surf fishing – Sport Fishing Mag https://www.sportfishingmag.com Sport Fishing is the leading saltwater fishing site for boat reviews, fishing gear, saltwater fishing tips, photos, videos, and so much more. Thu, 18 Apr 2024 20:57:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/uploads/2021/09/favicon-spf.png surf fishing – Sport Fishing Mag https://www.sportfishingmag.com 32 32 Top Bait Rigs for Surf Fishing https://www.sportfishingmag.com/howto/top-bait-rigs-for-surf-fishing/ Thu, 18 Apr 2024 19:54:04 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=54968 Five surf fishing rigs you should know how to tie no matter what coast you're fishing.

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Blackfish tautog surf fishing
Blackfish (tautog) are suckers for baits such as crabs and clams. Author Nick Honachefsky caught this blackfish from the surf on a fishfinder rig. Nick Honachefsky

The surf zone is a wild arena. Completely different environments span the Northeast to the Carolinas all the way to Florida. Texas and California are distinct too. But anglers who prowl the beaches know some surf rigs can be ubiquitously applied. Still, the many different options available might confuse those who don’t understand their applications. And surf spots in different states sometimes have different names for the same rigs. As a diehard New Jersey surf caster, I want to help you pick the best rigs for your favorite species. The hi-lo rig, pill float rig, fishfinder rig, chunk rig, and mullet rig are some my favorites for stripers, redfish and pompano, even sharks.

The Hi-Lo Surf Rig

Hi Lo Dropper Loop Rig
The Hi-Lo Rig: This rig consists of a 75-pound barrel swivel, 30-inch section of 25- to 40-pound leader, and two dropper loops 12 to 16 inches apart. Use appropriate hooks scaled to the size of the fish species you’re targeting. Tie a loop knot on the end to easily switch out weights. Nick Honachefsky

Quick Summary: Why have one hook when you can have two? Joking aside, there’s more to the logic of a hi-lo rig (dropper loop rig) than just having another hook. The hi-lo rig, sometimes spelled high-low rig, is meant to cover the waters just off the sea floor, anywhere bottom fish are feeding. Even one foot can make a difference to get bites when targeting true bottom feeders or to convince wary fish to swim up and eat a bait. Bait with worms, clams, shrimp, crabs or small chunk baits. (You can also use the rig when fishing bridges or piers — just space out the hooks accordingly.)

Design: Use a 75-pound barrel swivel and 30-inch section of leader. Tie the two dropper loops 16 inches apart in the leader. Pick appropriate size hooks scaled to the fish species you’re targeting, then thread the hooks on to the dropper loops. Tie a loop knot to the opposite end of the leader that you tied the swivel. A loop knot allows you to easily attach and remove a weight for different conditions. In the surf, pyramid sinkers work the best to hold bottom.

Species: Surf stripers, snapper, grouper, black sea bass, rockfish, tautog

The Fishfinder Slide Rig

Fishfinder Surf Rig
The Fishfinder Slide Rig: For this rig, thread a slide with sinker clip onto the main line. Then tie on a 75-pound barrel swivel, 20 to 30 inches of 25- to 40-pound leader, and ending with a snelled octopus or circle hook. Nick Honachefsky

Quick Summary: The fishfinder rig is meant to allow feeding fish to pick up a natural bait without feeling any unnatural resistance. The lack of tension helps prevent a gamefish from spitting out the offering. Try this setup when using live baits such as bunker (menhaden), mullet, eels, pilchards, sandworms or bloodworms. You can also use chunk baits or fresh clams as well. Besides the surf, good spots to use fishfinder rigs include inlets or creeks when the tide is running. Anglers should free-spool the line and allow a fish to take it unhindered in the current for a natural presentation.

Design: Utilize a fishfinder slide with sinker clip to attach a pyramid or bank-style sinker, or you can substitute an egg sinker for the slide clip. I prefer to use a 75-pound barrel swivel to prevent the sliding weight from reaching the hook. To the swivel, tie on 20 to 30 inches of leader and a snelled hook.

Species: Fluke, southern flounder, striped Bass, red drum, cobia, sheepshead

The Pill Float Rig

Pill float surf rig
The Pill Float Rig: A hi-lo (dropper loop) rig design with 75-pound barrel swivel, 30-inch section of leader, and two dropper loops 12 to 16 inches apart. The small pill-shaped floats should be threaded on the dropper loops first, before adding hooks. Nick Honachefsky

Quick Summary: Use this rig to keep the baits floating off the bottom to prevent crabs from stealing your baits. Sandfleas, worm bits and clam bits are great natural baits. Artificial offerings such as Fishbites, Fishgum and Gulp Saltwater Surf Bytes work too. Targets are generally smaller fish species up to 4 pounds. Or use the rig to procure live baits such as grunts and pinfish for the livewell. One other spot this rig excels: fun fishing along bridges and piers.

