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A ride to Venice leads to big Louisiana redfish
by Bob Marshall, The Times-Picayune
Friday November 21, 2008, 8:25 AM
Guide Mike Frenette says that you can sight fish for big reads in the shallow ponds until the 'river jumps.'FISHIN' FRIDAYS: Southwest Pass Fishing ponds
The car ride to Venice Marina was 90 minutes. The boat ride with guide Mike Frenette to Head of Passes took another 45 minutes on a very chilly morning. All this for redfish -- a species easily caught within 30 minutes of the French Quarter. Heck, people standing on the bank at Reggio Marina are filling their limits in less time than it took me to drive to Venice.
So why bother?
Because some fishing experiences are not about limits. And watching 35-inch reds tail in a foot of clear green water on a cool fall morning is one of them.
Fishin' Fridays: Delacroix Island
by Bob Marshall, The Times-Picayune
Friday November 07, 2008, 9:59 AM
Freddie Deitz reels in one of his many specks caught while fishing at the oddly-named Lake Pato Caballo - Duck Horse Lake - in the marsh south of Delacroix Isle."Duck" and "horse" are two nouns seldom used together in the world of outdoor reporting. You can't ride a duck, nor can you shoot a horse. Nor is it legal, advisable (or even imaginable) to pursue either with a rod and reel.
But, as usual, southeast Louisiana provides an exception to these rules.
It can be found in the marsh southwest of Delacroix Island where specks and reds have been hungry lately in a place named "Lake Pato Caballo" - which is Spanish for Lake Duck Horse.
Fishin' Fridays: Oct. 31, Battleground Bay
by Bob Marshall, The Times-Picayune
Friday October 31, 2008, 4:55 PM
Thursday's sunrise found anglers back at Battleground Bay, a hot spot for weeks -- until the wind, tide and water clarity turned ugly. Improving conditions should make this a top spot again.Just southeast of Pointe a la Hache, not 15 minutes from Beshel Hoist, lies a small interior bay with a name that's easy to remember: Battleground Bay.
Theories abound about the origin of that title. It might have figured in the British invasion of 1814-15, or the Union advance on New Orleans in 1862. It could have played a role in the trappers' wars, or perhaps a dispute between oystermen.
But Thursday, several dozen anglers who arrived at sunrise to partake in what had been a string of excellent fishing days had other answers. This was a place where they battled a stiffer-than-forecast east-southeast wind, a lower-than-predicted tide, and murkier-than-expected water.
Fishin' Fridays Oct. 24: Magnolia
by Bob Marshall, The Times-Picayune
Sunday October 26, 2008, 10:23 PM
Drift fishing for specks in the ponds, lagoons and bays in the Magnolia area is a great way to spend October days.Being adrift normally is not something to brag about. It implies you are wandering without direction, blowing with the wind, not anchored -- none of which are qualities anyone should aspire to.
But there is one exception: when you're fishing the southeastern Louisiana marsh in October. Then life can be a real drift, because this is that period of the year when speckled trout are also adrift.
Fishin' Fridays Oct. 17: Back Levee Canal
by Bob Marshall, The Times-Picayune
Friday October 17, 2008, 1:27 PM
Redfish, considered a poor second choice by sportsmen just 30 years ago, has become the most sought-after trophy for many marsh anglers today.Too much wind? Hogwash -- there's still a place to go
On the list of the things local anglers hate most, wind would be a tough one to beat.
Now that's saying quite a bit, because the list isn't small. You've got gnats, hardheads, no tide, too much tide, dirty water, water that's too clear, high water and low water, oh, and that idiot who does the fishing reports in the newspaper.
Catching big reds and we mean Big Reds
by Bob Marshall, The Times-Picayune
Friday October 17, 2008, 1:21 PM
Redfish are getting bigger in the Louisiana area. Fishing guide Sidney Bouirgeois shows off a recent catch.Something is happening to our redfish.
Ten years ago, whispering that line at a marina would have provoked fear and alarm, then ignited a search for culprits. Petitions would have been generated. Sportsmen's groups would have demanded laws to stop this horrible event.
Not this time. This time something good appears to be happening to our redfish in the shallow interior marshes: They are getting bigger.
Fishin' Fridays: Oct.10, Biloxi Marsh
by Bob Marshall, The Times-Picayune
Friday October 10, 2008, 9:49 AM
Barry Brechtel, of Big Fish Charters, reels in a typical "Bayou Biloxi transition season speck." Late September through October are the weeks when specks leave the outer bays and begin moving into interior marshes of the Bayou Biloxi area.The story was to be about the transition period of trout fishing in early fall, when specks begin migrating from their summer haunts in the large coastal bays into the shallow interior marshes. Guide Barry Brechtel explained how the pattern was just beginning, how we would be picking up seven or eight trout at each of our many stops during a wide circle through the marsh.
Fishin' Friday's: Sept. 26, Sandy Point
by Bob Marshall, The Times-Picayune
Sunday September 28, 2008, 7:39 PM
Open the file "Everything Old Is New Again," and you will come across this headline: The specks are biting at Sandy Point rigs!
Now, to anyone on the dark side of 50, such as angler Hunter Charvet (and a reporter who will remain nameless), the exclamation point at the end of that notice seems ridiculous. For most of our lives, the idea that speckled trout were at the Sandy Point rigs -- those structures standing in 20 feet of water in the Gulf of Mexico just out of Empire -- was not exciting, it was downright mundane. From childhood through our thirtysomething years, "Sandy Point and speckled trout" were as synonymous on the local sports scene as "Saints and disappointment."
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