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How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics

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At first, you may believe you’ll be restricted when it comes to surf fishing since you’ll be from dry land, but this couldn’t be further from the truth. Aside from deep sea , there’s a surprisingly wide variety of fish you can catch right off the shoreline, including ,

Rockfish and . This makes it easy for saltwater anglers to catch good game fish without having to leave land at all, so if you’re saving up for a new boat and casting platform to get out on the water you can still get a feel for saltwater fishing and be primed for when you’re ready to go out and land even bigger strikes.

1. Surf Casting for Beginners

How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics

Surf fishing is an easy fishing method to learn, with your tactics changing depending on factors such as location, seasons, , weather conditions, and the type of fish you’re hoping to get on your line; but, just starting out there are simple basics that will get you started off on the right track. If you’re new to surf fishing, the first thing you need to do is understand how to surf cast. Surf casting is actually a lot like regular casting, but with more emphasis on distance and accuracy to land your bait in the surf. Generally speaking, you’ll do well with a basic overhand cast straight out. For an overhand cast, hold the rod in your hand, bend your arm up into a 90 degree angle and quickly flick out the pole, straightening your arm to launch the bait into the water. The trick to surf casting is learning the exact speed and power you need to perfect both your distance and accuracy when tossing out the line.

How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics

Once you have the cast you can start to learn different tactics, such as using different bait or fishing at a different time of year, that will help you target specific fish species. For example, while shrimp will attract most species of fish, you may want to use live bait like Mullet for Flounder or Herring for Mackerel. It also helps to understand the habits of your target fish species based on the seasons, tides and weather conditions.

2. Changing Tactics: Reading the Beach

Seasoned surf anglers know how to read the beach and find the features that make a good fishing spot, but the ocean is an intimidating expanse to beginners. To increase your odds of finding fish, there are several things you can look for:

How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics

How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics

The sand bar is a critical component to figuring out where fish could be, letting you know whether the fish are behind it chasing bait fish, or closer to the shore. Sand bars will constantly change with the waves and passing storms, but you can locate them by determining where the waves begin to break as they come in.

Outflows, or rip currents, are breaks in the sand bar where the fish will often come to feed in the surf. Since fish may also feed to the left or right of an outflow, you may also want to try casting your line to either side of the outflow.

Areas of the beach with coarse sand and shells are more likely to be near deeper holes that will hold fish, so look up and down the beach for these areas to increase your chance of getting a strike. Remember that these subtle differences can have a huge effect when it comes to surf fishing.

How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics

3. Deciding When to Go Surf Fishing: Weather and Tides

Reading the beach will become easier as you become more experienced with surf fishing, but as you learn there are a few other things to consider as well. With the changing of the weather and tides, you will also see changes in the behaviors of fish. Perfect fishing conditions are difficult to achieve, so having a general idea of when the fish should be biting can make the difference between a successful day of surf fishing and a disappointing one. Every surf angler is going to have their own opinion and experiences when it comes to the best conditions for surf fishing, but there are a few general rules of thumb most can agree with:

Overcast and rainy days can help minimize shadows from your line, making the bait

more appealing. (Note: While rainy days may increase strikes, your safety should

always come first when surf fishing. Keep an eye on the weather at all times and be

prepared to seek shelter in the event of a thunderstorm or unexpected foul weather, like high winds that create dangerous waves and conditions.)

More fish will come in to feed during high , especially at dawn or dusk, as there will

be more water in your fishing hole, but certain species will prefer low tide.

Take advantage of low tide to read the beach and locate sand banks, dips, hollows, and

other structures.

How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics

4. How to Fish from the Beach: Surf Fishing Gear

When conditions are right and you decide to head to the beach for surf fishing, make sure you are adequately prepared. For a typical surf fishing excursion on the beach, you will need the following gear:

How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics

Saltwater and Feel

Cast Net

Tackle and Bait

Surf Fishing Rigs (Fish-Finder and Drop)

Knife

Bait Bucket and Air Pump Spare Spool of Line

Pliers or Disgorger

Tape Measure

Umbrella and Rain Gear

Sunscreen and Sunglasses

First Aid Kit

Fishing License

5. Remember Knowledge Comes from Experience

Having proper gear will make your surf fishing experience easier and far more enjoyable, especially as you learn how to read the beach and what conditions are best for getting the strikes. Remember that knowledge comes from experience. While guides can help establish a foundation as you learn the art of surf fishing, actually casting your rod from the sands of the beach will teach you what you need to know to become a seasoned surf angler.