Design: A hi-lo rig design, except with small Styrofoam pill shaped floats in front of the size number 4 to 8 bait-holder hooks.

Species: Pompano, whiting (northern kingfish), white perch, grunts, pinfish

The Chunk Rig

Chunk surf rig
The Chunk Rig: This rig centers around a three-way swivel, with one arm getting a sinker clip and weight, and the other arm receiving a 30-inch piece of 40- to 80-pound mono leader and snelled octopus or circle hook. Nick Honachefsky

Quick Summary: Tie on the chunk rig when targeting larger gamefish and you want to throw big baits. Use chunk baits such as menhaden, bluefish, cut mullet, pinfish, grunts or herring. A long leader allows bigger fish to pick up the bait and swim off. Then, an angler can and should reel tight for an effective hook-set. This is a great all-around rig when casting from the shoreline targeting different species. Just about everything eats chunk baits, except maybe those few crab-crunchers.

Design: Tie on a three-way swivel, with a sinker clip attached to one eye to handle a pyramid weight. The other eye receives a 30-inch piece of 40- to 80-pound mono leader. A snelled circle hook, scaled accordingly from 5/0 to 12/0, ensures solid hook sets.

Species: Sharks, striped bass, bluefish, drum, snook

The Mullet Rig

Mullet fishing surf rig
The Mullet Rig: A small, oval Styrofoam float with a built-in 4-inch length of wire, ending with a dual barb hook. The main line, float rig, and sinker are connected to a three-way swivel. Nick Honachefsky

Quick Summary: Specifically designed to throw fresh or frozen mullet, this rig allows the whole bait to be fished in a natural manner. The mullet floats just above the sandy seafloor in an enticing display to attract feeding gamefish. Also, the float keeps your bait off bottom where crabs can pick it apart.

Design: For this rig, I use an oval Styrofoam float built-in with a 4-inch length of wire, ending with a dual-barb hook. To bait this rig, remove the hook first. Thread the mullet on the wire from the mouth down through the body out the anal vent. Then, reattach the hook back to the metal leader. Make sure one barb is pierced into the side of the tail. Tie your floating mullet to a length of leader that connects to a three-way swivel. Connect your swivel to the main line. The third leg gets a sinker clip and weight.

Species: Striped Bass, bluefish, red drum, sharks

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Massive Mako Caught on Florida Beach https://www.sportfishingmag.com/news/massive-mako-caught-on-florida-beach/ Thu, 11 Apr 2024 15:10:35 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=54881 A trio of anglers caught the typically deep-water shark off the beach, and worked as a team to ensure a safe release.

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shortfin mako shark caught on Florida beach
A team effort was required to release the shortfin mako. Courtesy Travis Lucas

Three anglers were standing in neck-deep water off a beach on the Florida panhandle, being circled by a 12-foot shark—the kind of shark that makes its living attacking swordfish, tuna, and other sharks. It was the next-to-last moment in a beach-fishing adventure none of them will forget, and it ended safely for all of them, including the shark.

On November 12, Travis Lucas and friends Joshua Smith and Ben Brandner caught and released a very large shortfin mako shark from the beach. It’s exceedingly rare to catch a mako from shore; they prefer deep water and the larger prey that live there. This was the first confirmed shore-caught mako at Cape San Blas, about an hour east of Panama City. The shark was released per the rules; harvesting Atlantic mako sharks has been prohibited since 2022 due to overfishing.

Lucas, Smith, and Brandner never expected to catch a mako, let alone one that’s about as big as they get. “We usually just target big species, like bull sharks,” Lucas recalled. A week earlier, they had caught a 12-foot dusky shark and a 13-foot great hammerhead.

The Hometown Sharkers Score Big

The group, “Hometown Sharkers” on their social media, specialize in overnight beach outings.
Lucas was set up with an Okuma Makaira 130 reel spooled with 200-pound Reaction Tackle braid, a 300-pound mono top shot, and a homemade 800-pound leader on a 7-foot Rainshadow rod. The 24/0 circle hook was baited with a chunk of a blacktip shark caught earlier in the day.

Lucas had dropped the bait from a kayak about 1,000 yards offshore at sunset and paddled back to camp. During the evening, “we ended up catching a smaller bull shark on another rod,” he said. After that, it was a calm, cool night on a quiet beach—until it wasn’t.

“We had actually dozed off,” Lucas said. “I woke up to the 130 screaming.” He got into his harness and immediately knew the fish was heavy, perhaps a tiger shark. “It started pulling pretty significant drag pretty effortlessly,” he said.

Ten minutes in, the fish “woke up” and began leaping in the moonlight, “pretty much back-to-back for three or four minutes in one position, and then again in the next,” Lucas said. Eventually, the acrobatics ended. The fish ran toward shore a couple of times, which made life easier for Lucas, and the fight was over in 35 minutes.

