A good incoming tide today, with over cast skies can only mean one thing. Get out your top water lures. Today is a great example of when to use top water. Fish have a hard time looking into a bright sunny sky. With the over cast sky the fish can see their target.

I would go to the east side of the Harbor and start casting up against the Mangrove Trees “Bushes”. The big Snook and Red fish will be moving under the branches to feed while the tide is rising.

When you cast your lure, let’s say a torpedo, a tail drop lure (at rest the butt end of the lure sits lower in the water), cast it under the branches, the splash when it hits the water gets the attention of the fish. From a fishes point of view, is it a stick or is it food? Only movement will tell the fish that your lure is alive and ready to be eaten. So do not start jerking it out right away, just shake your rod tip, make the lure wiggle a bit. Just enough to show life, but not enough to move it away, it should be a live easy to catch prey. So it is splash, wiggle a bit, stop, wiggle a bit, then start working it out away from the trees.

After putting all of the effort into casting at that perfect spot, why? move it out right away, give the fish a chance to decide if it wants to eat it. Casting in and working the lure back quickly will produce fish but mostly smaller younger fish. The older larger fish, takes a minute more to decide do I want that? Is it worth the effort? The young ones will See it and smack it without thinking.

In a nut shell, when casting lures under the trees you want a lot of movement with as little forward motion as possible.

Good luck I hope you get to see a big ole Snook do a back flip, completely out of the water as it engulfs your lure, or the swell and push of the water as a Red fish swirls up with it’s back out of the water while taking your bait. The rush of seeing the fish hit that lure as well as the feel of the strike, knowing your movement of the lure, your ability to make that piece of plastic come alive is what did it.

How cool is that.

Frank

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