How-to Surf Fish - Saltwater Fishing Basics Saltwater Surf Fishing Basics | Bass Pro Shops

There's something fine and natural about getting next to nature, and nowhere is that easier for coastal anglers than surf fishing. You're barefoot (weather permitting) with the surf booming close by, the wind blowing and not another soul in sight. Lots of passing seabirds and fish busting the surface, too, if you're lucky.

Or how about a calm sunrise and you're sipping hot coffee with friends who share the same goal of catching fresh fish in the outdoors — sand between toes — without blowing your retirement on a boat, motor(s), trailer and tow vehicle. (You will need a vehicle of course, but more on that in a moment).

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If you're still learning to "read the surf," one of the best things you can do is watch where the locals fish.

Best Places to do Surf Fishing

Picking your spot and timing it right is important, of course. If you can "read the surf," for instance — that certainly helps. If you can't, locate a locally favorite stretch of surf, and study the line of breakers off the beach then watch where the locals fish.

Often they're formed by first and second sandbars, where a line of waves are breaking. There might even be a third sandbar in deeper water. Watch for a break in the second and third bars, where the water flows back out to sea. All of that water delivered to the beach has to return offshore, right? This excess water is where so-called "rip currents" may drag a swimmer offshore for a short distance. This same current pulls natural food out to the fish, and that's where your bait should often be.

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Author with a slot-size redfish just landed.

Watching where the locals fish; if you see a cluster of six guys down the beach, clustered together with about 18 long rods sitting in sand spikes, then you can bet they know what they're doing and they've picked the right spot. Move closer and observe, but don't crowd them. Study the water and wave breaks in front of them. Inquire when the local tide will be

"right." They probably won't be there for a dead-low tide, unless they're socializing. Incoming tides are often best, especially early in the morning, when the light is low and gamefish prowl close to the sand. Early is also good because families with their joyful kids haven't arrived yet; that won't happen until at least 10 a.m. during weekends, and often later.

Tip: Set your surf rods in PVC sand pipes. The PVC pipes protect the reels from a rising tide and breaking surf.

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Seatrout also feed in the surf, but you'll need the smaller 7-foot rod for throwing plugs and spoons to these fish.

Fishing Tackle

Don't kid yourself and bring just any to the beach. Regular "surf rats" use a surf rod from 12 to 15 feet long, with big rod guides, designed to deliver a bait and weight up to 100 yards offshore. A big saltwater spinning reel packed with 20- or 25-pound line can take the abuse of a serious cast and still subdue sizeable fish. Lighter line might snap in mid-cast, while heavier line takes up too much reel-spool capacity. You can bring a smaller rod (say 7 feet in length) for casting at closer fish, especially during high tide. Several of the bigger rods are normally set out. A serious surf veteran might use four to six outfits.

The big surf rods are set into sand spikes like Angler's Fish-N-Mate Sand Spike, which are metal spikes or PVC pipes some 3 to 4 feet long, sharpened at one end, and about 2-1/4 inches in diameter. These are driven into the sand and provide a stable platform for your rods.

Refrain from using buckets or coolers for this purpose, because they won't stop a rod from being pulled down into sand or water. The last thing you want is one of those fine reels falling into gritty sand and saltwater. Both are very hard on reels. Watching a surf rod getting pulled out to sea by a big fish can be a bummer, as well.

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Set the reel's drag light when using regular J hooks and stay close by, because you have to react quickly when a fish hits and set the hook. With Kahle or circle hooks, the themselves. That means with a strike, you can take your time and set your coffee down. Just be sure the drag is set with several pounds of pressure — you want a nice bend in that rod, so the fish hooks himself.

If you see Pelicans diving into the water, chances are they've found schooling baitfish — and very likely, predator fish.

Terminal Fishing Gear

Favorite leaders and hooks vary from one region to another, and the nearest small tackle shop or serious anglers on the beach can shed light on this. You basically want a leader somewhat tougher than your casting line, perhaps rigged with two baited hooks that at least partially set themselves — such as Kahle hooks — that certainly works best on pompano and a variety of other fish.