As the fish neared the beach, the anglers still didn’t know what they had caught. Maybe a hammerhead, they thought. When it reached the wash, they thought it may have been a great white. When they finally got a light on it, “there was a lot of screaming,” Lucas recalled.

Team Release

shortfin mako shark caught on Florida beach
Travis Lucas poses with the 12-foot shortfin mako shark caught on Florida beach just before release. Courtesy Travis Lucas

“Releasing that fish was one of the most memorable situations I’ve had,” he said. “We realized it was a mako. Josh runs out with the tail rope. I come out with bolt cutters and the hook remover. We get out there, assess the situation, get it unhooked, get the leader off of it. It was about 49 degrees, it was cold.”

Lucas’s wife, Flower, and the other guys’ girlfriends watched and held flashlights from the beach. The group began moving the mako to deeper water to ease its release. “So it’s pitch black outside. We get out past the sandbar, so we know she can swim off. She swims out 10 or 15 feet and comes back at us. She made three full circles around us before thrashing at the surface and then swimming off. It was definitely nerve-wracking.”

The group saw for themselves why makos are sometimes confused with, blue sharks. “They are in every sense of the word ‘blue sharks’,” Lucas said. “When the light hits them they’ll go from deep purple to blue, and it’s a color you’d never expect to see from an animal. It almost seems like it’s a holographic. They’re pretty wild looking. It’s definitely a once in a lifetime fish.”

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QUICK GUIDE: Surf Fishing Etiquette https://www.sportfishingmag.com/howto/best-surf-fishing-etiquette/ Tue, 12 Mar 2024 21:24:19 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=54245 An experienced surf caster explains the rules of the road when fishing from the beach.

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surf casters catch striped bass
If you are the first one to get to a spot, then that spot is yours to fish. But spots can get crowded when the striped bass are biting. How should you react? Nick Honachefsky
Mug – (verb) to hold up, knock-off, loot, plunder, hijack, swindle. 

If you’ve fished the beach long enough, you know what mugging is. Loosely defined, it’s the direct, uncomfortable encroachment of the area you are fishing by another angler, usually occurring after that said angler sees you hook up. Or it could happen when said angler thinks there’s enough room to fish the same exact spot as you. However you look at it, you know what it feels like when it happens and it can lead to expletive-laden verbal exchanges, fistfights, and even missed fishing time. And no one wants to destroy a fishing outing. So how do you know if you’ve been mugged or if you’re doing the mugging? Here are a few quick guidelines to follow to keep you on the straight and narrow.

First Come, First Served

The Golden Rule. If you are the first one to get to a spot, then that spot is yours to fish. No other angler has the right to mug you. Get up earlier if you want to put a claim on a spot.

If the Bait Fisherman Was There First

An angler is the first to the beach and sets up two sandspiked clamming rods in a hole. Other anglers should not fish anywhere between the deadstick rods but should stay and fish on the outermost sides of the rods. Some mornings I walk up to the beach to what I want to consider “my hole” to start plugging, only to see a deadsticker there. I feel trespassed, but he was there first, and it’s his hole to fish, plain and simple. I move on. Which leads me to the 30/50-yard rule.

The 30/50 Yard Rule

fishing the surf
Don’t cut in between anglers already fishing, especially if casters are tightly spaced together. Move to the outside of the pack. Nick Honachefsky

If a deadsticker is set up in a hole, and I want to plug, it is not considered mugging to walk 30 yards down either direction from his outermost rods and start making casts. However, if you are also bait fishing, it’s best to go down to the next hole to set up camp and stay at least 50 yards away. When anglers are plugging, a comfortable distance between anglers actively fishing is usually 30 to 50 yards.

Boat Versus Surf Fishermen

The concrete rule. No boat should fish so near the shore to be in the surfcaster’s average casting distance without expecting repercussions. Surf fishermen should get first dibs on surf fish — beach anglers are limited in the water they can cover, while boaters are not. If a boat fishes bunker schools or boiling striped bass close enough to read the writing on a surfcaster’s hat, the boater is too close. A boater shouldn’t be surprised by possibly getting hit by errant plugs, heavy metal jigs or weighted bunker snags. Surfcasters need not give way to a boater fishing inside the breakers.

Blitz Fishing Conditions

This one can get really dicey in the heat of the moment, so it’s best to keep your actions ultra-simple. Don’t cut in. An angler walks up to the beach to see striped bass and bluefish busting the surface. If the pack of anglers is tight, don’t walk down and begin casting between two anglers already spaced evenly apart. You’ll encroach their already established personal space and screw up the whole dynamic. Walk to either end of the pack, anticipating the school’s movement and begin casting. The school moves, then the other anglers pick up and frog hop to the forward-progressing end of the line to begin casting again. Don’t cut in between anglers. It will only lead to crossed lines, potential hooks in the face, and missed fishing time.

