Hubbard’s Marina Fishing Report 4-8-21

Hubbard's Marina Fishing Report

Inshore Fishing Report

Mackerel have really flooded the area especially around the mouth of Tampa Bay and some of our local passes when the bait is present. Also, deeper edges of local flats where water is moving is a good place to find them too. The faster moving flashy lures are always best like a casting spoon or my favorite, a gotcha plug. Look for birds while out on the water and areas where white bait is congregated near deeper moving water. Often times where mackerel are thick, they will push the bait up to the surface making it easy to spot their locations. Local fishing piers have been great places for mackerel like the skyway fishing pier, gulf pier at fort de soto, big pier 60 in clearwater, Anna Maria rod and reel pier, and the cortez fishing pier. Here’s a link to find all our local fishing piers thanks to the Tampa Bay Estuary program with links to find them –https://ocean.floridamarine.org/boating_guides/tampa_bay/pages/mobile_fishing_piers.html

Snook action has been going well around the area too with plentiful fish moving around the bay and starting to show up in local passes. The younger juvenile snook are really active around the flats right now especially around those areas where they can stage and ambush passing baits. Look for the cuts, pockets, edges, or points adjacent to the flats to find them grouped up and ready to eat. Soft plastic paddle tails, mirrolure mirrodines, or DOA shrimp are some great artificial options to target snook. However, the live white bait is really working well. You can still use shrimp too, but they are more focused on the white bait or pinfish now that water is warmed up and there is more of those bait fish present around the flats.

Redfish action is going well around the local grass flats, mangrove shorelines and oyster bars. Some fish are still hanging around those docks that border the areas listed first too. These guys are all about the artificial shrimp like the DOA shrimp or paddle tail soft plastics, but you can get them on them on hard baits like the mirrodine too. Look for them on the shallower flats. Often times they are going to be more easily spooked so longer casts further from the boat are key.

Trout action is getting better and better which is odd because most of the time they bite best when the water is cooler, but it seems they have woken up a bit with the warmer waters. These guys love the little cuts of the flats, edges, or potholes and they will often be in groups so where you find one there is often a few more. Soft plastics are a great option for the trout or free lined white bait.

Pompano are getting better and better around local passes and along our beaches too. You can find them around sandy edges in the bay too, but most of the time the local passes are good areas to look. Also, the fishing piers along the beaches work well to give you a shot at a pompano. Earlier in the morning when its calm and water is clear is best. Also, this coming week’s windy mornings will make it harder to target them as they like clearer calmer waters, but its an east wind most of the week so the beaches should still be clear enough to target them in the troughs that run parallel to the shoreline.

Nearshore Fishing Report

Weather has made it tough to get out there fishing as much as we would like and when we have been able to get out it’s been bumpier than we would like too. This often makes it harder to target those hogfish that are more leader shy and don’t like the stirred up murkier waters we get near shore when the weather is blowing. We haven’t seen a ton of hogfish this past week due to that, but we are still getting them when weather allows.

Lane snapper have been biting well for us near shore when we are able to get out to that 60-100ft area near shore. They like a little deeper water right now and there has been a pretty steady flow of mangrove snapper mixed in with the lanes especially as you move deeper. Light tackle and live shrimp or cut chunks of threadfin work well for both of these good eating snapper species.

Mackerel and kingfish are thick right now near shore and that’s been the big news lately near shore inside 100ft of water. We are getting a half dozen to a dozen of the mackerel trolling on the way out and back on our big party boats on our 5-hour half day. Our ten hours move a little fast to troll, but we do get the option once out there to flat line for the kingfish and we fish a little deeper than the half day, so we get a chance at some nice kingfish. Flat lines are out when weather allows on both these trips and every boat we have near shore this time of year. Often at the start of the trip we will just rig up the flat line with a dead threadfin but as bait comes up, we will switch that out with a blue runner or even a spot tail. Using number three or four wire works best for the kingfish and we use the three when water is clearer and four when its murkier. Don’t forget, we have the videos on our fishing tips and tricks page to rig the kingfish rig for your flat line rod. Also, it’s a good idea to bring some biodegradable balloons for the flat line too because when the current isn’t moving much the balloon works to get that out and away from the boat.

Red grouper are present out there in the deeper near shore waters but we aren’t seeing a ton of them. We are catching most of our red grouper out deeper offshore. Now that the deep-water closure is over, we are targeting them in 140-180ft of water primarily.

Offshore Fishing Report

Well, we have been pretty much regulated to near shore fishing due to weather lately its been really tough to find a good weather window to make it out deep offshore. However, last weekend we pushed through the weather and our 39 hour did extremely well fishing around 120ft up to around 180ft of water. The mangrove snapper bite was a little softer than we would have liked but that had more to do with the weather than anything. When the boat is bouncing in 6-8ft seas it makes it tough to hold bottom and present your bait in the right manner, nice and still to get the mangrove snapper chewing. However, some nice ones were caught using the double snell rig and dead cut threadfin. We see some big mangroves come up on the small to medium sized pinfish too. Luckily, while the mangrove action was soft, we did get into some really nice numbers of some solid yellowtail snapper. These guys love the cut thread fin or small strips of cut squid wing. We also saw solid numbers of porgies and bigger vermillion snapper too!

Red grouper action wasn’t as nuts as we thought it would be after the two month long deep water closure, but we did get some really nice ones and ended up with about two dozen. They were loving the live pinfish or the whole threadfin on 60lb leader with around 7-8ot hooks. You don’t have to use super heavy tackle with the red grouper as they won’t be as likely to rock you up and break you off like the gag grouper do.

The pelagic action was on fire this last weekend on the 39 hour. We had solid kingfish and mackerel for the ride out and then once offshore the big kingfish showed up and we got some really nice blackfin tuna. They were so thick we were catching pelagics while dropping live baits to bottom and retrieving snapper from the bottom! We even caught a 45lb kingfish while reeling in a vermillion snapper.