So I'm not a veteran to the salt like many of y'all here. I've been fishing now in the salt water for around 3 or 4 years. I'm a veterinary student up here at Texas A&M so my fishing opportunities are limited to the weekends but I still try to the make the best of it even with all the traffic.
This past weekend my girlfriend and I had an incredible experience in the back marshes off galveston bay while fishing from our kayaks... we saw, and I say this conservatively, every bit of at least 600-700 redfish. every area of the marsh we paddled had fish tailing, fish pushing water fish hitting the top and they were all reds. It was incredible... only hang up was they wouldn't touch an artificial. I threw the book at them. top waters, spoons, spinner baits, weedless plastics, weighted plastics... none of it mattered. They were feeding but I don't know on what. Could there've been some kind of nymph or other arthropod hatching that these guys enjoy dining on? When I've seen redfish acting like these fish before, they were always very compliant in taking an artificial. It was frustrating to not catch a fish but it was pretty cool to see that many fish in one place. Most of them looked to be in the 20-24 inch variety.
Highlight of the day was that my girlfriend did manage to catch one fairly early in the day on a soft plastic ribbit frog (something I was experimenting with) that was just being reeled across the top. It was her first red, 22 1/2 inches and right at 4 lbs on the BOGA. She was stoked, especially since she's fished mainly fresh her whole life. She made a statement to the effect of "now I see why you do this"
This past weekend my girlfriend and I had an incredible experience in the back marshes off galveston bay while fishing from our kayaks... we saw, and I say this conservatively, every bit of at least 600-700 redfish. every area of the marsh we paddled had fish tailing, fish pushing water fish hitting the top and they were all reds. It was incredible... only hang up was they wouldn't touch an artificial. I threw the book at them. top waters, spoons, spinner baits, weedless plastics, weighted plastics... none of it mattered. They were feeding but I don't know on what. Could there've been some kind of nymph or other arthropod hatching that these guys enjoy dining on? When I've seen redfish acting like these fish before, they were always very compliant in taking an artificial. It was frustrating to not catch a fish but it was pretty cool to see that many fish in one place. Most of them looked to be in the 20-24 inch variety.
Highlight of the day was that my girlfriend did manage to catch one fairly early in the day on a soft plastic ribbit frog (something I was experimenting with) that was just being reeled across the top. It was her first red, 22 1/2 inches and right at 4 lbs on the BOGA. She was stoked, especially since she's fished mainly fresh her whole life. She made a statement to the effect of "now I see why you do this"
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