A Baitfish Frenzy

Bunker schools near the beach and jetty
When bunker schools come to shore, casting can get competitive from the beach and jetties. Nick Honachefsky

In crazed excitement, when adult bunker schools come in close enough to cast to, it can get competitive from the beach. Always stay on the outskirts of the snagging crew. Say there are five guys all snagging bunker, but the school has begun to move south fast. You are on the tail end of the snagging crew. Don’t pick up and muscle your way in between anglers 2 and 3, or 3 and 4, but instead frog hop the entire bunch of anglers and intercept the school ahead to start snagging again. This rule applies only if the pack of anglers is fairly tight. If not, see the 30/50-yard rule (above) in respect to re-entering the snagging crew in the middle.

Beach Buggies Versus Walk-On Surf Anglers

Beach buggies have the decided advantage when chasing blitzes and scoping out spots. Still, anglers with beach vehicles shouldn’t mug other peoples’ spots. This is how it goes sometimes: Too many beach buggy anglers sit in the comfortable heat of the truck with binoculars without making casts. Once a walk-on has a bent rod, many times the buggy will scream on over, run out of the truck, and start casting right next to the guy hooked up. Bad move. It’s not bad to want to fish where the fish seem to be, but buggy anglers shouldn’t do drive-by muggings. A nice gesture would be to ask the walking angler if he minds you casting nearby. Common courtesy wins out.

Respect Other Anglers

When surf fishing, whether it’s in Jersey, North Carolina or Montauk, all that really matters is common sense and a little respect. Sure, there will be days when it’s a ghost town and you have the beach all to yourself, but there will also be days when it is jam-packed. React accordingly. The saying goes, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you”, or something like that. If it feels like you are mugging somebody, chances are you are. Whether you’re a local living year-round in a beachside community, a part-timer who owns a house or rents to enjoy a few months out of the year, or a day tripper driving from inland towns to enjoy the beaches, we are all fishermen. All of us have the same rights, respects and responsibilities to share the beach equally.

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Find Fish in the Surf https://www.sportfishingmag.com/howto/find-fish-in-the-surf/ Mon, 22 Jan 2024 21:53:45 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=53743 How one new surf angler learned to read the waves while fishing the beach.

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Florida Panhandle Beach Fishing
Surf anomalies are difficult to see when the sun is low on the horizon, but during midday hours, they’re almost impossible to miss. Todd Masson

Three years ago, when my wife and I bought a condo a long baseball throw from the white sand of the Florida Panhandle, I knew as much about surf fishing as a grandmother from Appalachia. I had done it a few times in my fishing career, but always as a tag-along with others who had more experience. They did the hard work of finding areas that provided a good chance for success.

To the neophyte, the surf is the surf. It’s just endless miles of waves crashing on an indistinct shoreline, and the fish could be absolutely anywhere. Anglers with little or no experience might tote a rod to the water’s edge and walk the shoreline, making more casts than a desperate guy at a singles’ bar, just hoping for the best.

But my experience with other methods of fishing told me that wouldn’t be the most efficient technique. Ironically, what helped develop my strategy for effective surf-fishing was drift-fishing in water with the salt content of a glass of milk. Multiple times every year, whenever South Louisiana goes a couple weeks without any measurable rainfall, I tag along with Independence resident Joe Lavigne, 74, who skulls a thin-metal flat boat down a local river

Drift fishing Louisiana river for bass
Floating rivers of south Louisiana with legendary angler Joe Lavigne taught the author about what types of hydrological features tend to hold fish. He found the same rules to apply in the surf. Todd Masson

A lifetime of experience has taught Lavigne where fish hold in moving water, and on every trip, he calls his shot multiple times, accurately predicting which casts will produce bites from pugnacious spotted bass. I may never be as skilled as him, but still, I’ve learned a lot in two decades of fishing with Lavigne. I’ve gotten pretty good at identifying fishy areas — where troughs are immediately adjacent to shallow water.

Figuring the same axiom had to hold true in the surf, I set out early in the morning after the first night at our new condo, intent on reading the water to determine where the anomalies existed. I imagined I’d return with a stringer of fish slung across my back, and hail my wife with a hearty “Good Morning,” just as she was taking her first sip of coffee.

But as Mike Tyson famously quipped, everyone has a plan until they get punched in the face. What socked me in the jaw that morning was the fact that, in the low light, I couldn’t tell where the bars were. An experienced surf angler could have probably seen subtle differences in how the waves were breaking, but to me, they looked entirely random.

So I just walked the beach making casts, and lucked into one undersized redfish. No one likes failure when fishing, but I absolutely despise it. It gnaws at me and lives at the forefront of my mind until I’m able to turn myself from a zero to a hero. Fortunately, I wouldn’t have to wait long for that to happen.

red drum fishing the beach
Although the fish are present in the Perdido surf year-round, redfish really crowd the troughs in wintertime. Todd Masson

To me, the beach is just a cool place to stand while you’re fishing, but my wife would spend all day every day there if she could. So in the interest of marital harmony, I hauled some beach chairs and an umbrella to the sand under a high midday sun, intent to put the misery of my early morning failure behind me.

