last week there were several reports of large sea trout. The biggest fish were found around beachfront; although large fish were caught in rivers near the sounds as well! Ample amount of rain meant most of the larger trout were in deeper water (8 to 12 feet). An adjustable float rig with live shrimp or finger mullet was the prescribed method. Fish are deep during periods of heavy rain. Shrimp in a bait bucket hanging off a dock will often die if there is a lot rain in a short period of time. Freshwater is literally floating on the saltwater. The most favorable place for a large sea trout after a period of heavy rain is deep. Smaller male sea trout can be found be the shallow. Fishing deep is trickier. A rip or current line might be visible but it is just as likely there won't be any visible indications. Fishing deep you're still looking for structure. The structure could be submerged trees, a man made object, a ledge, or a hole to name a few. A favorite tide is low incoming.

Although you'll find various drops work at various tides. Large sea trout are an exciting fish. Exciting to catch, fun to look at and good eat! With that said my strong encouragement is for most large sea trout to be released. These large fish are holding next year's crop. Wendell Harper reputed as likely the best seat rout fisherman on the Georgia coast has said "these large fish should be released." This is from a man who makes a good portion of his living catching sea trout. If Wendell believes releasing large sea trout can have a positive impact on the resource then it is likely so. A statement from other fishing guides is that whatever the limit is then as long they are within the limit everything is fine.

A few years the Georgia DNR had a program that would mean a slot limit, in other words releasing large fish (over 20 inches). The program never materialized due to a lack of funding. Staying with in the limits is like meeting the minimum requirement. What do you do when large seat rout are biting and your folks want to keep everyone. You try to encourage going light on the resource. When possible whether a recreational fisherman or charter fish for a variety of fish. Say you keep a couple of large sea trout, a redfish, some whiting; a couple of sharks and you have a mess of fish. Maybe in few years my outlook will be different but as of now it looks like we have plenty of sharks perhaps even too many. Keeping a shark one or two means you are saving a bunch of sea trout from either being caught by you or chopped by a shark.

Speaking of sharks. Sharks can be found along the sandbars off Warsaw. Fresh water has a tendency to drive fish out and deep. When the water in the sound is salty that usually when the shark is on. Big bait, large menhaden are in some weeks and out on others. Reports of large bait have been consistent off the sandbars off the north jetty. Bait will mean tarpon, kingfish, jack and large sharks. When bait is not present it's possible to catch predator fish just not as likely as when large schools of bait are present. August is usually the peak month for tarpon! If storms do not kick up the tarpon bite should be good! If you're struggling finding menhaden try catching some bait fish like pinfish with rod and reel. It's pretty fun and should be easy to do. Just down size your hook to number 6 or so and fish dead bait on the bottom near a dock or grass line. You might first try chumming them up with some little bits of shrimps.

Tides for this week are definitely on the increase although the highest is only 7.8 feet on Sunday. Tides should be good for sea trout! Here is a report on the Burnside bopper that was a long time in coming. The float is an excellent float! Made well with several qualities that competitors do not have. It is locally made and definitely a superior product. I have no hesitation in recommending these two floats. The larger is made for conventional (8 to 9 foot) casting tackle. This is tackle that I don't fish much these days. This is the reason for the delay in writing about this particular float design. I was using the larger float on a heavier 7 foot spinning tackle for large sharks, tarpon and jacks. The float did ok. When I fished the float, as it was intended it did a fine job! The idea is a popping float for a casting rod that could you fish along the beachfront for sea trout. This float does the job. Strengths of both the smaller and larger version: a unique design apt for casting, good sound, no additional weight needed and a more substantial main wire that is most resistant of any float on the market to bending. Sand Fly Tackle Shop is a supplier. Good float! If you fish casting rods you'll want this float. The smaller is a winner as well. The larger one is a must!

Hope this report is of interest and help. Remember to practice catch and release when possible! Good Fishing! Capt. Jack McGowan

Fish Species: spotted sea trout, red fish, shark
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About The Author: Captain Judy Helmey

Company: Miss Judy Charters

Area Reporting: Inshore and Offshore Savannah Georgia

Bio: Miss Judy Charters provides Inshore fishing, Offshore fishing, and Gulf Stream fishing charters. Whether it's sport fishing for the serious angler or a leisurely day for the family, we have the trip for you. We have been fishing in Savannah, Tybee and adjacent waters for over 50 years. We have the knowledge for your inshore and offshore fishing adventure. Take a look inside, you will find current fishing reports by Captain Judy and pictures of the many fish we catch here in Coastal Savannah Georgia.

912-867-4921
Click Here For Past Fishing Reports by Captain Judy Helmey