Inshore
Spotted Seatrout

During the summer, spotted seatrout occur in
lower parts of estuaries and prefer live baits. In early summer
you can get brown shrimp for bait with a cast net at low tide in
many areas. Later in the summer, white shrimp will be large
enough to use for bait. Also, small menhaden and finger mullet
can be obtained with a cast net and you can catch mud minnows
either with a baited minnow trap or with a cast net in shallow
creeks.
As in the spring and fall, the best fishing
is around areas with structures, such as oyster bars, rocks and
pilings during periods when the tidal currents are running. The
baits may be fished either on the bottom with a slip sinker
above a 20-pound test monofilament leader attached to a 1/0 or
2/0 hook or from a float rig. Generally in the summer, trout
fishing is quite spotty as the fish do not form large schools
typical of cooler periods of the year.
Red Drum

Summer fishing for red drum is slower than
during the spring and fall. During July, small juvenile red
drum, 8 to 10 inches in length, leave the shallow creeks and
form schools in the main estuaries. At this time they are very
easy to catch, but are smaller than the allowable minimum size
in South Carolina of 15 inches and should be released. These
fish will attain legal size in the fall.
During late summer, anglers are frequently
successful in catching larger fish (up to 20 to 30 pounds)
around jetties and at the mouths of bays and sounds. Baits used
are either live menhaden, finger mullet or fresh cut mullet.
These baits are presented on fish-finder rigs on the bottom. A
50-pound test monofilament leader attached to a 6/0 hook is
satisfactory for cut bait. For live bait, use a slightly smaller
hook (4/0) so that the bait can swim more naturally in the
current. Cut baits are fished on the bottom, whereas live baits
may be fished either on the bottom or floated along the jetty
rocks.
Flounders
Flounders are quite abundant in the estuaries
during the summer months. This is the time of the year when some
folks drift along the shallows during calm nights on an early
incoming tide to gig flounders. The boats are generally shallow
draft such as jon boats and have lights set up on the bow to
illuminate the bottom directly ahead of the boat. As one person
poles the boat, the other stands in the bow with a four-pronged
spear and strikes any flounders he can see on the bottom. When
the night is calm, the water clear and the fish available, quite
a few flounders can be harvested.
Many Grand Strand fishermen troll for
flounders during summer around inlets. Live baits, such as mud
minnows are trolled slowly along the bottom or adjacent to jetty
rocks. Other areas where flounders can be caught are inlets
north of Charleston, such as Dewees Inlet, Capers Inlet and
Prices Inlet.
Sheepshead
During the summer, sheepshead can be caught
around jetties, pilings and bridge piers. Fiddler crabs and live
shrimp are the best baits and they can be fished either with
float rigs (which are successful around the jetties) or with
1/4- or 3/8-ounce split shot weights crimped to the leader. The
hook sizes used are no. 1, 1/0, or 2/0 and the leader should be
about 20-pound test monofilament. Frequently you have to move
from place to place along the rocks to find fish.
Black Drum

Black drum are bottom feeding cousins of the
red drum. They feed oncrabs, shrimp, clams and mussels and do
not consume fish. They occur around rocks, pilings and bridge
piers. Since they are mainly bottom feeders, a fish finder rig
works well. When fishing for black drum you may hook a fish that
weighs 5 pounds or you might grab onto one that weighs as much
as 40 pounds.
The best bait for black drum is a large piece
of blue crab. To prepare the bait, pull the top shell from the
crab and cut it into quarters. Thread a large piece of crab onto
a 5/0 to 9/0 hook tied onto a swivel with 50-pound test
monofilament. Above the leader, which should be from 18 inches
to 2 feet long, a 2 to 3-ounce slip sinker is used to get the
bait to the bottom. Smaller black drum are delicious, but the
larger fish (over 15 pounds) have a coarse flesh. If you catch a
large fish you do not plan to eat, it should be tagged and
released.
Pompano

During late summer, the fine tasting pompano
is relatively abundant in the surf zone but not heavily fished.
Pompano frequent the surf zone right where the waves break in
"suds" on the beach. These fish feed on mole crabs which live in
this high energy area. The crabs burrow into the sand as the
wave breaks, and as the water retreats from shore after
breaking, the crabs strain the water for microscopic food items
that are suspended by wave action. Before the next wave breaks,
these small crabs (1/4 to 3/4- inch in length) burrow into the
sand.
Not all mole crabs manage to bury themselves
after each wave, however, and some are swept short distances
from the beach by the retreating water. Pompano cruise just
beyond the foam feeding on these crabs.
Pompano have small mouths and since mole
crabs also are small, a no. 1 or no. 2 hook should be tied
directly onto the line (8- pound test) from the reel. Flip the
baited hook into this area and allow it to be carried about by
the current. A very small piece of split shot (1/16 or 1/32
ounce) on your line will keep it slightly down in the water
column as it drifts. A small float about 12 or 16 inches away
from the hook gives a better idea of the location of the bait.
Pompano in the surf generally weigh less than
a pound but are fine food fish. If the bait is too far offshore
you will not catch pompano. If you fish directly in the suds,
you might still miss them but you may latch onto a whiting, a
small red drum, or even a flounder. Like pompano, these other
fishes are letting the wave action bring them a nice mole crab
dinner.
Whiting

During the summer, whiting can be caught in
the surf around the groins and in the sloughs and cuts along
open beaches. Whiting feed on small worms, crabs, and shrimp.
They generally weigh less than a pound and have a relatively
small mouth. A rig with two leaders with no.1 or 1/0 hooks
baited with cut shrimp fished on the incoming tide frequently
will catch whiting during the summer. Although they are not
large and do not fight as hard as many of the other inshore
fishes, they certainly make up for these shortcomings by being
excellent table fare.
King and Spanish Mackerel
During the summer months, the numbers of both
of these fishes decrease in comparison with the spring. There
are a few kings and Spanish around ship channels and on
occassion you can locate a school of Spanish a few miles off the
beach by looking for seabirds diving on the baits scared to the
surface by the fish. Best times are at dawn and dusk which seems
to be the period when these predators are most active.
During summer, kings are caught with live
menhaden trolled slowly or drifted under a large float. The same
general techniques that worked in the spring are used to catch
kings in the summer.
Crevalle Jack

When inshore waters warm in the summer, a
southern visitor enters our estuaries to terrorize small
menhaden and other small baitfishes. These are the 'jacks.' They
do not make spectacular long runs like large king mackerel and
they do not perform graceful jumps like tarpon, but they are one
of the toughest fishes encountered in inshore waters.
At night or at dusk and dawn during the
summer months, jacks lurk around rips during ebb tide feeding on
mullets, menhaden and silversides. Experienced anglers use
20-pound test line on a large capacity reel and a moderately
stout rod. Good baits for jacks are surface popping plugs like
the Striper Swiper or swimming plugs like the Redfin, Rebel, or
Rapala.
During the daytime you frequently can spot a
school of jacks milling on the surface. This type of fishing
requires two people; one casts from the bow of the boat while
the other runs the boat to intercept the school of fish. Large
yellow bucktails or Hopkins spoons work well during the day.
During the daylight a hooked jack will attempt to run back to
the school and once it gets into the school, the line will be
cut by the other members of the school. Jacks are not good food
fish and should be tagged and released.
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