And that’s when I found what I had been looking for. The wind was light and blowing offshore, which allowed any sediment in the water to settle out, and the tide had fallen since my early morning venture. Combined with both those factors, the early afternoon sun pierced the veil between me and nirvana, illuminating a boomerang-shaped sandbar 200 yards east that kissed the edge of the beach. I walked over, and through my polarized lenses, could clearly see a deep trough adjacent to the bar.

I wanted to sprint back to the condo, grab my rod and spend the rest of the day fishing, but then I remembered that whole marital harmony thing, and besides, I figured the fishing would be better in the morning on the rising tide.

I made a note of the exact location of the bar, and then I returned the next morning.

Flounder fishing the beach
The autumn flounder run in the surf along the Florida panhandle is outstanding. Todd Masson

Throwing a shrimp-colored soft-plastic paddle tail on a 1/4-ounce jighead, I caught a flounder on literally my first cast, and then proceeded to catch nine more. The season was closed in Florida, so stuffed flounder would not be one of the first meals at our new condo, but I couldn’t have cared less. The validation of figuring something out in a new fishing environment meant far more than any feast. 

Since then, I’ve used that exact strategy to have consistent success in the surf. Whenever we visit our condo, my first afternoon is spent walking the beach, searching for bars that have a perpendicular element, relative to the shoreline.

When I find them, I’m confident they will produce fish in the morning. In the fall, it’s flounder. In the winter, it’s redfish. In the spring, it’s speckled trout. And in the summer, it could be any of the above. I still wouldn’t consider myself a surf-fishing expert, but man, it’s been a fun journey trying to get to that level.

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North Carolina’s Crystal Coast is a Gem https://www.sportfishingmag.com/travel/north-carolina-crystal-coast/ Mon, 25 Sep 2023 20:31:32 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=52952 Located near the easternmost protrusion of the Outer Banks, the Crystal Coast offers inshore opportunities and a relatively easy run to the Gulf Stream.

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Oceanana Pier at sunset
No boat, no problem. Anglers can fish from piers that jut out 1,000 feet from the beach, such as the Oceanana Fishing Pier at Atlantic Beach. Courtesy Adobe Stock/Eifel Kreutz

Spend much time on the waters of North Carolina’s Crystal Coast and the origins of that moniker should be pretty clear. The waters here are some of the clearest in the Mid-Atlantic. The Crystal Coast, what can be described as the Southern Outer Banks, is a designation for roughly 85 miles of beaches (56 of which are protected) and coastal towns from the New River north to Cape Lookout. This includes Beaufort, Morehead City and the Cape Lookout National Seashore.

There’s no shortage of fishing opportunities on the Crystal Coast. Many are seasonal, but whatever the season, there are fish to be caught. While many destinations require bringing or hiring a boat, the coast of North Carolina boasts some of the world’s best surf fishing. Among the many species taken on beaches here, the two high-status game fish are red drum and striped bass. Very large reds prowl along the beaches in the fall. How big? Consider the IGFA all-tackle world record that angler David Deuel landed on an Outer Banks beach in November, 1984 — a fish weighing an extraordinary 94 pounds, 2 ounces.

Those without a boat can also hit the piers that jut out 1,000 feet from the beach into the ocean — the Bogue Inlet Pier (at Emerald Isle) and the Oceanana Fishing Pier (at Atlantic Beach). In addition to the many species that surfcasters catch, pier anglers target red drum, cobia and kingfish spring through fall, as well as croaker, bluefish, flounder and more.

Yet another land-based fishery involves wading in inshore waters, but these waters are much more accessible to those with skiffs or kayaks. Kayakers can access Back Sound and Bogue Sound from Fort Macon State Park and several spots around Harkers Island.

Located near the easternmost protrusion of the Outer Banks, the Crystal Coast offers a relatively easy run to the Gulf Stream and blue water often teeming with prized game fish. The list of summer-time targets includes marlins (blues and whites), sailfish, mahi, wahoo, tunas (yellowfin and blackfin) and more coastal species such as cobia, snapper, amberjack and kingfish.

Wahoo caught offshore North Carolina
The Crystal Coast offers a relatively easy run to the Gulf Stream and blue water, often teeming with prized game fish such as wahoo. Doug Olander

One of the most exciting cold-weather fisheries here sees larger charter and seaworthy private boats running out to fish just a few miles off the Outer Banks for huge bluefin tuna. Bluefin approaching the grander mark have been taken on sport-fishing boats, and tuna larger than 1,000 pounds have been caught commercially. The past season, in fact, was one of the best ever, and included not only giant bluefin but those of a more modest size (relatively speaking). While not as coveted as bluefin, blackfin tuna can be caught in numbers here at times and in the winter will run 25 to 30 pounds — large for the species.

