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March 18

Looking to start sight fishing for redfish more. What length and power of rod would yall recommend?

7
 
March 27

Anyone seen the rain totals for Thursday between poc and rockport?

1
March 26

Going fishing in Baffin for the first time in April, what lures should I be throwing?

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March 27
• Edited (Mar 27, 2025)
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Baffin Bay Trout 23in 4lbs caught on CoastalBrew 6in PotholePimp 1/8oz weedless Red 34in 13lbs caught on Kwigglers Mansfield Margarita Balltail Jr 1/8oz weedless

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March 20
• Edited (Mar 21, 2025)

After listening to Capt. Hillman’s podcast, I wanted to share a graphic I created for the Sportfish Center's social media. I hope this information helps you learn about slicks and how they're formed by fish. Yes, even Gafftops...

If you have ever gone fishing on the coast, you have probably seen a fish slick on the water's surface. It has a sweet and pungent smell akin to watermelon or fresh-cut grass. This slick is a telltale sign that helps anglers locate fish in the area. Spotted seatrout are often the cause of these slicks. However, they can also form from other fish such as red drum, black drum, southern flounder, ladyfish, hardhead catfish, and gafftopsail catfish.

Two scenarios can explain how slicks form. First, a predatory fish will consume a prey item such as mullet, menhaden, pinfish, bay anchovy, or shrimp. During consumption, the prey can be torn apart and release oily body fluids. Second, after a heavy meal, a predator will regurgitate its food (e.g., like a person burping), releasing fragments of its prey and even digestive juices. In either case, the contents are less dense than the surrounding saltwater environment and float to the surface, creating an oily slick. These slicks start small and can quickly expand in size, depending on the strength of the wind or current. If you come across a sizable one, it has had time to spread out, and you should position yourself upwind where the fish that created it will be holding.

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March 20

Happy Friday Eve!!!

March 23

Night fishing

I’ve tried wading at night 5-10 times. Out of those trips I’ve only had luck a handful of times and it was a grind. In the past I’ve always waded areas I know would be productive during the day, and I normally tried fishing them at night hoping for bigger fish. It’s just never panned out. I’m curious what conditions guides and successful night fisherman look for. I could probably boil my question down to this, would you rather night fish on a full moon, clear sky, low to moderate wind? Or on a new moon, cloudy sky, 10+mph wind?

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March 25

How so I get on the livestream?

3
March 25

Idk if this will work. Here’s the link https://angleru.com/pages/livestreamcbguest

March 25

Is the live feed link up yet or did I miss it?

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