Flats bite is heating up!
September 01, 2024 St. Petersburg 2 photos
Redfish
Redfish
Snook
Snook
Spotted Seatrout
Spotted Seatrout

Trip Summary

A lot of people will be focusing their efforts this weekend on grouper with gag season opening Sep 1. For those unable or unwilling to venture off the flats though, the redfish bite has been pretty good and will likely only get better as we approach the first days of fall. The water has cooled off a few degrees with all the rain we’ve had lately, and this might contribute to improved redfish activity. I like to look around shaded mangrove shorelines with access to deeper/moving water nearby. The best bite will be early in the morning on the incoming tide, and as the pilchards, threadfin, and sardines are getting bigger on the flats, youll find the slot reds will be unable to resist a well presented live bait. However, cut pinfish and shrimp will also work as well. We fished Saturday morning and caught several nice slot redfish along with some smaller ones. Caught quite a few snook as well but mostly smaller fish. As we approach early fall in the next several weeks, expect snook to begin meandering from the beaches and passes back into the canals, flats, and mangrove shorelines.
Dylan Baker
St-petersburg, Florida, United States
Capt. DL Spragg Charters thumbnail
Hello! My name is Captain Dylan, I am a Tampa Bay native, part-time fishing guide, and pilot-in-training! When I am not up in the air, I am out on the water doing what I love most - chasing fish! I’ve been fishing the bay, flats, and beaches of Tamp...

Other reports from this captain

The winter that just won’t quit
The winter that just won’t quit
January 18, 2025
Well it’s been a very chilly winter by our standards here in Tampa Bay, and the fish are trying to get through it just like we are. Water temperatures have been hovering in the mid-50s, and some fish are more tolerant than others to these colder than normal conditions. You might find a snook or two tucked up in the backwater canals and mangroves, but most snook will be hunkered down in deeper holes just trying to survive the winter. With this cold water, their metabolism shuts down to almost nothing. I wouldn’t expect snook action to turn on until we get on some warmer weather trends into February. The good news is, there are plenty of other species to target that don’t mind the chilly water. The big gator trout are out there this time of year foraging the shallow flats and mangrove edges, we haven’t found a ton of them but this is the time of year to find the big ones in the 22-24”+ range. Sheepshead action will of course be going all through the winter, we’ve been finding them consistently around most dock structures and deeper mangrove edges close to good water/tidal flow. We’ve been finding plenty of redfish as well in the same zones as the sheeps, but most of the fish have been smaller in the 14-16” range. Fishing with crabs or live shrimp, you may also stumble on some big black drum which are an awesome catch this time of year on light tackle. Out in the bay, the grunt action has been very good some days, with lots of solid eater size fish being caught. There have been plenty of mangrove snapper mixed in as well, but we’ve been getting mostly smaller fish with a few keepers mixed in here and there. Of course, the gags are out there as well so be ready when you get that big tug on your 15lb medium action spinning rod. It looks like the cold weather will persist through the end of this week, barely breaking into the low 50s some days. The good news is it looks like we’ll get on a solid warming trend the last several days of January, with temps in the 70s that will continue into the first week of February. This will be a welcome relief for both us and the fish.
Continue reading