Tournament fishing is big on the Crystal Coast; you’ll find offshore, inshore and surf events here. Notably this includes one of the fishing world’s premier tournaments, the Big Rock Blue Marlin, as well as other billfish tournaments in the summer. The fall schedule includes plenty of events for king mackerel.

Planning a Trip

Redfish being netted in North Carolina
Among the many species taken in North Carolina, the two high-status game fish are red drum (pictured) and striped bass. Very large reds prowl along the beaches in the fall. Sam Hudson

When to Go: Everyone wants to be here in the summer. That translates into lots of visitors, higher rates, busier roads. But it is a wonderful time of year to enjoy the beaches and offshore variety, along with calmer seas. Just book far in advance, as much as a year ahead. On the other hand, fall and winter offer special fisheries — big drum in the surf and then giant bluefin just offshore — at a time when visitors find things considerably more laid-back and less crowded here. Certainly, things get windier in mid-fall and winter; those who want to fish beyond the inlets would be wise to plan to stay at least a week, looking for a calm day or two.

Where to Go and How to Get There: The closest major airport is in New Bern (EWN), just over 30 miles away, served by a number of major carriers. Raleigh-Durham International Airport is just under three hours by car. More distant air options include international airports in Norfolk, Virginia (NIA), or in Charlotte (CLT), about a 4- or 5-hour drive, respectively. Many choose to drive to the Southern Outer Banks. From Atlanta, figure nearly eight hours drive time; from Boston, about 13 hours.

Flounder caught off the Crystal Coast
Off the beaches and in the bays, flounder are a popular target when the short season is open. Doug Olander

What to Expect: For visiting anglers, the infrastructure is generous, with plenty of inshore guides, offshore charter, launch sites and marinas. Also, take advantage of local bait and tackle shops, often the best source of information, especially for surf and jetty anglers. Private boaters fishing offshore will need a boat large and seaworthy enough to negotiate Bogue and Beaufort inlets; like all inlets, they can be tricky. Check the shoaling alerts online for up-to-date information when planning routes.

Crystal Coast accommodations are many and varied from budget (hard to find in high season) to five-star. Check with various local real estate brokers since they handle vacation rentals for the many amazing ocean-front homes along this coast.

Families who join anglers here need not be bored. Besides enjoying the endless Cape Lookout National Seashore beaches, visitors can paddleboard and kayak inshore waterways and marshes; climb to the top of the iconic Cape Lookout Lighthouse (Wednesday through Sunday); make historical visits to Beaufort’s North Carolina Maritime Museum and to Fort Macon; see the famed wild horses of Shackleford Banks Island; hike the Croatan National Forest; and plenty more.

Helpful Links

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Conventional Surf-Casting Reels https://www.sportfishingmag.com/gear/conventional-surf-casting-reels/ Wed, 22 Jun 2022 13:00:00 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=50779 These long-distance casting reels are capable of targeting big fish off the beach.

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I stopped by Hatteras Jack Tackle Shop in Rodanthe, North Carolina to talk with owner (and distance-casting champion) Ryan White. “There are some exciting new reels on the beach this year,” he said and took me on a tour of his favorite big-game surf tackle.

Long-distance casting reels have several things in common. Most important is the casting brake. These reels use either magnets or centrifugal pads to slow the spool on the cast, reducing the chance of backlashing the line. To further improve casting performance, the best reels use a spool, spindle and high-speed bearings.

Penn Fathom II 15 reel
Penn poured 90 years of experience into its Fathom II 15. Jon Whittle

Penn Fathom II 15

One of the most popular new surf-fishing reels comes from one of the oldest tackle companies. Penn poured 90 years of experience into its Fathom II 15 ($239.95). The redesigned star-drag reel quickly gained fans with its magnetic casting brake, and stiff aluminum frame and spool. When the reel disengages, the spool floats freely on the spindle. A small dial on the side plate adjusts the magnetic brakes to match casting conditions. Machine-cut gears and a carbon-fiber drag apply the pressure you need to pull big red drum through the breakers.

Daiwa Sealine-X SHA30 surf reel
The Sealine-X SHA30 features no-nonsense design and reliable performance. Jon Whittle

Daiwa Sealine-X SHA30

This reel has probably caught more big red drum in the surf than any other. Known on the beach as the “Slosh 30,” the reel’s no-nonsense design and reliable performance are still popular for beginners and old salts. The SHA30 uses three shielded ball bearings and a free-floating spool to maintain reliable casting performance. Marine-grade bronze and brass gears along with six stacked drag washers provide the fighting power. When I started drum fishing, I used the reel for years without fail. Like a Kalashnikov rifle, the simple construction and sturdy components keep the Daiwa Sealine-X SHA30 ($139.99) firing in the worst conditions.