Fishing Weights

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For lead weights, don't rely on just anything from your sinker box. Pyramid sinkers up to 6 ounces were designed for surf casting, because they dig into the sand. You don't want your baits rolling down the beach 50 yards in a current, crossing other angler's lines, right? In addition, carry several spider weights. These have copper legs that stick out, and really dig into the sand. A fast current makes them necessary. How fast is a fast current? An example would be the stormy weather that Texas surf anglers fish, while hoping for a run of "bull" redfish when a tropical storm (or worse) is in the Gulf of Mexico. That makes for serious tides and current.

Fishing Baits

Baits are a local situation. If you're after big predators such as bull redfish and sharks, then a big chunk of mullet is hard to beat. (The serious shark guys fishing the surf, of course, use much bigger tackle: boat tackle, and they have to deliver their big, whole fish, like a small tuna or stingray, offshore by some ingenious means. Like a balloon, surfboard or jet ski. Some guys even swim the bait offshore, with a bonito under their arm like a football, which seems dangerous and definitely NOT recommended.)

When after a variety of smaller fish, then the usual frozen shrimp, or cut bait will work. If you specialize in pompano, be prepared to dig your own mole crabs (sand fleas) from wet beach sand, preferably using a rake designed for that task.

Saltwater Surf Fishing Basics | Bass Pro Shops Saltwater Surf Fishing Basics | Bass Pro Shops

Artificial Fishing Baits

As for artificial baits, carry a small selection. Artifical baits such as spoons are always good, and fishing with topwater plugs in fairly calm weather are great on feeding fish. Mullet-imitation lures are useful, especially during the fall mullet run, when all good finger mullet point their noses south, running in huge schools towards the southern latitudes. This draws attention from countless predators, and these feeding frenzies can be spotted from afar, either from whitewater action or diving pelicans and terns. The first good cold front of autumn usually triggers this action.

While you're at it, keep a pair of needle nose pliers on that belt and a small fillet knife handy.

Ever try digging treble hooks out of a flopping, toothy or Spanish mackerel with your bare hands? It's not as fun as it sounds.

Serious surf angler with long rods mounted in his vehicle.

Other Surf Fishing Considerations

Getting to the beach is a requirement, and that means either hiking in or driving on sand. The hiking is healthy, but you'll need a packframe, at least, to carry gear. Or some sort of cart with inflatable wheels that works on soft sand.

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If you're going to drive on the beach, like they do on North Carolina's Outer Banks or Padre

Island in Texas, a four-wheel drive vehicle is necessary. With or without four-wheel, you should drop your tire pressure down to 24 pounds or lower, so those tires can better grab the sand.

Back on the highway, keep your speed down until arriving at the nearest gas station, which will likely has an air pressure machine to re-fill those tires. A tire gauge in your glove box is mandatory, of course. Be sure to carry a spare tire, and a flat, sturdy board to support the tire jack. (That same board is handy for cutting bait).

Bluefish often feed in the surf when they hem in schools of smaller baitfish. They're not picky and will hit jigs, spoons and plugs

Years ago in college days, we often managed 40 miles of beach driving on Padre Island, using my Volkswagon Thing. We did so without a spare tire, since space was tight. One morning after some hard driving, someone heard a sss---sss---sss outside the car, and yelled to turn down the radio. We stopped and glumly watched the tire going flat, with a catfish spine sticking out of the sidewall. Forty miles from pavement, but we had arrived at our spot, so we pulled out the tackle.

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It was a good day to fish. Six hours later, a moving dot appeared on the hot and shimmering sand dune horizon. It was a Volkswagen bus, arriving to camp and fish. They cheerfully lent us their spare tire and we found a handy piece of driftwood to place under the jack, changing our flat. We soon sped away in a cloud of sand, to return next day with their tire—and to fish again

Our friends back home were amazed to hear the tale. Some called it living right, while others spoke of Karma. We'd had no negative vibes that day, the fishing was too good, and that must have counted for something. The surf and sun were perfect, and we'd caught a heavy stringer of pompano, flounder and whiting. It never occurred that we might not make it home that day.

Such is the optimism of youth. These days I pack a little more carefully, even carry a tow chain in case we get bogged down. Or we might see another vehicle stuck, spinning their tires and asking for assistance.

Surf fishermen have to stick together, because quite often, we're the only people out there — alone on a wide expanse of breaking waves on sand.

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