Seigler SM casting reel
Seigler’s SM is built for maximum casting distance. Courtesy Seigler

Seigler SM

When a local reel company collaborates with hardcore drum anglers, the result is Seigler’s SM star-drag, magnetic-brake casting reel ($400). Virginia Beach-based Seigler Reels is located within casting distance of some of the best surf-fishing beaches and most experienced anglers. Designed for long-distance casting competitions, the reel uses the highest-end components for maximum casting distance. Smart design and sturdy construction make the SM one of the most user-friendly reels in the review.

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Best Knot for Surf Fishing: Alberto Knot https://www.sportfishingmag.com/howto/best-knot-for-surf-fishing-alberto-knot/ Mon, 13 Jun 2022 13:15:00 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=50735 I spent an hour and a half on the phone with “Crazy” Alberto Knie the other day. Knie is one of the East Coast’s most respected surf-casters, a guy who gave up his corporate career as a creative director for a New York ad agency so that he could spend the rest of his life […]

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I spent an hour and a half on the phone with “Crazy” Alberto Knie the other day. Knie is one of the East Coast’s most respected surf-casters, a guy who gave up his corporate career as a creative director for a New York ad agency so that he could spend the rest of his life fishing.

Knie is a wild interview. When discussing his predilection for fishing at night, he says, “I only fish the nonhuman hours.” You saw the nickname earlier, right?

Sometimes the best knot is the one you know best. And sometimes the best knot is the one Knie is known for. The Alberto knot works well for connecting braid to mono leaders. It’s small enough to pass through your guides but strong enough to land 50-pound fish through the surf.

I’m still on the phone. Knie has a lot of fish stories, but take him with a grain of salt. “In storytelling,” Knie says, “there’s always three versions: their story, my story and the truth.”

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Shimano Speedcast XS Surf Reel https://www.sportfishingmag.com/shimano-speedcast-xs-surf-reel/ Tue, 18 Apr 2017 04:44:21 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=44501 Spinner features a long-stroke spool design and slow oscillation.

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Shimano Speedcast XS surf reel
The new Shimano Speedcast XS surf reel features a max drag of 22 pounds Courtesy Shimano

Shimano says its new Speedcast XS surf reel features a long-stroke spool design and slow oscillation, which packs line tightly on the reel for extreme casting distance. The spinner uses X-Ship, reinforcing the alignment between the pinion and drive gear, to deliver a 4.3-to-1 gear ratio and retrieve 40 inches of line per handle turn. The reel holds 590 yards of 40-pound braid, 510 of 50-pound braid, or 360 yards of 65-pound braid. With a max drag of 22 pounds and a weight of 22.9 ounces, it costs $149.99.

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10 Top Popping Spots https://www.sportfishingmag.com/10-top-popping-spots/ Thu, 10 Apr 2014 22:43:38 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=44293 Nothing's more exciting in fishing than massive topwater strikes, and here are 10 places in the world that rank among the best to experience that rush.

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Have popper will travel — to these most exciting spots for the world’s most exciting style of fishing.

OMAN

Angler with a huge giant trevally caught fishing in Oman

OMAN

A good place to start our tour is surprising Oman. One needn’t do more than take a quick look at No Boundaries Oman’s web site to get the picture. In fact many pictures — showing giant trevally of truly giant proportions with mangled poppers hanging from their maws. While you can fish here year-round, mid-September through April is prime period. No Boundaries Oman prides itself on tagging and releasing the GT that anglers catch. Courtesy No Boundaries Oman

THE SEYCHELLES

Angler holding a tuna fish caught in The Seychelles in the Indian Ocean
The atolls and small islands scattered about this vast watery Indian Ocean world make the word “remote” dramatically insufficient. Little surprise that ops to pop await everywhere — Desroches, Farquar, St. Joseph’s, Alphonse, St. Brandons and other areas all offer GT, jobfish, tuna (yellowfin and dogtooth), emperors, red (bohar) bass, coral trout and much more. Check out the action in this Desroches Island photo gallery, this Seychelles flats-on-fly gallery or this Seychelles fishing video. Courtesy Desroches Island Resort

GABON

Fisherman holding a huge tarpon caught in Gabon
Gabon would have to rate as one of the best spots anywhere for tossing poppers from the surf. The beaches off Loanga National Park offer tarpon, huge cubera (aka African red) snapper, giant African threadfin, oversize jacks and barracuda; the same species are also available to anglers fishing Ndogo and Iguela lagoons from boats. Read more about fishing Gabon here. Courtesy Julien Lajournade, Voyages de Peche

VENICE, LOUISIANA

Red drum caught while fishing in Venice, Louisiana
As with many of the top popping places in the world, the northern Gulf of Mexico offers a variety of popping options, from blue water to nearshore rigs to the endless marshes. You could, in a day, throw poppers to bull redfish, big jacks, cobia, yellowfin, mahi and more. Although not all the action is on top in this Venice, Louisiana, fishing photo gallery and fishing video, they’ll give you an idea of the opportunities. Courtesy Capt. Sonny Schindler, Shore Thing Charters

NEW ENGLAND

Big bluefin tuna fish caught in New England
You needn’t head to equatorial reefs for great popper action. Starting in May, try southern New England for bluefin tuna. June, September and October are hot months, and in fact, November can be outstanding between early weather fronts. There are tuna skippers who cater to the “jiggypop” crowd, like Capt. Dom Petrarca (Coastal Charters Sportfishing), the “jigging and popping specialist” who fishes up and down the southern New England coast. Watching bluefin tuna of 200 pounds and at times much more compete to clobber big poppers qualifies as one of fishing’s ultimate thrills. Courtesy Capt. Dom Petrarca

GREAT BARRIER REEF/NORTHEASTERN AUSTRALIA

Patrick Sebile with a fish caught in Australia
The seemingly infinite bommies (coral heads) and reef structure off northeastern Australia are home to a host of predatory game fish ready to attack large, loud poppers — giant trevally, red bass (bohar snapper), coral trout (grouper) like this beauty caught by Patrick Sebile, Maori wrasse, green jobfish, narrowbarred Spanish mackerel and others. Figure on top-shelf spinning gear with no less than 100-pound test, here. See this GBR fishing photo gallery for an idea what the fishing is like. Here is more information on Great Barrier Reef fishingand how to book a trip. Doug Olander

PANAMA

Angler with a Sierra mackerel fish caught on a popper lure in Panama
This country’s rocky Pacific coast is rife with reefs and rocky headlands interspersed with sandy beaches and it all shouts roosterfish, cubera, trevally, sierra and more — plus just a bit farther out, you can pop for yellowfin, mahi and maybe a billfish. Quite a few excellent fishing resorts have established operations on Panama’s coast; one of the best-known with the longest run is Tropic Star Lodge at Piñas Bay. See a video of insane tuna topwater action shot off Panama. The author, a longtime fan of Sierra mackerel, holds up a beauty here after it smashed a popper in the Perlas Islands. Courtesy Dave Lewis

NEW CALEDONIA

Angler holding a big giant trevally in New Caledonia
Indo-Pacific reefs inside this huge French island’s fringing lagoon, passes and outer edges of the reef truly teem with life — where much of that life is big, mean and hungry — and not likely to pass up a hapless, struggling popper. The GT are massive by any measure, as are the mega coral trout (long, aggressive, colorful grouper that lay in wait atop reefs), narrowbarred Spanish mackerel, behemoth Maori wrasse, voracious red bass (snapper that love to dash up from reefs to nail anything moving above) and much more. However, with the demise of an outstanding French fishing operation, Poissone-Banane, dedicated and reliable sport-fishing operators are hard to find, here; I found this New Caledonia fishing company online, but have no experience with it. Courtesy David at Poisson-Banane

VANUATU

Fisherman holding a dogtooth tuna fish caught while fishing in Vanuatu
One need only glance at the Ocean Blue web site to see that few places on earth promise more hardcore popping action than the tiny ocean nation of Vanuatu, located north of New Caledonia and about 1,300 miles east of Cairns, Australia. Anglers on the trips customarily hooks trophy fish on top — and that includes a number of blue marlin as well as dogtooth tuna like this one. Courtesy Ocean Blue Fishing

MADAGASCAR

Angler Dave Lewis holding a fish caught in Madagascar
Reputedly the world’s fourth-largest island, Madagascar is surrounded by prime popping waters in the Indian Ocean off southeastern Africa. GTs and other trevally, various types of snapper and grouper and an amazing array of still more species. Though the northern end (around Nosy Be) has gotten more pressure in recent years, much of the rest of the island remains lightly fished indeed. Read more about Madagascar Fishing Adventures and how to plan a trip. Dave Lewis

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Boston-area Fisherman Reels in Gun After Casting Near Pier https://www.sportfishingmag.com/news/boston-area-fisherman-reels-gun-after-casting-near-pier/ Tue, 25 Sep 2012 00:22:28 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=48269 Police investigate whether pistol was real

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Crooks ditch firearms in all kinds of remote places, but one Massachusetts angler, who reeled in a barnacle-encrusted pistol this weekend, never thought he’d hook more than dinner while fishing off the local pier.

“Yesterday I caught a 27-inch bluefish. Today? A gun,” the shaken angler, Alberto Pina, told BostonHerald.com in a story published Monday. The man even had his 3-year-old son with him for a day outdoors. Pina was fishing from a pier near Carson Beach in South Boston.

Pina called 911 and Boston police recovered the pistol. The website says police don’t yet know if the firearm was real.

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